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I Ain't Afraid of Dying - John Anderson



     
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I Ain't Afraid of Dying Lyrics


In the name of progress
Big old building's goin' up
And in the name of progress
Another Mom And Pop shop bites the dustThat old home town flavor
Has all but disappeared
And I worry when I wonder
What is gonna be like in twenty yearsI may not have the answer
When it's all said and done
Sometimes I have the question
Where they're comin' fromI know where I am going
When they may need a rest
Oh, I ain't afraid of dying
Lord, it's the living that scares me to deathSirens scream in the city
Gunshots ring in the night
Another mother watches while
Her young son claims to lifeSome father says in the name of God
He took his baby's life
Well I don't think so, the God I know

Will believe that's rightI may not have the answer
When it's all said and done
Sometimes I have the question
Where they're comin' fromI know where I am going
When they may need a rest
Oh, I ain't afraid of dying
Lord, it's the living that scares me to deathLord, I may not have the answer
When it's all said and done
Sometimes I have the question
Where they're comin' fromI know where I am going
When they may need a rest
Oh, I ain't afraid of dying
Lord, it's the living that scares me to deathYea, I know where I am going
When they may need a rest
Oh, I ain't afraid of dying
Lord, it's the living that scares me to death
Scares me to death

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1. John Anderson (born December 13, 1954 in Apopka, Florida) is a country singer and musician. He scored hits in the early 1980s with songs such as "Swingin'," "Your Lyin' Blue Eyes," "Black Sheep" and the Billy Joe Shaver-composed "I'm Just an Old Chunk of Coal." His career hit a dry spell for several years until 1991, when his single "Straight Tequila Night" came out. Subsequent hits included "Money In The Bank" and "Seminole Wind." The latter would become Florida's unofficial state anthem.

Anderson makes his home in Smithville, Tennessee, approximately 50 miles southeast of Nashville.



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John Anderson