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Delta Dreams  - Martin Simpson



     
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Delta Dreams  Lyrics


We drove North from New Olreans
In a '55 Bel Air
Music on the bench seat,
Expectation in the air
There's room for a man to wear his hat
In this church of red and cream
And we are pilgrims of purpose,
Driving in this dream
[Chorus]
"Is that a '55, man?"
"I used to drive a '55..."
"What you got under the hood, man? "
"She makes me feel alive"
Live oaks draped with Spanish moss
Like rags of shawls and ball gowns
Shade the shame-faced dowagers

Along the river road
And on the bluffs at Vicksburg
The big guns still guard the river
Menacing the barges
As they haul their heavy load
[Chorus]
Outside the closed down undertakers
Two Lincoln hearses stand there
Rusting and a pealing
In the unforgiving air
The church where Sonny Boy lies buried
Burned down to the ground
The crucifix of rusty nails
And ashes there I found
There's no panther in the canebreak
No devil at the crossroads
But here's a '57 Cadillac
And it's tearing down the road
It's Birdbreath and his buddies
They're coming from Chicago
They got a fifth of whiskey
They got a hundred miles to go
They are barrelling from the West Side
To the Gulf of Mexico
[Chorus]
Oh the young people they left here
For the steel mills and assembly lines
The marshalling yards and the killing floor
Many years ago
But the cities they are dying
And the industries are wasted
And there sure is no good reason
To come back here any more
[Chorus]
We drove North from New Olreans
In a '55 Bel Air
Got music on the bench seat,
Expectation in the air
There's room for a man to wear his hat
In this church of red and cream
And we are pilgrims of purpose,
Driving in this dream
[Chorus]
---
Lyrics submitted by HF.

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Martin Simpson (born 5 May 1953, Scunthorpe, England) is an English guitarist of some renown. In the 1970s he teamed up with legendary singer June Tabor; together they recorded three albums. By the age of 12 Simpson was playing guitar and banjo. In 1970, Simpson dropped out of college to become a full-time professional musician, touring folk clubs. In 1976 he recorded his first solo album "Golden Vanity". In the same year he opened for Steeleye Span on their UK tour. Teaming up with June Tabor, a folk singer who didn't play an instrument, Simpson toured folk clubs and appeared at festivals. They recorded three albums together, highlighting each other's complementary talents. There was a fluid jazzy feel about their approach to traditional material. In the 1980s he moved to America, originally to Ithaca, New York then to Santa Cruz and finally New Orleans. Over the next ten years Simpson became more and more adventurous, playing blues, bluegrass, cajun and even Indian-inflected music. He released a series of albums right through the 1990s, eventually moving back to the UK.

Read more about Martin Simpson on Last.fm.


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Martin Simpson