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Mama's Last - David Lee Murphy



     
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Mama's Last Lyrics


Well, I never knew my daddy
But everybody says my brother looks like him
And my brother, he’s in prison
And I doubt he’ll be gettin’ out again
But I watch it from the cradle
Though mama tried to hide the truth from me
She did all that she was able
And Lord, I guess the rest is history
But we all know nobody’s perfect
And mama prayed I’d turn out differently
And she tried to raise me better
‘Cause I was the baby of the family
Oh well, I know she’d never say it
But we all make mistakes and that’s a fact
And I know I’m not the first but I guess
I was Mama’s last
Mama had to work the factory
She had too much pride to take a helpin’ hand

But she read the Bible
So I got no excuse for what I am
When they’d pass the plate on Sunday
I know it’d break her heart if she knew now
While she was puttin’ in her quarters
I was reaching in and taking dollars out
But we all know nobody’s perfect
And mama prayed I’d turn out differently
And she tried to raise me better
‘Cause I was the baby of the family
Oh well, I know she’d never say it
But we all make mistakes and that’s a fact
And I know I’m not the first but I guess
I was Mama’s last
But we all know nobody’s perfect
And mama prayed I’d turn out differently
And she tried to raise me better
‘Cause I was the baby of the family
Oh well, I know she’d never say it
But we all make mistakes and that’s a fact
And I know I’m not the first but I guess
I was Mama’s last
No, I’m not the first mistake that she ever made
But I was mama’s last

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David Lee Murphy (born January 7, 1959 in Herrin, Illinois) is an American country music singer-songwriter. Signed to MCA Records in 1994, Murphy made his first appearance on the U.S. Billboard country charts that year with "Just Once", a song from the soundtrack to the 1994 film 8 Seconds. A year later, Murphy's debut album Out With a Bang was released; overall, it produced four chart singles, including his Number One single to date, 1995's "Dust on the Bottle". His follow-up albums, Gettin' Out the Good Stuff (1996) and We Can't All Be Angels (1997) were less successful than their predecessors, and by 1998, Murphy was dropped from MCA's roster; a fourth album, Tryin' to Get There, was released in 2004 on Koch Entertainment.

Between 1994 and 2004, Murphy charted a total of thirteen singles on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts, one of which (1995's "Dust on the Bottle") reached Number One. In addition, he has co-written singles for other country artists, including "Living in Fast Forward", a Number One single for Kenny Chesney in 2006.

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David Lee Murphy