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Don't Come the Cowboy With Me, Sonny Jim! - Kirsty MacColl



     
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Don't Come the Cowboy With Me, Sonny Jim! Lyrics


Some boys with warm beds and cold, cold hearts
Can make you feel nothing at all
They'll never remember and they'll never mind
If you're counting the cracks in the wallThey're quick and they're greedy, they never feel guilty
They don't know the meaning of hurt
The boots just go back on, the socks that had stayed on
The next time they see you, they treat you like dirt
The next time they treat you like dirtNow don't come, the cowboy with me, Sonny Jim
I know lots of those and you're not one of them
There's a light in your eyes tells me somebody's in
And you won't come, the cowboy with meDon't be too rough on my cold, cold heart
It's all I've got left to me now
I fell out of favor with Heaven somewhere
And I'm here for the hell of it nowSome girls play cowboys and some boys play harder to get
But they're got just the same
They smile and say cheese, they're so eager to please
But they'll never remember your name
The names and the places all changeBut don't come, the cowboy with me, Sonny Jim

I know lots of those and you're not one of them
There's a light in your eyes tells me somebody's in
And you won't come, the cowboy with meDid somebody tell you I'm lonely as hell?
I didn't expect you to know me so well
If I learned a lesson it's how to bounce back again
Sometimes I bounce off the wall
And sometimes my head hits the floorSo don't come, the cowboy with me, Sonny Jim
I know lots of those and you're not one of them
There's a light in your eyes tells me somebody's in
And you won't come, the cowboy, ohDon't come, the cowboy with me, Sonny Jim
I know lots of those and you're not one of them
There's a light in your eyes tells me somebody's in
And you won't come, the cowboy with me

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

Kirsty Anna MacColl (Croydon, England, UK on 10 October 1959 - 18 December 2000) was a British pop singer-songwriter. She was the daughter of dancer Jean Newlove and noted folk singer Ewan MacColl. MacColl began her career in the late 1970s UK punk rock scene, singing backing vocals for Drug Addix. Her UK hits included the 1981 single "There's A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis", a cover of Billy Bragg's "A New England" in 1985, a duet with Shane MacGowan of The Pogues on "Fairytale of New York" in 1987, and a cover of The Kinks' song "Days" in 1989.

Read more about Kirsty MacColl on Last.fm.


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Kirsty MacColl