We crack and roll in the bar rooms
It's a glorious calling
If you've got nothing much to lose
And you can take it further still
That's all you really want to
Now you will, you will
So what you waiting for?
There's nothing waiting for you here no more
(Chorus)
If you go
It will be hard to come back
If you go
It will be hard
Hard to come back
It's hard to come back
It's hard to come back, you know
It's hard to come back
Again
(Escudo
Escudo requisar)
This ain't your house
This ain't your name on the front door
She ain't your true love
You ain't the one you were before
And it will never be enough for you
To go about doing what you used to do
You gonna need something more
You best be headed for the door
(Chorus)
It will be hard to come back
it will be hard you know
Etc.

Madrugada is a Norwegian alternative rock band formed in the town of Stokmarknes in 1993. Its key members have included Sivert Høyem (vocals), Robert Burås (guitar), and Frode Jacobsen (bass). After Burås' death on 12 July 2007, Høyem and Jacobsen decided to finish recording what was to be their final album in the original lineup. On 21 January 2008, the band released Madrugada and announced that they would split after one last tour. They performed their final concert on 15 November 2008.
In June 2018, it was announced that Høyem, Jacobsen, and Lauvland Pettersen had reformed the band for a series of shows in 2019.
According to Anders Kaasen of Allmusic, the band was noted for "its bareboned blues-inspired alt-rock" at the end of the 1990s.
There's an irony in using an adolescent term like "lameness" when criticizing another writer's vocabulary or literary prowess.
I can readily imagine being 40 years younger, downing cheap draft beer in a bar and dancing like crazy to this.
Most Norwegians can speak English better than many English Canadians.
Righteous unilinguism is not an issue.
I find that most Norwegians speak English better than many English. We have a horrendous bigotry when it comes to language education.
Like us in England too? I'm a little surprised.
I lived across the street from a Norweigen family and yes their English was very good.
I find that most Norwegians speak English better than many English. We have a horrendous bigotry when it comes to language education.
Like us in England too? I'm a little surprised.
I lived across the street from a Norweigen family and yes their English was very good.