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January 11, 2007
Collie Buddz - "lyrical war became a part of my daily life"
Buju Banton, Bounty Killer and Beenie Man served as Collie Buddz's primary influences. "Back when Beenie and Bounty used to war lyrically, seeing clashes wit' Kilimanjaro an all the sound-man an' everything...the whole music scene for me took on a new meaning. Clash thing an' lyrical war became a part of my daily life from early out."
ABOUT COLLIE BUDDZ
Born in New Orleans, raised on the isle of Bermuda with intermittent stays in urban Toronto, Colin Harper is not an easy youth to pin down geographically. His musical alter ego Collie Buddz however, is one of the most firmly grounded voices you may ever encounter. Incorporating influences from hip-hop to soca, Collie's music nevertheless has a rock-solid foundation in reggae - and its power to connect ghetto reality with the highest heights of human aspiration - that is a rarity even in Jamaica.
Born in 1981, at the dawn of the turbulent era signaled by the twin omens of Bob Marley's passing and Ronald Reagan's election, Collie was immersed in the sound system culture of Bermuda aka "The Rock" since the age of 6. "I used to come home from primary school and my brother would always be on the turntables, playin his new 45's an' I'd just be there vibesin'." The evolution of dancehall and sound-clash culture into a movement of it's own in the late 80s and early 90s set the backdrop for young Collie's discovery of his own sonic identity, and the dancehall kings of that generation - Buju Banton, Bounty Killer and Beenie Man served as his primary influences. "Back when Beenie and Bounty used to war lyrically, seeing clashes wit' Kilimanjaro an all the sound-man an' everything...the whole music scene for me took on a new meaning. Clash thing an' lyrical war became a part of my daily life from early out."
The daily operation of trading lyrics in schoolyard clashes quickly gave way to more serious combat as "...people startin sayin 'Ay, Buddz got some lyrics!' From an early age, some of the local sounds on the island wanted to get me on dubplate," says Collie, who stepped into the first of many vocal booths at age 16 to voice customized dubs for some Bermudian sounds. "Sounds was always trying to buss local artists in Bermuda." Consistent encouragement from the various soundmen and engineers he encountered on those dub excursions led Collie to maintain a musical focus and eventually trek to Florida for a degree in audio engineering, a path that ended behind the boards of his own Bermudian studio, jointly run with his older brother (Smokey) and Sneek Success from one of Bermuda's founding sounds, 'Newclear Weapon'. Building riddims for other artists only expanded his love for writing and voicing his own lyrics however. "I used to make these beats an' none of the tunes came out how I pictured an artist sittin' on de riddim, so I decided to start to get in the booth myself again and spit some lyrics. Unless my brother engineerin' for me, I'm runnin from the board to the booth, back to the board!" Like boot camp for a one-man army, that experience molded the signature vocal style that defines Collie Buddz - a songwriter who can lay his own riddim, sing the hook and chat on the verse. "I build de riddim first and while I'm building it I don't try an' think about lyrics 'cause I'm tryin' to focus on the riddim, yunno? I make it sound as best I can and then for a day or two I rest my ears then start de writing process. I come up wit a melody firs' and get that down, then start with the lyrics." The skill with which he compartmentalizes multiple roles in the studio also extends to his easy movement between styles.
A falsetto that combines the singsong lover's rock appeal of a carnival crooner like Rupee with the deeper emotional catch of Bob Marley or Sizzla, Collie's voice sits with equal comfort over the jump-up pace of ragga-soca, 4/4 hip-hop beats or an achingly slow one drop. Most strikingly on tunes like "My Everything" he finds both the drive of dancehall and the bluesy edge of roots in a frenetic polyrhythm built around the Latin horns of David Bowie's "Let's Dance," an up-tempo track that could be just as home in a Trinidad carnival as a UK discotheque. "Some tunes I create are just to show that I could do anything I put my mind to," he explains "to show the versatility of my style." For many artists such versatility can be a curse and only a select few can maintain a distinctive voice when so many styles come so easy. But on tracks like "Moving On," the layers of competing influences seem less like contradictions and more like necessary stages in the development of a larger persona, something like the succession of roles from pimp, to preacher, to something like a revolutionary that formed Malcolm X. Instead of pulling the song apart, the warring elements are all somehow essential to a larger vision reflected in his lyrics: "Feel like me cyan move an' trap in a cage / still searchin' for the words to put 'pon the page..." It's that discovery of timeless roots even within the sweatiest dancehall track that marks the culmination of Collie's growth.
"Nowadays when I go to put on a CD, its old tune: Alton Ellis, The Meditations, The Heptones, Skattalites, Jacob Miller, Eric Monty Morris; love the rockers music. From that I start to teach myself some of the history of this music, that's where I started to come a little more versatile with the singin'...the foundation just straight reality, yunno. I like dancehall, but de foundation and conscious tune really what me love."
Posted by yardFlex at January 11, 2007 11:33 AM
Comments
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Posted by: out an BAD
on January 11, 2007 01:42 PM
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finally the bud come around and the high grade wa him a smoke meck him do this interview like its no joke yaaaaaaaaaaaa, big tune this youth have it a bus the place in a Brooklyn and lots more other places, but it get nuff air play a Brooklyn, y because of the words of the song , and it go so finally the herbs come around a the high grade what me a look for me get by the pounds yyaaaaaaaa when colley budzz cum around a bay ganja man tune a hit pan the compound yyaaaa, something like that it go but it big no f**k, when collie buddz cum around a bay ganja man tune a lick from the sounds yyaaaaaaaaaaaaa, u big my youth u a go far, but in this sight they only care about bounty and Bennie and kartel an mavado and them waist artist who promote gun and killing i say f**k that ganja man tune fe people ears, culture music fe we ears, positive music fe we ears a that we want killa bounty mavado beenie all a u waist dj who know better do better, collie buddz keep up the good work an set it the right way fe the youths. we all need a good follower in out lives as juviniles
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Posted by: DiJahBritish
on January 11, 2007 01:50 PM
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finally di herbz come around
di high grade weh me a look fah mi get it by di pound yea..
Big chune yah now..do u ting yute
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Posted by: zeen den
on January 11, 2007 02:44 PM
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oh nigga please already sh*t!....Collie Budz????.....hahahahahahaha......whateva dude
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Posted by: bronxmon
on January 11, 2007 05:48 PM
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his tune is big but hopefully his next single can be a little better. like a I-wayne or warrior king-- (you know that kind of effect) but I rate him sed ways. first heard it on sirius radio big up pat mckay bobby and jabba and gringo
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Posted by: BoBo
on January 11, 2007 08:21 PM
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Finally di HERBS come aroun! wi eva have it by di pound. big up collie budz, u need fi fawud a yaad & voice some dubz, huh! di tune a lock di streets, big tune. keep di music flowin
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Posted by: southie/site
on January 11, 2007 10:01 PM
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Collie wah mi fi seh, hope a some good works yuh a come wid, wi want di ting stay authentic, yuh affi dj bout di life wat yuh live or else it wont be real, dont dj bout tivoli and jungle if u never live deh, di japanese done a copy wi sound clash ting already jus keep it real and try learn di real ting so u can understand weh wi music cum from, dont try cum inna it fi meka quick buck,peace out////////
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Posted by: Wade Cameron
on January 12, 2007 08:34 AM
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Promote di Herb my yute. Mek dem know seh finally di herb come around. Yu song bad ehhhhh!!
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Posted by: rebel_1Ne aka mistaC
on January 12, 2007 01:07 PM
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big up mista collie buddz ... dun know how it set .. 1Ne ting, through all dis hype, just maintain the humble vibes, remember your beginnings n where it start, and don't get toooooo caught up or fool .. zeeen ... do dat and jah will tek care of da rest ... eZ blood
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Posted by: lil jamaica
on January 12, 2007 01:52 PM
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I like your music sean paul you have the best music cause it's the bomb and I want to see you in person
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Posted by: rebellion
on January 14, 2007 05:53 AM
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wait. kid rock shave him hair and sing dancehall now? whaaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!!
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Posted by: Gallis
on January 15, 2007 01:20 PM
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Collie Buddz ah definitely do him ting but him sound similar to Gentleman dough...
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Posted by: Mad Ranger
on January 18, 2007 03:23 PM
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This a big tune Massive ...Pay attention.dem soon legalize it with tax.....Respect..
Pull Up Pull Up Pull Up Wheeeeeeeeeeeeel!!!
Big Up Collie!! ...Small Island Big Artist!!Keep Di Fire Blazing Sah!!!
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Posted by: kevin thomas
on January 23, 2007 06:46 PM
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I HEARD THIS TRACK WHEN I WAS IN THE GYM COUPLE MONTHS AGO.I STOP HALF WAY IN MEH BENCH PRESS AND LISTEN.MUST SAY I TAUGHT IT WAS A NEGRO, BUT DUDE LACED IT."FINALY THE THINGS COME AROUND"
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Posted by: jacqueline
on February 9, 2007 10:33 AM
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Collie Buddz continue to do what u r doing. Stay sweet and sexy. i hope u finally come around to Trinidad to perform. Love yah baby
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Posted by: Izay Lisinan
on February 11, 2007 10:32 AM
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Collie, respect man. Da high grade weh me a look foh, for true. Much success man, one love.
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Posted by: Full of Questions
on February 15, 2007 08:53 AM
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Wait, alright, Come Around is obviously catchy, but the video? This dude is fronting for the Garrison now? C'mon man, nice appropriation. That just shortchanges those who actually live there. Move to Tivoli and get back to us. Then again, maybe him and Dudus are down? Ugh, say no to whiteboy patois.
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Posted by: Sweet_darkie
on February 27, 2007 06:21 PM
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Big up big up hig up...I heard a couple of your tunes and did not know it was you puttin it down like dat on the tracks...I gotta give you respect styll...Can't wait till you come back around Toronto to perform and mash up de place..
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Posted by: Bill Budds
on February 27, 2007 10:34 PM
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I'm Collie's father, Billy Budds.... and I'm proud of my son. He is truely the Vanilla Ice of reggae....
U go son!!!!
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Posted by: King Ryan-i
on March 2, 2007 06:05 AM
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boy mad tune mashup de place...keep it up...more time.
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Posted by: Da real
on March 3, 2007 06:54 AM
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Anybody can practise sumtin like it mathematics. It have 1000 bredren that have higher grade than collie. But since the man white and the record company say im look marketable im get a record deal one time. Me doh like how the man fakin di accent big time. Di man say im proud to be fro Bermuda, but Bermuda accent doh sound nuttin like how Collie talkin. Be real Collie, done wid di fake imposter ting!
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Posted by: Curlz
on March 15, 2007 09:33 AM
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The first time I heard the tune was on reggae charts. I thought the dude was a Jamaica guy. I must have played the song about five times that morning. The drums and the "yeah I" got me. The fact the he is white is of no significance to me. I loved the tune even before I saw the person. Big up Collie Buddz. I don't know if he'll get another big tune like this one but he'll be remembered for sure. no doubt. Nuff respect from Jamaica.
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Posted by: Teflon
on March 16, 2007 12:47 AM
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A Jamaican sign Collie Buddz to Columbia Records. It tek one full year. Me here seh it was a fight fi get im locks inna paperwork. If is one ting weh mi know is dat where envy live so do di haaaaaterrrrz lolol. Di bwoy nice big up yuh self I.
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Posted by: Fan
on March 21, 2007 06:07 PM
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Collie Buddz has another song 'Mamacita' which got real airplay for Trinidad Carnival. His songs real bad (good). He is performing at Madison Square Garden this Friday 23rd as Machel Montano's opening act. And for all the ppl who think he's an imposter..he was raised in Bermuda. His accent aint fake. Quit hatin on the man cause he white...His CD will be released in June, 2007. Yea, I did my homework on him..He also sang 'Mr Harper'
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Posted by: Natalie
on March 23, 2007 10:30 PM
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SEXY HOT TUNE FROM A HOT SEXY SEXY SEXY MAN!!! DO YOUR THING! RESPECT TO YOUR VERSATILITY AND CREATIVITY. I LOVE HEARING ARTISTS WHO ARE UNIQUE, YOU ARE TRULY AN INSPIRATION...KEEP IT UP, IM LISTENING!!
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Posted by: daphne
on March 27, 2007 04:33 AM
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Are you serious? This guy and his music is beyond horrible. 1) This is not original. Black men have been doing this for quite a long time now all he did was hijack their style. 2) This guy is just another Snow who knows how to pretend and speak faulty patois well enough to fool every one. Capleton, Elephant Man, Sizzla…the list goes on they never got this much attention and they have more than a decade in the dancehall/ reggae industry, with the background to match. This guy comes from Bermuda! This is just another white guy pretending to be something he is not. At least Eminem came out and didn’t try to emulate an entire culture of people he knew he could not relate to. Instead he created his own niche. Now white rappers and other artists trying to infiltrate the black music scene can look at him and see that they don’t have to put on a show and pretend to be something they are not. He is just another white person pulling a sheet over every ones eyes, pretending that he understands black culture, just like Robin Thicke, Vanilla Ice, and now this dude collie buddz. It sickens me that this is black planet and he is getting so much praise on here when it is clear that he’s doing this to exploit the black community. How blind can black people be!! If you want to give white artists credit give the credit to the ones who are true to themselves, the ones who invent their own style, the ones who don’t try to emulate black people just for the sake of sales.
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Posted by: Devantekid
on March 31, 2007 11:41 AM
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I ain't hatin on Collie!!
I was so surprised to find out he was white!
In my mind I was picturing a seasoned dread singing it! ;-)
wicked chune
Lovin Mamacita too! ;-)
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Posted by: CUFISMACKA
on April 6, 2007 01:45 AM
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yo daphne shutup ya mouth zeeeen? He ain't tryin to exploit the black community stop hatin and open up dem ears idiiiiiyacht! COlliebuddz make true music. who cares if hes white stop being a hater and racist and all over his dic*......and oh yea FINALLY DI HERBS COME AROUND stop hatin on di music listen to the sound ye? bad monnn collie bigup
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Posted by: Don Youth
on May 2, 2007 05:59 AM
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Bl***d cl***t...me here dis tune fe weeks pon pirate radio ina England me have fe download de tune...when me see seh a white bwoy on MTV me shock!!! De yout can DJ trust me pon dat...
becaah him white nobody have fe dis de yout...him luv we reggae muzik and culture don't badda dis him fe dat!! blessed Collie Buddz gwaan my yout!! Pass it around yeh!
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Posted by: SHATABWOY
on May 2, 2007 09:52 PM
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I respect Collie budz to the upmost. To comment on Dolphne, I think you are bias with everything you commented on. Especally about Robin thicke. Robin is both black and white. HE IS WHAT HE IS. People mimic our West Indian culture because of our lyrics and creativity. Respect what people are doing to show appreciation for our music. Collie budz is apart of our culture regardless of his race. If later on down the road he becomes a one hit wonder like snow and the rest then so be it. I love his lyrics and flow. Earlier someone mentioned that movado, beenie, and kartel all want to potray the bad mon/gun man image and it's true. Collie is speaking on harmony, love, relaxtion. Big up mi bredren Collie..keep doing u and ya music. JUst keep it real and don't get your fame just for the money. Do it for your passion and love for the music and culture. BUn dii graddeee yah sahh!!!!
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Posted by: Tafa
on June 3, 2007 05:52 PM
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Collie Buddz is a wicked artist period. Black or White, it really makes no difference. As a black man who has been subjected to racisim, I am suprised to see so many people on this board attack the youth because of his race.
Finally is a good song, so is Mamacita and I've met an worked with the youth and he is both humble and talented as a stage performer with a lot of potential for growth. Remember this is just his first album. The future is bright for this artist, close your eyes to color and listen and feel the music.
Its 2007 people wake up; its just one love.
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Posted by: nuhbaanbackacow
on June 13, 2007 09:25 PM
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what do you mean he is not being real, the video come around is about the whole ganja situation in bermy. He explained about the drought and shit, check the youtube videos. Just because the video was shot in jamaica or where ever does not mean he is not being real. Just because you see people dealing shit in the video doesnt mean it is a jamaican thing only you know. People dem a deal shit everywhere man. He could have shot the video in holland or the dutch carribean as well.
Just because the video was shot in jamaica doesnt mean that what he is actually singing about, portrays reality as it is known in Jamaica only you know.
Damian Marley is not from the ghetto either you know, and how many people has he killed?
"raggamuffin sen fi call me fom di bush bungalow bust off trigga finga trigga hand and trigga toe, a two gun mi ab mi bust dem inna stereo" ..... uhm yeah right!!! Wa mek uno fi galaang so check yuself firs.
uno pussyclaat nuh know how di worl a run.
I love damian by the way, i was just trying to make a point. Jah bless!!
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Posted by: RIBBIE BUMBSKANK
on June 18, 2007 02:30 AM
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YO COLLIE BUDDZ,I DONT KNOW WHATS REALLY GOOD WITH YOUR SOUND AS OF YET, I JUST HIPPED MYSELF TO IT. BUT I MUST SAY IM IMPRESSED. AND I AGREE WITH YOUR BUN DOWN DE GOVERNMENT,TEACH DE YOUTH DEM. KEEP THE FIRE ROARIN,AND STAY TRUE TO YOUR OWN ONE SELF...YEAHH AND LET ME KNOW WHEN THEY COME AROUND..REEESSSSPECT!!!
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Posted by: RIBBIE BUMBSKANK
on June 18, 2007 02:36 AM
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ALL THE HATERS!! LETS NOT FORGET YELLOW MAN
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Posted by: jazzy
on June 19, 2007 03:05 PM
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bumba clot!!!!!!!!!! me want a high grade ting right now to bun dem pussy holesss dem! Ganjajjjjjaaaaa, give me some weeedddddddddd mannnnnnn
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Posted by: Bermy Man
on June 26, 2007 07:17 AM
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Um saying, the man a sell off mad. But as a bermy man I can testify that we sound more British than Jamaican.
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Posted by: ras li
on June 28, 2007 12:51 PM
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bad man you kill a some bati boy anytime big up from kenya you know from mama africa we listen to you and we afi keep di fire burning.
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Posted by: travel
on July 3, 2007 04:02 PM
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