yes she sang about the thingymabob.
We all know what that was
Ron the batcave
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yes she sang about the thingymabob.
We all know what that was
Ron the batcave
Was it Chuck berry who sang *playing with my dingaling*, believe it was banned here in UK, kt
I remember gimme that thing song being used on the telly during the 1970 world cup, they used speeded up football clips
and continually put them on forward and reverse to the music and lyrics of gimme that thing, it was very funny at the time. JF
I Still See That Tackle By Moore: The Joy Of Mexico 70
If this World Cup coming up can give me just a tiny little bit of the things I got from my first then I for one am not going to complain about the state of the modern game with all its faults.
I Still See That Tackle By Moore: The Joy Of Mexico 70 - The Daisy Cutter
England's 1970 Mexico world cup was marred by the false allegation of Bobby Moore stealing a bracelet, he was a brilliant
footballer and captain for England. John F
reply john f collier
your right its like scousers when they are caught bang to rights they always say it was not them.
tom
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keith tindell
yes you are correct
trouble with chuck berry was that he was arrested some years ago for being a paedophile, always asking for young girls to play with his dingaling.
true story
tom
Hi Tom, in Bobby Moore's case he was "in the words of the police" set up by the jewelry shop owner, there was two
theories, one was it was for publicity for the shop the other was that the jeweler had taken money and made the claim
to unsettle the England team, it wasn't just Bobby Moore it was also Bobby Charlton but somebody said they saw Moore
put the bracelet in his pocket, they discovered later that the bracelet was being shifted around by the local crooks.
Regarding scousers, I wouldn't know as unfortunately there are tea leafs and low lifes in every community. cheers John F
reply john f collier
hi john, its just my wicked sense of humour , trying to stir things
tom
The Pipkins - Gimme Dat Ding
Singer Tony Burrows told the story of the song to Mojo magazine August 2010: "It was written for a children's TV programme called Oliver In The Underworld. "Freddie Garrity (of Freddie and the Dreamers) was the artist. It was the only song Freddie didn't do on the album, Roger Greenaway and I were booked to do backing vocals for the album at Abbey Road. Basically we made (Ding) in the studio. It was a conversation between a metonome and a pianola - the metronome had lost its click, so it was originally called Gimme Dat Click. But that wouldn't sing, so we changed it."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3aZ-Y5YvkxY