5674
members
472
SoundCloud
783
Spotify
51
Spotify Playlists
111
BandCamp
22
Peertracks
277
YouTube
135
Musicoin
21
DTube
Please see the FAQ if autoplay is not working on Musicoin tracks  
Listening from:     Genre:
      Note: You are NOT logged in so won't earn credits.
A Tiny Tall Tale




Lyrically a fun track "A Tiny Tall Tale" is built around the first blues riff that I could play on a guitar. The song is a mix of country, blues, folk, americana and honky-tonk.

Lyrics

Once upon a dark and moonlit night,
Two dead men prepared themselves to fight.
Back to back they faced each other’s frown,
Drew their knives and shot each other down.
(Back to back they faced each other,
Drew their knives and shot each other. Ooh!)

One was blind and the other couldn`t see,
So they chose a monkey for a referee.
A blind man went away to see fair play.
A dumb man went away to shout “Hooray!”
(A blind man went to see fair play,
A dumb man went to shout “Hooray!” Ooh!)

A deaf old cop who heard the silent noise,
Pulled his gun and stabbed both of the boys.
If you don`t think my tale is really tall,
Ask the blind, he’s the one who saw it all!
(If you don`t think his tail is tall,
Ask the blind, who saw it all! Ooh!)

Yes, it’s true!

I may be wrong, but it seems as if the drummer is gone.
As it turns out, he won’t be the only one.
It`s sad but true, those eggs won’t shake themselves.
It won’t take long and there’ll be nobody else.




Bio

Ortwin Wendt is the driving force behind the passionate, fun, and genre-free project that is United Duality. Based in Celle, Germany, Wendt leads with skilful guitar work and strength of songwriting. In addition though, he fills out every single with layers of instrumentation and colour – often self-crafted, often through collaborations with other vocalists and musicians; always to beautifully engaging and uplifting results.
Despite a notably varied string of influences, United Duality makes music with clear links to and inspiration from the likes of The Beatles and other pop-rock creatives of the sixties and seventies. You can hear this approach across releases, even among such strong eclecticism – from the experimental rock soundscape of Purple Heron to the collaborative folk delicacy of See-Saw, there’s something enjoyably familiar about the United Duality sound; an admirable sense of identity runs throughout everything.







Add To Playlist