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It's Alright - Indigo Girls



     
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It's Alright Lyrics


It's alright forty days of rain
The skin stretched our from the growing pain
It'd be nice to have an explanation but it's alright
And it's alright if you hate that way
Hate me 'cause I'm different, hate me 'cause I'm gay
Truth of the matter come around one day it's alrightI look at this life line stretched way all across my hand
I look at the burned out empty like a plague across the land
And for everything I learn there are two I don't understand
That's why I'm still on a search through the weather strewn church
I'm doing the best that I can and it's alrightAnd it's alright though we worry and fuss
We can't get over the hump or get over us
It seems easier to push than to let go and trust but it's alright
We get a little distance some things get clearer
Yeah give 'em the space some hearts get nearer
Ran as hard as I could and still ended up here and it's alrightSo look at this life line stretched way all across my hand
I look at the fires of hatred burning up the bounty of this beautiful land
I know I'm small gone way but I know I'm strong
And it's my thirst that brought me to the water

When you give it all up then she carries me on, it's alright, yeah

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
The Indigo Girls are Amy Ray and Emily Saliers. They met on the playground in grammar school in Decatur, Georgia, USA, and have been playing together since high school.

Their first release in 1985 was a seven-inch single named "Crazy Game", with the B-side "Everybody's Waiting (for Someone to Come Home)". That same year, the Indigo Girls released a six-track Extended play album named "Indigo Girls", and in 1987 released their first full-length album, Strange Fire, recorded at John Keane Studio in Athens, Georgia, and including "Crazy Game". With this release, they secured the services of Russell Carter, who remains their manager to the present; they had first approached him when the EP album was released, but he told them their songs were "immature" and they were not likely to get a record deal.

They were signed to Epic Records in 1989 and won the Grammy for best contemporary folk album later that year (for their self titled release) Some of their hit songs include "Galileo," "Closer to Fine," and "Shame on You."

Aside from being musicians, Ray and Saliers are activists, constantly supporting causes like gun control, women's rights, Native American rights, environmental protection, the abolition of the death penalty, and as lesbians themselves, LGBT rights. They constantly devote their time and money to such causes, often playing benefit concerts.

Ray and Saliers both have side projects. Ray owns and founded Daemon Records, an independent label based in Decatur. She also has a career as a solo artist, and has released two albums thus far. Saliers is the part owner of Watershed, a restaurant and wine bar in Decatur.

Together, the Indigo Girls are constantly touring. Their new album, Poseidon and the Bitter Bug, was released March 24, 2009.

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Indigo Girls