So Barney went on with his off-key crusade,
Singing pubs and small clubs, never making the grade.
They married next week in a ceremony grand,
Said, "Barney, my boy, you're a vocal nightmare!"
Now Barney, he fancied himself quite the star,
For somewhere there's someone who'll get the joke.
So sing from your heart, be it tenor or croak,
Your voice is a crime, it's an assault on the ear,
There once was a singer, old Barney McBard,
His manager, Slick Pete, with pomade in his hair,
He'd warble and wail with the grace of a goat,
If you don't like the sound, well that's just tough."
Where they both sang their vows to the horror of all hands.
Now the moral, dear friends, of this musical tale:
For there in the crowd sat a tone-deaf old crone,
But at least it's all me, and it's honestly true."
True love's often deaf, and off-key to prevail.
My voice may be rough, and my pitch may be skew,
"I'll not have my voice altered, tweaked, or repaired!
He croaked out a ballad that solved life's great riddle.
Who thought Barney's voice was as sweet as her own.
"Fear not," said old Slick with a glint in his eye,
But by God, every song came straight from his throat.
My warbling's authentic, it's genuine stuff,
Slick Pete, he insisted, grew red in the face,
It'll fix your bum notes without breaking an arm."
"There's a newfangled gadget we simply must try.
And one fateful night at the old Frog and Fiddle,
Though his pitch was as wayward as sailors in bars.
But Barney stood firm with his chin in the air,
But Barney just grinned and he picked up his git,
It frightens small children and curdles the beer!"
Whose voice was as rough as a wire-brush on lard.
Said, "I'd rather sing poorly than not sing a bit.
"Without Auto-Tune, you're a bloody disgrace!
It's called Auto-Tune, and it works like a charm,