DamnLyrics - The center provides all the lyrics

On The Wind - Kenny Roby



     
Page format: Left Center Right
Direct link:
BB code:
Embed:

On The Wind Lyrics


I sleep in the day
Big boats won't find me at night
I'd hate to go out like that
No true sailor goes down like that
I took a little drink, there ain't much left
Must be at least three days from land
I dreamed of Judy today when I slept
And woke up with my face in my hands
The sun is heavy out here today
After a while, though, it ain't so bad
It ain't any heavier than dreams I've had
Where I can run on the wind
Today I saw my face in the water
Didn't even recognize myself
Then I saw the faces of my daughters

I tried to think of something else
The sun is heavy out here today
After a while, though, it ain't so bad
It ain't any heavier than dreams I've had
Where I can run on the wind
The only reading I brought was the Good Book
I always wanted to learn the whole thing
Talk to myself when my thoughts get too full
When I get tired of talking, I sing
Last night I nodded off in my thoughts
I woke to the sound of the big barge's horn
And life flashed before me in a split-second film
I never wanna let that happen again
The sun is heavy out here today
After a while, though, it ain't so bad
It ain't any heavier than dreams I've had
Where I can run on the wind (x3)
---
Lyrics submitted by JRC.

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
In the mid to late 90’s, as a founding member of the band Six String Drag, Kenny Roby established himself as one of the main songwriting forces behind the Americana/Roots Rock movement. Six String Drag played a major role in the early success of Steve Earle and Jack Emerson’s E Squared label. Roby and his band toured nationally with Earle and other acts and also gained a strong following on the east coast and the midwest. The band was featured on the soundtrack to the Grammy nominated film You Can Count On Me and garnered much critical acclaim for their E Squared release High Hat. In 1998 the band broke up and Roby continued with a solo career releasing two more critically acclaimed albums Mercury’s Blues and Rather Not Know. Roby’s writing and singing have been praised by Billboard, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Boston Phoenix, The Washington Post, Option, No Depression, Performing Songwriter and many other publications. Kenny has also been featured on NPR’s All Songs Considered and Acoustic Cafe and has received extensive national airplay on NPR, Americana and AAA radio stations. Ryan Adams has claimed Roby as as an influential writer on his and his former band Whiskeytown’s music. Adams featured Roby’s song Rather Not Know on NPR’s All Songs Considered in 2004. (in a segment called You Play the Dj: Artist’s Picks) As well, Adams recently mentioned Roby in Rolling Stone as the best songwriter that not many people have heard of. Roby's new album "The Mercy Filter" leans much less on Americana than previous efforts but dips and turns more into straight up rock, experimentation, Beatle-esque grooves, and soulful ballads. His new band features Scott McCall (Two Dollar Pistols, New Electric Combo), Mark O'Brien (Two Dollar Pistols, Barn Burning), David Kim (Les Dirt Clods, Houston Brothers) and Ray Duffey (Six String Drag, Countdown Quartet, New Electric Combo) To hear more songs, go to www.myspace.com/themercyfilter. And be sure to visit www.kennyroby.com. Press and radio folks can send an e mail to [email protected] for promo. (taken from kenny roby's myspace page) Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

View All

Kenny Roby