Van Morrison and Tom Jones - Cry for home video free download


145,905
Duration: 04:12
Uploaded: 2011/07/07

Just an absolutely great tune.

Comments

9 years ago

fawltyadder55

When Van says listen we all listen to the master

9 years ago

Valeria Cenerelli

Merci <3

9 years ago

MsZelda113

I thought Tom doing "I'm not feeling it anymore" was the ultimate, but then there's this. Fab!!

9 years ago

Denise Hamel

Every day I find another GREAT one

9 years ago

Andrásné Tóth

Van Morrison and Tom Jones - Cry for home

9 years ago

Anne Hodges

Two Long Time Greats Who Have Lost NOTHING In Their Most Perfect Voices!! What a Duet....Blues, Gospel & Superb Voices Combined!! I love, love this song!! 

9 years ago

David Mitchell

I like this better than their version of Sometimes We Cry : )

10 years ago

Eduard van Maurik

I love It !

10 years ago

ALAIN DEWAELE

TOP TRACK

10 years ago

Fatima Ricci

Very good.....Fantastic!!!!!

10 years ago

harryor33

Those two albums gave birth to Avalon Sunset. :-)

11 years ago

Patrick Jordan

Two fantastic voices, awesome song.Van Morrison and Tom Jones - Cry for home

11 years ago

zoedaria

Yes/ i was born in Kellswater where a lot of Ulster Scots sttled etc and lived in BAllymena. Van was born in Belfast

11 years ago

shanaye hughes

{2} much as the modern day English did in thier invasions of Britain did after the Romans had left. Saxons, Angles, Jutes and many more tribes that eventualy became to be known as English. What is the difference between the disunited Celtic tribes and the disunited tribes that eventually made up England....none

11 years ago

shanaye hughes

{1}Who claimed that there was a mass Celtic invasion of these lslands.? The Celtic peoples of central Europe { or Kelts as known by the ancient Greeks} were not one nation but an amalgamation of several or even scores of tribes united by by nothing more than language and custom. Thier intergration with the natives of these lslands took hundreds of years and even up to the Roman invasion they still operated in a tribal system.

11 years ago

anglobrit smyth

it goes on and on ... no proof of celtic people

11 years ago

anglobrit smyth

There is a problem with what is written in these ancient texts. In the mid-twentieth century, when Irish archaeologists went looking for evidence to support the stories, they found no material evidence in Ireland to uphold the theory of a mass invasion of Celtic people at the time claimed in the texts or at any time for that matter.

11 years ago

anglobrit smyth

Some innovative authors could trace a chieftain's or king's family back to Noah and the flood. This was not a practice unique to Ireland. Origin myths are typical of any society that wants to make legitimate claims to a noble lineage. The Romans did precisely the same thing when their early writers invented a connection with them and the ancient Greek world, giving the Romans a position of legitimacy within classical Mediterranean civilization.

11 years ago

anglobrit smyth

im afraid its an origin myth ..... Much of what we think of as being popular Irish culture originated in the nineteenth century. For example, Irish dance as we now know it was "developed" in the nineteenth century when set dancing was first introduced. Irish dancing masters adapted continental dances, like the quadrille, to the style of solo step dancing, which was introduced into Ireland in the eighteenth century from Europe

11 years ago

anglobrit smyth

This word coupled with anything Irish is now commonplace and accepted with total validity. But how valid an assumption is this? How truly "Celtic" is Ireland? This question is one of the most significant ones addressed by modem day Irish archaeologists and historians and has some very interesting answers.

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