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"Have a Cuppa Tea" is a song written by Ray Davies and performed by the Kinks on their 1971 album Muswell Hillbillies. Like many Kinks songs, it is stylistically influenced by the British Music Hall. It also has a slight country influence—with the mesh of these two styles being a hallmark of the album. It is believed to be about Ray and Dave ...
Muswell Hillbillies was the band's first album for RCA Records, [2] their prior recordings having been released on Pye Records (Reprise Records in the United States). Their contract with Pye/Reprise expired the same year.
"I'm a Little Teapot" is an American novelty song describing the heating and pouring of a teapot or a whistling tea kettle. The song was originally written by George Harry Sanders and Clarence Z. Kelley and published in 1939. [1] By 1941, a Newsweek article referred to the song as "the next inane novelty song to sweep the country". [2]
Barnardo reflects on the course his life is taking ("A Strange and Lovely Song"). While wandering London's streets, he encounters two homeless children who take him to the rooftops where they live, and it is there Barnardo learns of their struggle to survive ("The Likes of Us"). Barnardo is troubled by the conditions in which the children live.
A Cuppa Tea and a Lie Down is the first album by New Zealand band Able Tasmans. [2] [3] It was released by Flying Nun Records in 1987. [4] The CD release of the album contains bonus tracks taken from the Tired Sun EP and assorted singles. [4]
There’s nothing like unwinding with a steaming hot cuppa. Or maybe you’re an iced-tea-on-the-patio type of person. Either way, you may adore the stuff without knowing exactly what it is.
A cup of tea (the beverage), or a teacup (the container itself) "Cup of tea" as an idiom, referring to a preference Often used in the negative: "X is not my cup of tea" means "I don't like X." Music "Cup of Tea", a song by The Verve Pipe, from the 1996 album Villains; Cup of Tea, a 2000 album by Irish traditional band Sláinte
The song, set in a self-service restaurant modeled on the Horn & Hardart Automat, is sung in the play by a group of once-wealthy citizens who were awaiting better times, as mirrored in the song's opening lyrics: Just around the corner, there's a rainbow in the sky, So let's have another cup of coffee, and let's have another piece of pie.