Thursday, November 29, 2012

More music from TVZ

Kim Ruehl on the latest from the late Townes Van Zandt.

"Buddhist country music"

Naila Francis serves up an interesting profile and update of Tracy Grammer.

Sean Tyrrell "Lights of Little Christmas" "Mattie" "The Rising of the Moon" "Cry of a Dreamer"

Sean Tyrrell is one of the more innovative singer-songwriters in that he creates his own material but is also known for adapting the poems of others to music.

Below is the best Tyrrell I could locate on YouTube:

"Lights Of Little Christmas"



When the snow lies on the hillside like the ghost of being born
And the wind makes praying fingers in the shadows of the thorn
There’s someone I often think of wishing, somehow she’d return
Though I know she’s in some city watching coloured neons burn

In the still and silent midnight thoughts unbidden come to mind
Shades of pictures in an album labelled,‘Those were better times.’
And that girl she smiles out sweetly, sitting pretty in the frame
Blowing out her penny candles and I hear her call my name

Chorus
And the lights of Little Christmas shine so brightly in the west
Saying please come home we miss you
and we wish you all the best
yes, we wish you all the best

Now another winter marches ‘cross the fields of frozen stone
And another Little Christmas finds me quietly at home
Til the telephone starts ringing and I go totake the call
Someone asking, ‘Do you know me? Do you know this voice at all?

Never in a lifetime could I be made to forget
In a journey of a thousand miles I remember every step
And, yes, I know those sweet lips that are so close to the phone
Is she here or in America? Is she home or is she gone?

Chorus
And the lights of Little Christmas shine so brightly in the west
Saying please come home we miss you
and we wish you all the best
yes, we wish you all the best

 She says I just got into Shannon and I think I’m home to stay
Could you come and pick me up down here. There’s a word you’ve got to say

And I’ve barely put the phone down and the keys are in my hand
And each little light that I pass by says right here’s your promised land.
Yes, each little light that I pass by says right here’s your promised land.

+++++

"Mattie" 



Mattie walked out on a frozen night
He was headin’ for the pub and he had no delight
His head down on the railroad track
And his old cow Delia sad lowin’ him back.

He met with a dark and staggerin’ man
as he passed him by shouted back at him:
“Mattie can’t you see what’s become of me?
I cannot feel the fin.”

“The very last house that I have left
Half impressed with my rhymes
They’re now all dead to me
All I’ve got left is the beat of the stagger
Headin’ down the Curra Line.”

But Mattie passed on as quick as he could
He couldn’t stand such a drunken man sober
All he wanted was the light in the bar
The “Nightingale” and the “Wild Rover”.

When he came in
They were sayin’: “Now you’re back
Did Delia drive you out
With your spoutin’ and your swearin’?
We don’t want to hear about Bunker Hayden
But later you can give us the ‘Girls of Kinkane’.”

The fear-a-ti eyed him warily
As he handed him his first jar of porter
He says: “You must have seen the bishop’s ghost tonight
To put the dry look back in your eye.”

But Mattie would not be taken in
By their jibin’ and their regalin’
He found himself a freshly blown crew
And fell in with their sport and their bailin’.

But as he was going home, in the very same spot
Where he met his dark familiar
He seen him comin’ back down the line
And he was bright, strange and fine.

As he passed him by Mattie threw out his arms
Tryin’ to grab hold of his likeness.
In the morning all they found was a frozen corpse
At the butt of the Curra Line.

And at the wake
They were lashin’down
“The drops of brandy-“
“The old fashioned habit-“
In the church they were lashin’ down pounds and fivers
So Mattie would be fine in the old by and by.

+++++

"The Rising Of The Moon" 



Tyrrell re-writes the original lyrics -- have yet to find his verses.

+++++

"Cry Of A Dreamer"



+++++

Friday, November 23, 2012

The Waifs "London Still" "Bridal Train"

Not real familiar with The Waifs out of Oz but here are a pair of their songs that you will enjoy:

"London Still"


I wonder if you can pick up My accent on the phone When I call across the country When I call across the world I see you in my kitchen I can picture you now As you toast to your small town And you drink the happy hour I'm in London still I'm in London still I'm in London still I took the tube over to Camden To wander around I bought some funky records With that old motown sound And I miss you like my left arm That's been lost in a war Today I dream of home and not of London anymore I'm in London still I'm in London still Yeah I'm in London still You know it's ok [ From: http://www.metrolyrics.com/london-still-lyrics-the-waifs.html ] I'm kinda happy here for now I think I've finally grown up And got myself a love of now If I ever come home and I, I think I will I hope you're gonna want to hang At my place on Sundays still Oh yeah I hope you will 'Cause I'm in London still You know we got it sorted We really got it down To a fine art on Sunday In our sleepy Sunday town I wonder what I'm missing I think of songs I've never heard I'm dreaming of your voices And I'm dreaming of your herb I'm in London still I'm in London still I'm in London still Oh I'm in London still La la la la London still I'm in London...

Read more: THE WAIFS - LONDON STILL LYRIC

Wonder if you can pick up my
Accent on the phone
When I call across the country
When I call across the world
I -- see you in my kitchen
I can picture you now
As you toast to your small town
When you drink the happy hour
I’m in London still
I’m in London still
I'm in London still

I took the tube over to Camden

To wander around
I bought some funky records
With that old Motown sound
And I miss you like my left arm
That's been lost in a war
Today I dream of home and not of London anymore
I'm in London still
I'm in London still
Yeah I'm in London still

You know it’s okay

I’m kinda happy here for now
I think I've finally grown up
And got myself a love of now
And if I ever come home
And I, I think I will
I hope you're gonna wanna hang at my place on Sunday still
Oh yeah I hope you will
Cause I'm in London still

You know we got it sorted, yeah

We really got it down
To a fine art on Sunday
In a sleepy Sunday town
I wonder what I'm missing
I think of songs I've never heard
I'm dreaming of your voices
And I'm dreaming of your hurt
I'm in London still
I'm in London still
I'm in London still

Oh I'm in London still

la-la-la-la-la London still
I'm in London
and

"Bridal Train"



Telegram arrived today
It's time to catch the Monterey
Cause the man I wed he waits for me
And the daughter that he's yet to see

U.S. navy beamed its message

will deliver brides on a one way passage
it made big news across the nation
the bridal train leaves from Perth station

All the girls around Australia

married to a yankee sailor
your fare is paid across the sea
to the home of the brave and the land of the free

from west to east the young girls came

all aboard the bridal train
It was a farewell crossing of her land
she's gone to meet her sailor man

no time for sad goodbyes

she held her mother as she cried
and then waited there in the freo rain
to climb aboard the bridal train

well she was holding her future in her hand

the faded photo of a man
catch a sailor if you can
the war bride leaves her southern land

All the girls around Australia

married to a yankee sailor
your fare is paid across the sea
to the home of the brave and the land of the free

from west to east the young girls came

all aboard the bridal train
it was a farewell crossing of her land
she's gone to meet her sailor man

this is the story of the starry nights

through desert plains and city lights
through burning sun and driving rain
she wept aboard the bridal train

All the girls around Australia

married to a yankee sailor
your fare is paid across the sea
to the home of the brave and the land of the free

from west to east the young girls came

all aboard the bridal train
it was a farewell crossing over land
she's gone to meet her sailor man
I wonder if you can pick up My accent on the phone When I call across the country When I call across the world I see you in my kitchen I can picture you now As you toast to your small town And you drink the happy hour I'm in London still I'm in London still I'm in London still I took the tube over to Camden To wander around I bought some funky records With that old motown sound And I miss you like my left arm That's been lost in a war Today I dream of home and not of London anymore I'm in London still I'm in London still Yeah I'm in London still You know it's ok [ From: http://www.metrolyrics.com/london-still-lyrics-the-waifs.html ] I'm kinda happy here for now I think I've finally grown up And got myself a love of now If I ever come home and I, I think I will I hope you're gonna want to hang At my place on Sundays still Oh yeah I hope you will 'Cause I'm in London still You know we got it sorted We really got it down To a fine art on Sunday In our sleepy Sunday town I wonder what I'm missing I think of songs I've never heard I'm dreaming of your voices And I'm dreaming of your herb I'm in London still I'm in London still I'm in London still Oh I'm in London still La la la la London still I'm in London...

Read more: THE WAIFS - LONDON STILL LYRICS

Friday, November 16, 2012

James Keelaghan "Cold Missouri Water"

James Keelaghan has a myriad of albums and songs out but he will always be remembered for this one:

"Cold Missouri Water"



My name is Dodge, but then you know that
It's written on the chart there at the foot end of the bed
They think I'm blind, I can't read it
I've read it every word, and every word it says is death
So, confession - is that the reason that you came
Get it off my chest before I check out of the game
Since you mention it, well there's thirteen things I'll name
Thirteen crosses high above the cold Missouri waters

August 'Forty-Nine, north Montana
The hottest day on record, the forest tinder dry
Lightning strikes in the mountains
I was crew chief at the jump base, I prepared the boys to fly
Pick the drop zone, C-47 comes in low
Feel the tap upon your leg that tells you go
See the circle of the fire down below
Fifteen of us dropped above the cold Missouri waters

Gauged the fire, I'd seen bigger
So I ordered them to sidehill and we'd fight it from below
We'd have our backs to the river
We'd have it licked by morning even if we took it slow
But the fire crowned, jumped the valley just ahead
There was no way down, headed for the ridge instead
Too big to fight it, we'd have to fight that slope instead
Flames one step behind above the cold Missouri waters

Sky had turned red, smoke was boiling
Two hundred yards to safety, death was fifty yards behind
I don't know why I just thought it
I struck a match to waist high grass running out of time
Tried to tell them, Step into this fire I set
We can't make it, this is the only chance you'll get
But they cursed me, ran for the rocks above instead
I lay face down and prayed above the cold Missouri waters

And when I rose, like the phoenix
In that world reduced to ashes there were none but two survived
I stayed that night and one day after
Carried bodies to the river, wonder how I stayed alive
Thirteen stations of the cross to mark to their fall
I've had my say, I'll confess to nothing more
I'll join them now, because they left me long before
Thirteen crosses high above the cold Missouri waters
Thirteen crosses high above the cold Missouri shore 


+++++

But he certainly has others. Here's another elegant Keelaghan song:

"Kiri's Piano"



Of all of Kiri Ito's joys, the thing she loved the best
Was to play her prized piano when the sun had gone to rest
I used to hear the notes drift down along the silent water
As Kiri played the notes and scales for her dear sons and daughters

Now me I played piano though not as good as Kiri
She went in for that long-haired stuff but my, she played it pretty
The old piano had a tone would set my heart to aching
It always sounded sweetest though when it was Kiri playing

In December when the seventh fleet was turned to smoke and ashes
The order came to confiscate their fishing boats and caches
And Kiri's husband forced to go and work in labour camps
And Kiri left alone and fend and hold the fort as best she can

But the music did not drift as often from up the cove at Kiri's house
And when it did it sounded haunted, played with worry, played with doubt
For Kiri knew that soon she too would be compelled to leave
And the old upright would stay behind and Kiri she would grieve

I loaded Kiri on the bus with stoic internees
The crime that they were guilty of was that they were not like me
And if I was ashamed I didn't know it at the time
They were flotsam on the wave of war, they were no friends of mine

I went up to Kiri's house to tag all their belongings
And set them out for auctioneers who'd claim them in the morning
One piece that I thought I'd keep and hold back for myself
Was that haunting ivory upright that Kiri played so well

But Kiri had not left it there for me to take as plunder
She'd rolled it down onto the dock and on into the harbor
The old upright in strangers' hands was a thought she couldn't bear
So she consigned it to the sea to settle the affair

So many years have come and gone since Kiri's relocation
I look back now upon that time with shame and resignation
For Kiri knew what I did not that if we must be free
Then sometimes we must sacrifice to gain our dignity

++++

And another:
 
"Hillcrest Mine"



Down in the mines of the Crowsnest Pass
It's the men who die in labour
Sweating coal from the womb of the pit
It's the smell of life they savour
And in that mine young man you'll find
A wealth of broken dreams
As long and as dark and as black and as wide
As the coal in the Hillcrest seam

CHORUS
They say you don't go
Say you don't go down in the Hillcrest Mine
They say you don't go
Say you don't go down in the Hillcrest Mine
'Cuz it's one short step
You might leave this world behind
And they say you don't go
Say you don't go down in the Hillcrest Mine.

I've heard it whispered in the light of dawn
That mountain sometimes moves
That bodes ill for the morning shift
And you know what you're gonna lose
Don't go my son where The deep coal runs
Turn your back to the mine on the hill
'Cuz if the dust and the dark and the gas don't getcha
Then the goons and the bosses will

CHORUS

Well son I'm gonna open up, I'm gonna have my say
You'll get no peace from the Hillcrest Mine
'Cept the peace of any early grave
Go out and work for The workers' rights
Go work for the workers' needs
Don't stay down here to toil for your buck
To be a tool for the owner's greed

CHORUS

CHORUS


+++++

Plus,

 "McConville"



I work down at McConville's, it's the pub behind the square
If ever you're in Portadown, anyone can point you there
We have lagers ales and porters, but the thing that brings them in
Is the whiskey that McConville brews that where this all begins

IN all the years I've worked there and for fifty years before
Not a bottle of the sweet stuff ever walked outside the door
Cause McConville laid the rule down, it was honoured till today
Drink your fill while at the bar, but the bottle has to stay

Six or seven years ago when young Jimmy first came by
He was looking for a local, we were the third place that he'd tried
Her looked around, no ferns…, no telly blaring from the bar
And once he tried the whiskey he never strayed too far

He'd come in after dinner for an hour maybe more
Play some cards and talk and joke, 'cause that's what a local's for
Before he'd leave most nights, because the bottles had to stay
He'd ask me for a whiskey just to see him on his way

Three days ago his mate come in, he said Jimmy took a fall
From a roof that he was working on, he had no chance at all
And today after the funeral, after burying young Jim
They came here to his second home, the mourners crowded in

Then I did a thing I never thought I'd do 'til it was done
I took a bottle from the shelf, I held it up for everyone
Rules are made for breaking, tonight the whisky leaves the bar
An auction for the family, who'll give me £50 to start

At £500 the bidding stopped, no, you couldn't hear a sound
But for the roar as Jimmy's mates stepped up and laid their pay packs down
And I can't believe I did it, never thought I'd see the day
That I'd hand someone the bottle and then watch it walk away

As I was heading home tonight I passed the grave yard by
I sure that I heard singing and silhouetted on the sky
Were Jimmy's friends and they were pouring something on his grave
A little offering for young Jim to help him on his way 


I work down at McConville's, it's the pub behind the square
If ever you're in Portadown, anyone can point you there
 

John Gorka's best

John Gorka is a member of the folk music pantheon, a well-earned residency. Posting his legacy songs is quite the chore in narrowing them down to a workable number. Here's the best shot (in no particular order):

"Love is Our Cross To Bear"



I didn't know where to look for you last night
I didn't know where to find you
I didn't know how I could touch that light
That's always gathering behind you

I didn't know that I would find a way
To find you in the morning
But love can pull you out of yesterday
As it takes you without warning

I want to be a long time friend to you
I want to be a long time known
Not one of your memory's used-to-bes
A summer's fading song

CHORUS:
It's from me, it's to you
For your eyes
It's a weight, a wonder that is wise
I am here, you are there
Love is our cross to bear

I know I'll think of us upon that hill
With the golden moon arising
And the stars will fall around us still
While the love is realizing

And so it is until we meet again
And I throw my arms around you
You can count the gray hairs in my head
I'll still be thankful that I found you


CHORUS:
It's from me, it's to you
For your eyes
It's a weight, a wonder that is wise
I am here, you are there
Love is our cross to bear


+++++

 "I'm From New Jersey"



I'm from New Jersey
I don't expect too much
If the world ended today
I would adjust

I'm from New Jersey

No I don't talk that way
I watched too much TV
When I was young

I'm from New Jersey

My mom's Italian
I've read those mafia books
We don't belong

There are girls from New Jersey

Who have that great big hair
They're found in shopping malls
I will take you there

I'm from New Jersey

It's not like Texas
There is no mystery
I can't pretend

I'm from New Jersey

It's like Ohio
But even more so
Imagine that

I know which exit

And where I'm bound
The tolls on the parkway
They will slow you down

New Jersey people

They will surprise you
Cause they're not expected
To do too much

They will try harder

They may go further
Cause they never think
That they are good enough

I'm from New Jersey

I don't expect too much
If the world ended today
I would adjust
I would adjust
I would adjust


+++++

 "The Gypsy Life"



There is nothing in my head today
Nothing awful there to ponder or confuse me
Go ahead in what you have to say
And I will listen as I listen to the news

I know the whole truth there is horrible

It's better if you take a little at a time
Too much and you are not portable
Not enough and you'll be making happy rhymes


Chorus
You might like the gypsy life
You judge your progress by the phases of the moon
Get your compass and your sharpest knife
People love you when they know you're leaving
Soon

If you choose to settle in one place

You may be harder over on the ones you love
Like a tree without the growing space
You will be taking from below and from above

Chorus:

You might like the gypsy life
You judge your progress by the phases of the moon
Get your compass and your sharpest knife
People love you when they know you're leaving
Soon


There is nothing in my head today
I'll cross the river people as I cross my heart
The pigeon bridges are a place to stay
I will go under as I try to do my part

Chorus 

You might like the gypsy life
You judge your progress by the phases of the moon
Get your compass and your sharpest knife
People love you when they know you're leaving
Soon
 


+++++

"Armed With A Broken Heart"



Take this as a warning
To stay away from me
Because the man that you used to know
Is not the man that you're going to see
Someday we may laugh at this
Someday we may be friends
But for now you can keep your distance
Stay away till the pieces mend

(2)

This sudden loneliness has made me dangerous
Please don't watch me while I fall apart
'Cause I'm sad and I'm angry
And armed with a broken heart

(3)

And what will get me through the night
Is what I'll use with all my might
And to some peace I have a right
But I pay so dearly

And at my age I should be wise

Now I'm untying all those ties
The evidence is in the eyes
That should see so clearly
I once saw so clearly

(4)

You know I will say anything
If it will keep you away
But I don't know what I would do
If you said you were gonna stay
Don't do me any favors
Don't try to ease the pain
Won't you please let me hate you now
So I won't fall for you again

(Repeat stanza 3, then stanza 2)


+++++

"People My Age"
 
 

People my age
Have started looking gross
I cannot say all
And I shouldn't say most
I've seen 'em in the grocery
I've seen 'em up close
And people my age
Have started looking gross

People my age

Are showing some wear
There's holes where their teeth was
And their heads have gone bare
Their brains are shrinking
Faces sinking into fat
And as for the mirror
We won't be looking into that

People my age

Have started looking gross
Maybe not in Colorado
Or up the Silicon Coast
Back in Pennsylvania
I'd eat scrapple on toast
Those were my first steps
On the road to looking gross

People my age

Are looking overripe
Some are getting operations
To tighten up what ain't tight
What gravity's ruined
They try to fix with a knife
What's pleasant in the darkness
Is plain scary in the light

Gross


+++++

"Semper Fi" The video is comprised of several performances



My father met Eleanor Roosevelt
In 1945
The war at last was over then
And they were still alive

Her husband was the President

Till he ran out of time
Her Franklin D. was history
And they'd put him on the dime

My father joined the leathernecks

To stay out of the mines
The new marine was just fifteen
In 1939


There were medals and malaria
The south pacific war
Through jungles that were paradise
And were paradise no more

Soldiers fight and soldiers die

Soldiers live to wonder why
Semper fi fe fo fum
Look out peacetime here we come

Some of the men who did survive

Were not the lucky ones
War is only good for those
Who make and sell the guns

My father lay recovering

The hurt was all inside
Sometimes the wounds that never heal
Are easiest to hide

When Eleanor came bearing gifts

To San Francisco Bay
She gave my dad a blanket
In the hospital that day

That blanket meant a lot to him

My mother has it still
Some forget the kindnesses
That others never will

Soldiers fight and soldiers die

Soldiers live to wonder why
Semper fi fe fo fum
Look out peacetime here we come


+++++

"Part Of Your Own"



I wish that you could live forever
And that I could be there too
And that there'd be generations
To look after me and you

But I know that isn't likely

So I guess I'll say it now
That I'll love you past the boundaries
That time and breath allow

You were my first memory

We were playing in the grass
Like the colors of your apron
Love was colored in to last

Chorus

And I'm glad the light still hits your face
And I'm glad every time you answer the phone
For you life and home have never been an easy place
And I'm glad to be part of your own 


You were the foundation
That we built my life upon
First with Dad and Cass and Mary
Then one was sick and one was gone 


People only get one family
And a lot of them are rough
I'm glad the one I got was one
That wasn't hard to love 


I hope I have your toughness
Along with your will to be kind
And know as I am one of yours
That you are one of mine

Chorus


+++++

"Where The Bottles Break"



I walk where the bottles break
And the blacktop still comes back for more
I walk where the bottles break
And the blacktop still comes back

I live where the neighbors yell

And their music comes up through the floor
I live where the neighbors yell
And their music wakes me up

Life beyond the playground fence

Is serious as basketball
Life beyond the playground fence
Is serious

Four blocks from the steel mill blasts

I paint my claim up on the wall
Four blocks from the steel mill blasts
I paint my claim

From my end of the southside drag

It's a common thought to call the cops
Further west it's been gentrified
They turned biker bars into flower shops

I kind of miss those Harley guys

Who rarely did a body harm
They mostly liked to drink and shout
And flash the pictures on their arms

It happens when the money come

The wild and poor get pushed aside
It happens when the money come
The poor get pushed
The buyers come from somewhere else
And raise the rent so you can't hide
The buyers come from out of state
And they raise the rent

Buy low sell high

You get rich and you still die
Money talks and people jump
Ask how high low-life Donald what's-his-name
And who cares
I don't wanna know what his girlfriend doesn't wear
It's a shame that the people at work
Wanna hear about this kind of jerk

These people aren't saints

No people just are
They wanna feel like they count
They wanna ride in their own car
People aren't saints
No people just are
They wanna feel like they count
They wanna ride in their own car

I just wanna make enough

To buy this town and keep it rough
I just wanna make enough
To buy this town

Buy low sell high

You get rich and you still die
Money talks and people jump
Ask how high low-life Donald what's-his-name
I walk where the bottles break
And the blacktop still comes back for more
I walk where the bottles break
And the blacktop still comes back

I live where the neighbors yell

And their music comes up through the floor
I live where the neighbors yell
And their music wakes me up

Life beyond the playground fence

Is serious as basketball
Life beyond the playground fence
Is serious


+++++

"The Sentinel"



no lyrics available

+++++

"I Saw A Stranger With Your Hair"



I saw a stranger with your hair
Tried to make her give it back
So I could send it off to you
Maybe Federal Express
'Cause I know you'd miss it

I saw another with your eyes

The flash just turned my head
I went to try them on for size
But they looked the other way
And they wouldn't listen

CHORUS:

But you're never hard to find in a crowd
The people around you smiling out loud
Their feet don't touch the ground
No, their feet don't touch the ground
No, their feet don't touch the ground

I heard a stranger with your voice

It took me by surprise
Again I found it wasn't you
Just an angel in disguise
In for a visit

By the way how is my heart

I haven't seen it since you left
I'm almost sure it followed you
Could you sometime send it back
I'll buy the ticket

CHORUS


I saw a stranger with your hair

I saw another with your eyes
I heard an angel with your voice
By the way how is my heart
By the way how is my heart


+++++

"Raven In The Storm"



I'm the latest apparition
Cutting slices in the night
I come through without permission
Moving in and out of human sight
I'm the tapping on your shoulder
I'm the raven in the storm
I'll take shelter in your rafters
I'm the shiver when you're warm

I'm the gold in California

I'm the well in Mexico
Like the vultures in the valley
I will wait for you to go

I'm the gypsy in your pocket

I'm the horseman in your dreams
I'm the reason dogs are barking
I'm the hand that stops the scream

I'm the baby's cry that isn't

I am the distant relative
I'm the scratching in the ceiling
I'm advice you shouldn't give

I'm the ghost of a traveling salesman

My foot will be there in your door
Though I can walk through walls and windows
I will knock just like before

I'm the darkness in your daughter

I'm the spot beneath the skin
I'm the scarlet on the pavement
I am the broken heart within

I won't take a train to nowhere

I will not touch just anyone
Ask a stranger why I'm waiting
In the chamber of a gun


+++++

"Italian Girls"



I used to fall for Italian girls
They filled my dreams, they made my world
If I had moved less awkwardly
They might have had their way with me

The longer names, the darker hair

They made me weak, they made me stare
I couldn't say a word to them
Their figures so full of vitamins

I wasn't cool, I wasn't bad

I was the only one I ever had
And they posessed the world's delights
Espresso mornings, lasagna nights

(Chorus)

Oh, the Italian girls

The Italian girls
They made my world

They were strong and they were proud

Some were sweet and some were loud
They'd fill me up with what they'd cook
And put me down with just one look

I followed them through summertime

I made them laugh, I made them rhymes
But they left me there for other ones
Who had the dough when day was done

Just one thing keep me free

They were not in love with me

Now they've married and gained some weight

But that weight I appreciate
For it's the work of all those meals
And what you eat is what you feel

(Chorus)

For the Italian girls

The Italian girls
They made my world

I used to fall for Italian girls

They filled my dreams, they made my world
But passion dies and fades away
Or lives to fight another day


+++++

Here's an article offering brief describing/interpreting various Gorka songs.

Friday, November 9, 2012

A new release from Carrie Newcomer

Kim Ruehl/Folk Alley previews "Kindred Spirits: The Collection" -- the new Carrie Newcomer release.

Mary Chapin Carpenter "In My Heaven" "The Moon and St. Christopher" "Stones In The Road" "Between Here And Gone"

Mary Chapin Carpenter has loads of enjoyable songs but it's always been her most introspective creations that have grabbed me. Below are some of those offerings:



Nothing shatters nothing breaks
Nothing hurts and nothing aches
We've got ourselves one helluva place in my heaven
Looking down at the world below
A bunch of whining, fighting schmo's
Up here we've got none of those, in my heaven

There's pools and lakes and hills and mountains
Music, art, and lighted fountains
Who needs bucks here, no one's counting
In my heaven
No one works, we all just play
We pick the weather everyday
If you change your mind, that's ok, in my heaven
Grandma's up here, Grandpa too
In a condo with to-die-for views
There's presidents and movie stars
You just come as you are
No one's lost and no one's missing
No more parting just hugs and kissing
And all these stars are just for wishing
In my heaven

There's little white lights everywhere
Your childhood dog in Dad's old chair
And more memories than my heart can hold
When Eva's singing "Fields of Gold"

There's neighbors, thieves and long lost lovers
Villains, poets, kings and mothers
Up here we forgive each other, in my heaven
For every soul that's down there waiting,
Holding on, still hesitating
We say a prayer of levitating, in my heaven
You can look back at your life and lot
But it can't matter what you're not
By the time you're here, we're all we've got
In my heaven
In my heaven
In my heaven

+++++



When I was young I spoke like a child, and I saw with a child's eyes
And an open door was to a girl like the stars are to the sky
It's funny how the world lives up to all your expectations
With adventures for the stout of heart, and the lure of the open spaces

There's two lanes running down this road, whichever side you're on

Accounts for where you want to go, or what you're running from
Back when darkness overtook me on a blind man's curve

I relied upon the moon, I relied upon the moon

I relied upon the moon and Saint Christopher 


Now I've paid my dues cuz I have owed them, but I've paid a price sometimes
For being such a stubborn woman in such stubborn times

Now I have run from the arms of lovers, I've run from the eyes of friends
I have run from the hands of kindness, I've run just because I can

But now I'm grown and I speak like a woman and I see with a woman's eyes

And an open door is to me now like the saddest of goodbyes
It's too late for turning back, I pray for the heart and the nerve

And I rely upon the moon, I rely upon the moon

I rely upon the moon and Saint Christopher

I rely upon the moon, I rely upon the moon

I rely upon the moon and Saint Christopher

to be my guide

+++++



When we were young, we pledged allegiance every morning of our lives
The classroom rang with children's voices under teacher's watchful eye
We learned about the world around us at our desks and at dinnertime
Reminded of the starving children, we cleaned our plates with guilty minds
And the stones in the road shone like diamonds in the dust
And then a voice called to us to make our way back home

When I was ten, my father held me on his shoulders above the crowd

To see a train draped in mourning pass slowly through our town
His widow kneeled with all their children at the sacred burial ground
And the TV glowed that long hot summer with all the cities burning down

And the stones in the road flew out beneath our bicycle tires

Worlds removed from all those fires as we raced each other home

And now we drink our coffee on the run, we climb that ladder rung by rung

We are the daughters and the sons, and here's the line that's missing

The starving children have been replaced by souls out on the street

We give a dollar when we pass, and hope our eyes don't meet
We pencil in, we cancel out, we crave the corner suite
We kiss your ass, we make you hold, we doctor the receipt

And the stones in the road fly out from beneath our wheels

Another day, another deal, before we get back home

And the stones in the road leave a mark from whence they came

A thousand points of light or shame, baby, I don't know 


+++++



Tonight the moon came up, it was nearly full
Way down here on earth, I could feel its pull
The weight of gravity, or just the lure of light
Made me want to leave my only home tonight

Now I'm just wondering how we know where we belong
Is it in a photograph or a dashboard poet's song?
Will I have missed my chance to right some ancient wrong?
Should I find myself between here and gone ...

Now I could grab my keys and peel out in my truck
With every saint on board bringing me their luck
I could drive too fast, like a midnight thief
As if there was a way to outrun the grief

Now I'm just wondering how we know where we belong
In the song that's left behind, in the dream I couldn't wake from
Could I have felt the brush of a soul that's passing on?
Somewhere in between here and gone ...

Up above me, wayward angels
A blur of wings and grace
One for courage, one for safety
One for just in case ...

I thought a light went out, but now a candle shines
I thought my tears wouldn't stop, but then I dried my eyes
And after all of this, the truth that holds me here
is that this emptiness is something not to fear

Yeah, I'll keep wondering how we know where we belong
After all the journeys made and the journeys yet to come
When I feel like giving up instead of going on
Somewhere in between .....

Yeah, I'm just wondering how we know where we belong
Is it in the arc of the moon leaving shadows on the lawn?
In the path of fireflies and a single bird at dawn?
Singing in between here and gone

Ellis Paul "Angel In Manhattan"

Ellis Paul is another artist with a bevy of intriguing and lovely songs -- this is the best match of lyrics and video I could locate for him.



Tell the man who repairs the wings for angels
That one has fallen among the mortals on Bleeker Street
I lent a hand, she looked up at the steeples
As if to blame them for the pavement beneath her feet
She said, "I never much liked flying, but the job requires trying
The hard part's avoiding buildings and concrete"

(chorus)
Spread the news, 'cause there's an angel in Manhattan
Call out the paparazzi and the television crews
Let the people choose
Would a little Faith come to harm them?
Print the headlines up in the New York Daily News
It was just another day
Like any other, other day

A Tuesday afternoon
I hailed a cab, a crowd gathered as it pulled beside us
And somebody tore at her wings, but I helped her safely inside
"I'm much obliged," she said, but the driver he looked shaken
He said, "You're fakin', lady, who's taking who for a ride"
But then we floated up over the traffic, she turned the radio to static,
And she sang to him in Billy Holiday's sweet voice

(chorus)
Spread the news, 'cause there's an angel in Manhattan
Call out the paparazzi and the the television crews
Hey if you choose
Would a little faith come to harm you?
Print the headlines up in the New York Daily News
It was just another day
What will the mayor say?
"Good afternoon"

We flew down the length of Fifth Avenue
She threw out miracles, it was a hysterical ride
And if the crowd on the sidewalk looked skeptical
She took the blue right out of their cynical eyes
"It's all in what you feel inside"

She shook the mayor's hand, and he declared
That he'd hold a press conference,
The fans and protesters blocked the stairs to city hall
"I'd like to thank you all," he said
And when she stepped before the cameras
It felt like a trial, but she smiled as the questions were called,
"What do you say to detractors, who claim you're just some actor?"

She said, "The question here, is 'Do I believe in you?'"
It was just another day
Like any other, other day

(chorus)
Spread the news, I saw an an angel fly from Manhattan
In front of paparazzi, in front of television crews
And me I choose
I know a little faith wouldn't harm me
Despite what they print in the New York Daily News

It was just another day
Like any other, other day
Like any day

Sunday, November 4, 2012

The underrated and unknown

Mario Tarradell begins his article with a nod to Jackson Brown and then goes on to honor the underrated and unknown singer-songwriters, those who deserve much more attention.

Among those heralded: Jimmy LaFave, Grace Pettis, John Gorka, Mindy Smith and Gretchen Peters.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Heavens, a Top 10 folk music article

Grantland, of all sites, offers a folk music article, one by Molly Lambert on a Top 10 -- not sure criteria/parameters used but just be thankful for the genre being highlighted.