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A football chant or terrace chant is a form of vocalisation performed by supporters of association football, typically during football matches. Football chanting is an expression of collective identity, most often used by fans to express their pride in the team they support, or to encourage them, and to celebrate a particular player or manager.
Here We Go (football chant) Honey (L'Arc-en-Ciel song) Hot Shot Tottenham! Hot Stuff (Donna Summer song) (How Does It Feel to Be) On Top of the World; Hurry Up England;
Fussball Ist Unser Leben by 1974 West Germany national football team (1974) Ole Ole Ole by The Fans; World Cup Fanfare by Werner Drexler (1974) Lu Lu Lu Lukas Podolski Song (2010) Zlatan song by Sanjin and Youthman(2017) 11 kleine Spanier (2010) Zelena je trava by Trawa jest zielona (2010) ¡Podemos España! (2008) Toco y me voy by Bersuit ...
The writer of the song is often attributed to Albert T Smith who became a director of Norwich City in 1905 after the club was founded in 1902, [3] and the song was adopted by fans of the club. [4] It is sung pre-match at Carrow Road and throughout the games that Norwich City play, home and away.
The melody was also used by Manchester City and Sunderland fans for the chant "Niall Quinn's Disco Pants", in tribute to the Irish centre forward. The song was released as a single in April 1999, reaching no. 56 in the UK Singles Chart. [3] The chant formed the title and a great deal of the lyrics for Everton's FA Cup final single "Here We Go ...
The song itself is a plaintive rally-cry by the fans of Sheffield United. It is usually heard at the start of home games played at 'Beautiful Downtown Bramall Lane ' (as it is often called by the announcer on match days), the home of the club, and sporadically throughout away matches.
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"No Surrender (to the IRA)" is a British football chant sung to the tune of the "Oil in My Lamp" hymn which expresses opposition to the Provisional Irish Republican Army.It was commonly sung in UK pubs in the 1970s and 1980s, including by Rangers F.C. supporters, many of whom held strong unionist sentiments.