RUM AND COCA COLA
THE ANDREWS SISTERS
SONGWRITERS: JERI SULLIVAN; MOREY AMSTERDAM & PAUL BARON ·
COUNTRY: U. S. A.
ALBUM: THE ANDREWS SISTERS IN HI-FI
LABEL: CAPITOL RECORDS
GENRE: POP
YEAR: 1956

"Rum and Coca-Cola" is a popular calypso song composed by Lionel Belasco with lyrics by Lord Invader. The song was copyrighted in the United States by entertainer Morey Amsterdam and became a hit in 1945 for the Andrews Sisters, spending ten weeks at the top the Billboard Pop Singles chart.
If you ever go down Trinidad
They make you feel so very glad
Calypso sing and make up rhyme
Guarantee you one real good fine time
Drinkin' rum and coca-cola
Go down point Koomahnah
Both mother and daughter
Workin' for the Yankee dollar
Oh, beat it man, beat it
Since the Yankee come to Trinidad
They got the young girls all goin' mad
Young girls say they treat 'em nice
Make Trinidad like paradise
Drinkin' rum and coca-cola
Go down point Koomahnah
Both mother and daughter
Workin' for the Yankee dollar
Oh, you vex me, you vex me
From Chicachicaree to Mona’s isle
Native girls all dance and smile
Help soldier celebrate his leave
Make every day like new year's eve
Drinkin' rum and coca-cola
Go down point Koomahnah
Both mother and daughter
Workin' for the Yankee dollar
It's a fact, man, it's a fact
In old Trinidad, i also fear
The situation is mighty queer
Like the Yankee girl, the native swoon
When she hear der bingo croon
Drinkin' rum and coca-cola
Go down point Koomahnah
Both mother and daughter
Workin' for the Yankee dollar
Out on Manzanella beach
G.i. romance with native peach
All night long, make tropic love
Next day, sit in hot sun and cool off
Drinkin' rum and coca-cola
Go down point Koomahnah
Both mother and daughter
Workin' for the Yankee dollar
It's a fact, man, it's a fact
Rum and coca-cola
Rum and coca-cola
Workin' for the Yankee dollar.
GUILTY AND WHAT KIND OF FOOL
BARBARA STREISAND AND BARRY GIBB
SONGWRITERS: ALBHY GALUTEN & BARRY GIBB
COUNTRY: u. s. a.
ALBUM: guilty
LABEL: Columbia records
GENRE: pop
YEAR: 1980

Guilty is the twenty-second studio album by American singer Barbra Streisand released on September 23, 1980 by Columbia Records. It was produced by Barry Gibb of the Bee Gees and his group's regular production team of Albhy Galuten and Karl Richardson.
After the success of the Bee Gees in the late 1970s, there was some time to write songs for other artists and Streisand, one of those artists, asked Gibb to write an album for her. It became her best-selling album to date internationally, with sales of 15 million copies worldwide as well as spawning several hit singles. According to the liner notes of Barbra's retrospective box set: Just for the Record, the album also received a record certification in Austria, Brazil, Denmark, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain. Sweden, Switzerland, and Russia.
(Together)
There was a time when we were down and out
There was a place when we were starting over
We let the vow break
We let the heartache in
Who's sorry now?

(Barbra)
There was a world when we were standing still
And for a moment we were separated...
And then you found her
You let the stranger in
(Together)
Who's sorry now?

(Barbra)
Who's sorry now?

What , what kind of fool
Tears it apart
Leaving me pain and sorrow?

(Barry)
Losing you now
Wonderin' why
Where will I be tomorrow?

Forever more that's what we are to be
Without each other
We'll be remembering when...

(Together)
There was a time when we were down and out
We cried...
There was a place when we were starting over
We lied...
We let the vow break
We let the heartache in
Who's sorry now?
Who's sorry now?

(Barbra)
What , what kind of fool
(Barry)
What , what kind of fool
(Barbra)
Tears it apart
(Barry)
Tears it apart
(Barbra)
Leaving me pain and sorrow?
(Barry)
Oh! Losing you now
How can I win?
Where will I be tomorrow?

(Barbra)
Was there a moment when I cut you down?
Played around?
What have I done?!
I only apologize
For being, as they say, the last to know
It has to show
When someone is in your eyes...

(Together)
What, what kind of fool
Tears it apart
Leaving me pain and sorrow?
Losing you now
Wondering why
Where will I be tomorrow?
What, what kind of fool
Tears it apart
Leaving me pain and sorrow?
Losing you now
How can I win
Where will I be tomorrow?
ANYMORE OF THIS MINDY
SMITH WITH MATTHEW PERRYMAN JONES
SONGWRITERS: MELINDA LEIGH SMITH; MATTHEW PERRYMAN JONES & SETH HAMILTON JONES
COUNTRY: U. S. A.
ALBUM: ANYMOR OF THIS
LABEL: TVX RECORDS
GENRE: COUNTRY
YEAR: 2013

Acclaimed songwriter Matthew Perryman Jones has teamed up with fellow Nashville artist Mindy Smith on a recent single. “Anymore of This” is co-written and performed by the pair and has already seen huge success thanks to several features on TV shows, including the wildly popular The Vampire Diaries.
Blending big-city intelligence and sophistication with the clear and honest passion of classic country and folk performers, Mindy Smith is a singer who combines the best of both worlds, and her talents have earned the young performer a growing reputation as an artist to watch, as well as some well-known admirers. Smith was born in Long Island, NY, and with the encouragement of her parents developed a passionate interest in music at an early age, taking up singing as a hobby. In 1994, Smith's mother lost a long battle with cancer, and after her passing Smith and her father moved to Knoxville, TN. Once they settled in their new home, Smith began exploring the musical heritage of the South and became enamored with folk, bluegrass, and the blues, developing a special enthusiasm for Alison Krauss, Shawn Colvin, and the Cox Family.
Where did I Begin
Turning through the pages
But I don't know what I've read

Thread is wearing thin
Everything's familiar
But I don't know who I am

Do you know where you're going?
Don't even know where I've been

Watching moments pass
I wanna run away from it
But I still won't take that step

Locked inside the glass
An empty box of memories
And a heart full of regret

Do you know where you're going?
Don't even know where I am

I don't wanna miss
I don't wanna miss anymore of this
Letting go I wanna feel all of it
I'm hanging on every word you say

I gotta keep goin'
Can't stay where I am

I don't wanna miss
I don't wanna miss anymore of this
Letting go I wanna feel all of it
I'm hanging on every word you say

I don't wanna miss
I don't wanna miss anymore of this
Letting go I wanna feel all of it
I'm hanging on every word you say

After the fall
We can recover
What's left in the dark
Can still be discovered
I won't give up
I won't give up no no

After the fall
We can recover
What's left in the dark
Can still be discovered
I won't give up
I won't give up oh no.
DARK FOUR DOOR
BILLY RAFFOUL
SONGWRITERS: BILLY RAFFOUL & ROSS JACOB GOLAN
COUNTRY: CANADA
ALBUM: DARK FOUR DOOR
LABEL: INTERSCOPE RECORDS
GENRE: ALTERNATIVE ROCK
YEAR: 2017

22 year old Billy Raffoul has been an artist we’ve been watching closely over the last few months, but who is he really? With a sound best described as “low-timbered rock and roll,” and an artist who has been compared to Neil Young and Jeff Buckley – Raffoul is one of Interscope’s most exciting recent signees.
He may be young in years, but he is wise in the realm of music, having been brought up in an art-centric family environment. His father, Jody Raffoul, is a musician who opened for Bon Jovi, Joe Cocker and many others, and his mom has a career in painting and writing . In fact, Billy claims that his parents are his inspiration all together and are a constant fountain of support. Billy has always been surrounded by music, and even joked saying “the Beatles were like Jesus in our house.”
You got up, you felt you should
I keep trying to myself I would've done the same had I could
I never thought that you would
But we became the eye of a storm, you took off from that outbound platform

And you went east 'cause it's easy
Don't mind if you leave me as long as you come back home
So I went south to define me and someday you'll find me
No different than I was before

Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door
Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door

I don't sleep enough at night
Imagining your silhouette I draw the outline of you in my mind

Since you went east 'cause it's easy
Don't mind if you leave me as long as you come back home
So I went south to define me and someday you'll find me
No different than I was before

Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door
Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door

Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door
Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door
Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door
Until then I'm still looking for you in every dark four door.