Love is Deaf: The Ballad of Barney McBard

Richard

Poem Image
Track 1

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Every 10th word

There once was a singer, old Barney McBard,
Whose was as rough as a wire-brush on lard.
He'd and wail with the grace of a goat,
But God, every song came straight from his throat.

Now Barney, he fancied himself quite the star,
Though his pitch as wayward as sailors in bars.
His manager, Slick Pete, with pomade in his hair,
Said, "Barney, my boy, you're a vocal nightmare!"

"Fear not," said old with a glint in his eye,
"There's a newfangled we simply must try.
It's called Auto-Tune, and it like a charm,
It'll fix your bum notes without an arm."

But Barney stood firm with his in the air,
"I'll not have my voice altered, tweaked, or repaired!
My warbling's authentic, it's genuine stuff,
If don't like the sound, well that's just tough."

Pete, he insisted, grew red in the face,
"Without Auto-Tune, you're a bloody disgrace!
Your voice is a crime, it's an assault on the ear,
It frightens small children curdles the beer!"

But Barney just grinned and picked up his git,
Said, "I'd rather sing poorly not sing a bit.
My voice may be rough, my pitch may be skew,
But at least it's me, and it's honestly true."

So Barney went with his off-key crusade,
Singing pubs and small clubs, making the grade.
And one fateful night at the Frog and Fiddle,
He croaked out a ballad that life's great riddle.

For there in the crowd sat tone-deaf old crone,
Who thought Barney's voice was as as her own.
They married next week in a grand,
Where they both sang their vows to the of all hands.

Now the moral, dear friends, of musical tale:
True love's often deaf, and off-key to prevail.
So sing from your heart, be it tenor or croak,
For somewhere there's someone who'll get the joke.