[0:13]Good evening, Miss Carroll. Good evening. I hope you might be coming in, you see. I have a very nice table. Won't you join me? Well, that's very nice of you, but I have to Thank you.
[0:43]It started in the Congo.
[0:49]Where drums beat night and day.
[0:54]It started in the Congo. Where the natives weave away.
[1:10]The beat of the bongo, the beat of the bongo. For down there in the Congo. The rhythm makes you sway.
[1:29]It came to San Domingo, the rhythm so grand. We down in San Domingo, the rhythm swept the land. The beat of the bongo and the bongo from the Congo and now from San Domingo, I bring a bongo band in San Domingo. The bongo bongo is quite a dingo in San Domingo. That's why the kango the bongo bongo when they find dango in San Domingo. Ole! Charlie and Jenna, allow me to introduce to you the most terrific, the most sensational, who is my rise, who's my rise in the world? The best bigest bongo players in history.
[2:19]In San Domingo. Viva! The bongo bongo. Viva, viva. It's quite a dingo. Agua. In San Domingo. Agua. That's where the gang go. Olé! The bongo bongo. Viva, viva. When they fandango, agua, in San Domingo. Olé, olé, olé. Ole. Olay. Olay. Olay. Olay. Olay. Oh, hey, you. Hey, you. Hey, you. Hey, you. Ho, ho.
[3:03]The cast nets they get a play cast nets make you sway. The bongo bongo. I I bongo. I I bongo. And you'll be kigo. I I kigo. In San Domingo. Bongo bongo. If you know how to sway, you can learn how to play just the way that they play in San Domingo. If you beat when you're hung, just repeat it on a drum and they'll know that you're from old San Domingo. Bongo bongo. Did you say bongo? Bongo bongo bongo bongo bongo bongo bongo. I I I I I. Go where to gang go. Bongo bongo. And you pandango in San Domingo. Just bongo bongo. Bongo bongo. Bongo bongo.
[3:59]Bango. Did you say Bango? Well, that's across a cow. A gangster. 17, 21, 25. You got a Jack? Yep. You got nine. 18. 27. 36. I got a Jack. You got a four. You got a nine. You got a 10. Yep. Come again. A 17, 24, 31, 35. B i n g o b i n g o Bongo!
[4:29]Bongo. Bye, bye. Two, three, four, five, six. Ole!



