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Dos Banjos - Billy Strings



     
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Dos Banjos Lyrics


The times have changed, the times have changed, humanity has lost its way.
The people now, the people now, how they survive, I don’t know how.
My Mama said, make many friends, they’ll give to you, you’ll give to them.
They count more than money son, just care for music friends and fun.
What will you do, what will you do? When everything you’ve listened to, it’s all a lie, it’s all a lie, you’re gonna hang your head and cry.
The times have changed, the times have changed, humanity has lost its way.
The people now, the people now, how they survive, I don’t know how.
And when I go to Canaan’s land, my friends I hope you’ll take my hand. And we will leave this world below and with our loved ones we will go.
The times have changed, the times have changed, humanity has lost its way. The people now, the people now, how they survive, I don’t know how.
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Most of this is correct but corrections would be appreciated.

Lyrics Submitted by Bobby Womble

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Incendiary American roots duo Billy Strings & Don Julin tap into the vein of the earliest bluegrass music on their new album Fiddle Tune X, back when bluegrass was a rough-and-tumble art form pouring out of the Appalachian mountains, made with great virtuosity and huge attitude. With just two instruments (guitar and mandolin) and one voice, this duo has been tearing up stages across America and generating huge buzz based on their intense live shows. Drenched in sweat, grimacing like a banshee, howling like a bluegrass berserker, and picking with such ferocity that he’s been known to break three strings in one song, 22 year old guitarist and singer Billy Strings could have tumbled out of coal country in the old mountains, tattoos and all, but actually hails from Michigan, where he met mandolinist Don Julin. Older in years and experience, Strings’ musical partner Julin has carved out a lengthy career at the forefront of acoustic mandolin music, known for his wide versatility, powerful picking technique, and remarkable creativity on this humble instrument. On stage, the two egg each other on to more and more intense riffs and improvised breaks, pushing harder and harder on their own abilities to try to break through to new levels of musicianship. There’s a reason that they were called “the unholy child of Pantera and Tony Rice” by The Bluegrass Situation, and they show this intensity on their new album, Fiddle Tune Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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Billy Strings