Disc 1 | ||||||
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1. |
| 4:09 | ||||
If the whole world was a honky-tonk,
And it revolved around an old jukebox, We'd tell our troubles to the Bar, Over cryin' steel guitars, And soon, they'd all be gone. Yeah, if you asked me what I thought, I'd say: "We'd be better off, "If the whole world was a honky-tonk." You could smoke that cigarette, An' be politically incorrect. Show off that red 'round your neck: Not hear a single soul object. Wouldn't need no lawyers to decide, Who is wrong and who is right. No need for big expensive trials: Brother, we'd just step outside. If the whole world was a honky-tonk, And it revolved around an old jukebox, We'd tell our troubles to the Bar, Over cryin' steel guitars, And soon, they'd all be gone. Yeah, if you asked me what I thought, I'd say: "We'd be better off, "If the whole world was a honky-tonk." Wouldn't have to pay no tax: Just set a tip jar in the back. If we ran low, we'd pass the hat: I bet we'd all be in the black, If the whole world was a honky-tonk. And if you're lookin' love: Someone to heal that broken heart. Hey, buddy, you'd be in half. You wouldn't have to go that far. If the whole world was a honky-tonk, And it revolved around an old jukebox, We'd tell our troubles to the Bar, Over cryin' steel guitars, And soon, they'd all be gone. If you asked me what I thought, I'd say: "We'd be better off, "If the whole world was a honky-tonk." Life would be a three-chord song, And the king would be George Jones, If the whole world was a honky-tonk. |
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2. |
| 3:54 | ||||
I been on the road now dang near all my life:
An' I do love to sing a song. I can say I've worked hard, put in my time: Now it's time to go home. And catch up on my chores: Watch the sunset from my porch. I'll be somewhere down in Texas if you're lookin' for me, Drinkin' in that great wide-open: soakin' up the summer breeze. Kickin' back an' settled in with my family. I'll be somewhere down in Texas if you're lookin' for me. That's where I got started, where I was born an' bred: It's the fire inside of me. I couldn't have imagined this Texas highway led, Far beyond my wildest dreams. But I'll turn out the lights tonight, An' say goodnight, but not goodbye. I'll be somewhere down in Texas if you're lookin' for me, Drinkin' in that great wide-open: soakin' up the summer breeze. Kickin' back an' settled in with my family. I'll be somewhere down in Texas if you're lookin' for me. I made so many friends, Hope we meet someday again: Till then: I'll be somewhere down in Texas if you're lookin' for me, Drinkin' in that great wide-open: soakin' up the summer breeze. Kickin' back an' settled in with my family. I'll be somewhere down in Texas if you're lookin' for me. |
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3. |
| 4:13 | ||||
I left, out of Tucson, with no destination in mind.
I was runnin' from trouble and the jail-term the Judge had in mind. And the border meant freedom, a new life, romance, And that's why I thought I should go, And start my life over on the seashores of old Mexico. My first night in Juarez, lost all the money I had. One bad senorita made use of one innocent lad. But I must keep on runnin'; it's too late to turn back: I'm wanted in Tucson, I'm told. Yeah, an' things'll blow over on the seashores of old Mexico. Two Mexican farmers en route to a town I can't say, Let me ride on the back of a flatbed half-loaded with hay. Down through Durango, Colima, Almiera, Then in the Manzanillos, Where I slept on the seashores of old Mexico. After one long siesta, I came wide awake in the night. I was startled by someone who shadowed the pale moonlight. My new-found companion, one young senorita, Who offered a broken hello, To the gringo she found on the seashores of old Mexico. She spoke of Sonora and swore that she'd never return, For her Mexican husband, she really had no great concern. 'Cause she loved the gringo, my red hair and lingo: That's all I needed to know. Yeah, I found what I needed on the seashores of old Mexico. Yeah, she loved the gringo, my red hair and lingo: That's all I needed to know, ha, ha. Yeah, I found what I needed on the seashores of old Mexico. |
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4. |
| 4:18 | ||||
Hope is an anchor and love is a ship, time is the ocean and life is a trip
You don't know where you're going, ‘till you know where you're at And if you can't read the stars, well you better have a map A compass and a conscience, so you don't get lost at sea Or on some lonely island, where no one wants to be From the beginning of creation, I think our maker had a plan For us to leave these shores and sail beyond the sand And let the good light guide us through the waves and the wind To the beaches in a world where we have never been And we'll climb up on a mountain, y'all we'll let our voices ring Those who've never tried it, they'll be the first to sing Whoa, my, my I'll see you on the other side If I make it And it might be a long hard ride But I'm wanna take it Sometimes it seems that I don't have a prayer Let the weather take me anywhere But I know that I wanna go Where the streets are gold ‘Cause you'll be there Oh, my , my You don't bring nothing with you here And you can't take nothing back I ain't never seen a hearse, with a luggage rack So I've torn my knees up prayin' Scarred my back from fallin' down Spent so much time flying high, till I'm face first in the ground So if you're up there watchin' me, would you talk to God and say, Tell him I might need a hand to see you both someday Whoa, my, my So I'll see you on the other side If I make it And it might be a long hard ride But I'm wanna take it Sometimes it seems that I don't have a prayer Let the weather take me anywhere But I know that I wanna go Where the streets are gold ‘Cause you'll be there Oh, my , my Cause you'll be there Oh, my ,my |
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5. |
| 2:53 | ||||
I been watchin' you watchin' her watchin' herself in the mirror,
In her tailor-made dress an' her long blonde hair, An' her big diamond rings: her custom-made shoes. And I can by the look on your face that you're makin' your move, But she hasn't got time for a man who's tongue-tied. An' she doesn't like cowboys an' thinks less of fools. So, boy, don't you saddle yourself to a high-tone woman. She'll cut up your heart like an' old credit card, When the fun and the money runs out. I've never seen an uptown, well-read thorougbred, High-tone woman sink as low as you. Hey, I'm on your side; don't go gettin' me wrong, now: You're not a bad fellow at all. But you're out of her league so stay in the bleachers: Son, you couldn't please her if you had it all. So, boy, don't you saddle yourself to a high-tone woman. She'll cut up your heart like an' old credit card, When the fun and the money runs out. You're a fool if you saddle yourself to a high-tone woman. (I seen her.) I've seen her cut up a heart like an' old credit card, When the fun and the money runs out. I've never seen an uptown, well-read thorougbred, High-tone woman sink as low as you. Oh no, I've never seen an uptown, well-read thorougbred, High-tone woman sink as low as you. |
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6. |
| 3:24 | ||||
7. |
| 3:29 | ||||
I woke up this mornin',
Peaked out my door: It was rainin', cold an' grey. It's my one day off: I was gonna play golf. There goes the plans that I made. Oh, but you won't hear me complain. An' oh, what a perfect day for lovin' you. When you're in my arms, I've got sunshine, An' the sky's always blue. Couldn't ask for better weather, To do what I do: Oh, what a perfect day for lovin' you. So let's go grab a blanket, An' a hot cup of coffee, And sit out on the front porch and swing. That look in your eyes is what's on my mind: We don't have to say anything. Let's just listen to that old tin roof sing. An' oh, what a perfect day for lovin' you. When you're in my arms, I've got sunshine, An' the sky's always blue. Couldn't ask for better weather, To do what I do: Oh, what a perfect day for lovin' you. Oh, what a perfect day for lovin' you. For lovin' you. |
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8. |
| 3:04 | ||||
There wouldn't be no Alamo,
No Cowboys in the Superbowl: No "Lonesome Dove", no "Yellow Rose", If it wasn't for Texas. I wouldn't be a Willie fan. Nobody'd swim the Rio Grande. I wouldn't be an American, If it wasn't for Texas. Fort Worth would never cross my mind, An' there'd be no Austin City limits sign. No Lonestar of any kind. If it wasn't for Texas. I'd never've gone to Tennessee, To sing my songs an' chase my dreams. Only Heaven knows just where I'd be, If it wasn't for Texas. Fort Worth would never cross my mind. There'd be no Austin City limits sign. An' no Lonestar of any kind. If it wasn't for Texas. It made me the man I am: Thank God for my old stompin' ground. I wouldn't be standin' right here, right now, If it wasn't for Texas. If it wasn't for Texas. If it wasn't for Texas. |
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9. |
| 3:52 | ||||
I know the end is near:
I've seen the warning signs. Been preparin' myself, Layin' in supplies. I bought a case of Jack, A boxed-set of Merle: I'm gettin' ready, Ready for the end of the world. I'm gettin' ready for the end to come: That final hour it all comes undone. An' she drops the bomb: An' says he ain't my girl. I'm gettin' ready, Ready for the end of the world. My neon shelter waits, Where I can go to hide. While the memories burn, I'll be safe inside. With the honky-tonk few, Bracin' for the worst: I'm gettin' ready, Ready for the end of the world. I'm gettin' ready for the end to come: That final hour it all comes undone. An' she drops the bomb: An' says he ain't my girl. I'm gettin' ready, Ready for the end of the world. Yeah, I'll be ready: Ready for the end of the world. |
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10. |
| 3:20 | ||||
He wondered how she'd take it when he said goodbye.
Thought she might do some cryin': lose some sleep at night. But he had no idea, when he hit the road, That without him in her life, she'd let herself go. Let herself go on a singles cruise, To Vegas once, then to Honolulu. Let herself go to New York City: A week at the Spa; came back knocked-out pretty. When he said he didn't love her no more, She let herself go. She poured her heart an' soul into their three-bedroom ranch. Spent her days raisin' babies, ironin' his pants. Came home one day from the grocery store and found his note, And without him there to stop her, she let herself go. Let herself go on her first blind-date: Had the time of her life with some friends at the lake. Let herself go, buy a brand new car, Drove down to the beach he always said was too far. Sand sure felt good between her toes: She let herself go on a singles cruise, To Vegas once, then to Honolulu. Let herself go to New York City: A week at the Spa; came back knocked-out pretty. When he said he didn't love her no more, She let herself go. To Vegas once: Honolulu, New York City. Came back knocked-out pretty. |
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11. |
| 3:18 | ||||
Oh, I've been stumblin' through the darkness,
Tryin' to feel the ground beneath my feet. Afraid of movin' much in any direction: Stuck where the past and the future meet. But I fin'lly got my first good look: A little fire was all it too. An' as the flames grew brighter, I saw everything that I'd missed. Once you get your courage up, You light a match an' your eyes adjust: It's amazing what a man can see, By the light of a burnin' bridge. An' there were things I saw that I'm not proud of. Things that I'd do diff'rent now from then. But when I really make myself get honest, It's over and I can't go back again. 'Cause I fin'lly got my first good look: A little fire was all it took. An' as the flames grew brighter, I saw everything that I'd missed. Once you get your courage up, You light a match an' your eyes adjust: It's amazing what a man can see, By the light of a burnin' bridge. It sure is hard to let go and to leave the past behind, But there ain't no other way that you can find some peace of mind. When I fin'lly got my first good look: A little fire was all it took. An' as the flames grew brighter, I saw everything that I'd missed. Once you get your courage up, You light a match an' your eyes adjust: It's amazing what a man can see, By the light of a burnin' bridge. It's amazing what a man can see, By the light of a burnin' bridge. |