Cammag (Manx pronunciation: [kʰamaɡ]) is a team sport originating on the Isle of Man. It is closely related to the Scottish game of shinty and is similar to the Irish hurling. Once the most widespread sport on Man, it ceased to be played around 1900 after the introduction of association football, though it has experienced a revival in the 21st century.
Equipment involves a stick (Manx: camman, meaning "little curved thing") and a ball (crick or crig) with anything between four and two hundred players. Sometimes whole towns and villages took part, or even played each other. The cammag can be any stick with a bent end, and is similar in design to the caman in shinty, both unlike the Irish camán, having no blade. A gorse wood cammag, if of suitable size and shape, was a very much treasured possession. The crick can be made from cork or wood, and varied from circular to egg-shaped, sized from approximately two inches in circumference to the size of a fist. Old accounts tell that the crick was sometimes covered in cloth or leather.
All i need is somebody to touch me and hold me again
wanna feel like i did when i lay in your arms, oh yeah
i say you left me alone and i just cannot take it, i hate
all i need is somebody to hold me...
Somebody, somebody to touch me and hold me,
somebody, somebody to love me and kiss me.
All i need is devotion and one strong emotion again
gonna find me a friend and he'll help me to mend, oh yeah
i say i'm missing your love and i just can't deny it, i
tried it
all i need is somebody to hold me...
Somebody, somebody to touch me and hold me,
somebody, somebody to love me and kiss me.
Somebody, somebody to heed me and need me,