Kimber's Men were formed in the summer of 2001 and in those early days they… Read Full Bio ↴Kimber's Men were formed in the summer of 2001 and in those early days they comprised Neil Kimber - ship’s bosun, John Bromley - ship’s cook, Joe Stead - ship’s doctor, and Roger ‘Tonky’ Hepworth the ship’s cabin boy. But in the summer of 2004 Roger was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer and sadly he passed away in April 2005. Kimber’s Men realized they would never sound the same again. Roger is missed not only for his wonderful harmonies and guitar playing, but for his friendship and advice always warmly given.
Neil and Roger had been singing together as a duo in West Yorkshire since 1966 whilst John burst upon the folk scene a little later in 1972 as a member of Hebric. John, who has a voice similar to Paul Robeson also sings with the local operatic society in Halifax and is a member of The Bradshaw Mummers who can be seen in quaint outfits throughout most summers at various festivals acting out the important chapters of English history. John sang lead bass with Northern Ballet at Leeds Playhouse for the winter season of Mozart’s Requiem. Meanwhile Joe Stead had begun a professional career in London in 1966 which eventually took him to various parts of the world and more recently the first Valparaiso Festival of the Sea in Chile. Joe has performed in concert in America with Pete Seeger twice and also sung at a garden party with Paul Robeson in London in 1958. Neil also sang in concert with Pete Seeger when he and Joe crossed the Atlantic with Paul Downes to perform in a concert in New Jersey to raise funds for the Delaware Valley River Project.
There are now two new members in the group. David Buckley joined Kimber's Men at the end of April 2006. David is an actor and a singer who has performed in musicals and with the Halifax Operatic Society. They found him playing the part of Captain Smith in 'Titanic the Musical'. David sings tenor harmony. He has recently written a song called 'I will always be there' which may become as popular as 'Don't take the heroes'.
In June 2007 Kimber's Men increased their number to 5 when 'Gaz' joined the quartet.
Neil and Roger had been singing together as a duo in West Yorkshire since 1966 whilst John burst upon the folk scene a little later in 1972 as a member of Hebric. John, who has a voice similar to Paul Robeson also sings with the local operatic society in Halifax and is a member of The Bradshaw Mummers who can be seen in quaint outfits throughout most summers at various festivals acting out the important chapters of English history. John sang lead bass with Northern Ballet at Leeds Playhouse for the winter season of Mozart’s Requiem. Meanwhile Joe Stead had begun a professional career in London in 1966 which eventually took him to various parts of the world and more recently the first Valparaiso Festival of the Sea in Chile. Joe has performed in concert in America with Pete Seeger twice and also sung at a garden party with Paul Robeson in London in 1958. Neil also sang in concert with Pete Seeger when he and Joe crossed the Atlantic with Paul Downes to perform in a concert in New Jersey to raise funds for the Delaware Valley River Project.
There are now two new members in the group. David Buckley joined Kimber's Men at the end of April 2006. David is an actor and a singer who has performed in musicals and with the Halifax Operatic Society. They found him playing the part of Captain Smith in 'Titanic the Musical'. David sings tenor harmony. He has recently written a song called 'I will always be there' which may become as popular as 'Don't take the heroes'.
In June 2007 Kimber's Men increased their number to 5 when 'Gaz' joined the quartet.
Spoken Introduction
Kimber's Men Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Spoken Introduction' by these artists:
The Bill Evans Yo yo yo nigga Swinging through the forests of the jungles …
We have lyrics for these tracks by Kimber's Men:
Barrett's Privateers Oh, the year was 1778 How I wish I was in…
BULLY IN THE ALLEY Oh help me Bob, I′m bully in the alley Wey hey,…
Darkest before the dawn They say it's darkest before the dawn This thought keeps us…
Don't Take the Heroes They can't believe it in Penzance town They've heard that th…
God moves on the water God moves on the water April the fourteenth day God moves on…
Leave her Johnny leave her I thought I heard the Old Man say Leave her, Johnny,…
Northwest Passage Ah, for just one time I would take the Northwest…
Sam's Gone Away How I wish I was a cabin boy, on board…
SHENANDOAH Oh Shenandoah, I long to hear ya (Away, you rolling river) O…
The Robert Whithworth Captain Gibson hear our plea Six men's lives are in peril…
The Robert Whitworth Captain Gibson hear our plea Six men′s lives are in peril…
Tow rope girls Their ship′s leaving Fisker with cargoes of grain, Hartigan …
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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Jack Robson
I've watched this many dozens of times, and just noticed a beautiful little detail:
The way Tom spins the barrel round at the beginning of the scene- he wouldn't have bothered if it was fully loaded- he'd have already checked his gun was ready before leaving the Garrison.
He only had one bullet in the chamber the whole time. He's a gambling man. It was just one bullet that meant anything in this moment.
This, for me, is the single most iconic moment in drama of the 21st Century so far. It's so gut-wrenching; the shit we all get ourselves into, just because fate said so.
I hope Cillian is alright nowdays! He's such a wonderful person and a pure method-actor- which means he's also got a lot of shirin hisbown mind. I'm bipolar myself, and that's my diagnosis of Tommy Shelby, and perhaps Cillian too.
You live by the sword, you die by the sword.
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Alister Bill
@FBI Agent 00
kartik singh
What's the music in the beginning
David Kim
Love this scene. Really shows you the difference between leadership of Tommy and Billy. Billy fired at Tommy and Tommy's crew stepped forward, trying to protect him. Tommy fired at Billy and nobody stepped forward, his crew just stared at him. When Tommy told them to all go home, that is exactly what Billy's crew did. They didn't respect Billy's leadership and probably figured life would be better and fine without him anyways. They wanted Billy dead.
Masterful.
Horror King
Yh and that they are just minions to a probably tyrannical leader but Tommy has a family, true soldiers, who care for each other and love and respect their leader
Chris Dawson
Just bad writing lmao.
Horror King
@Chris Dawson wat u on about bad writing
Chris Dawson
@Horror King It is self evident.
Horror King
@Chris Dawson I don’t think it is
Maggie
I really miss the vibe that John had, no one can replace him. This scene will always remain one of the greatest ones. Everything is perfect. I miss Freddie as well, I want them both back.