DamnLyrics - The center provides all the lyrics


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

On and On Lyrics


Just a little more time for you
Just a little more time for me
Just a little more time that we could be together
We go on and on, and on and on [x2]
We leave it behind but we're still moving on and onI remember when we use to play hopscotch out on the sidewalk
I would draw your picture there with my white chalk
Every day we'd ride bikes home through the schoolyard
We would eat, sleep, work just so we could play hard
Tired of calling mom saying "please come get me"
Traded in my bike for a beat up Chevy
Pops was home drinkin'
I was home dreamin'
And the years fly by like, boom![Chorus]
We go on and on, and on and on [x2]
We leave it behind but we're still moving on
Ain't life like that
It just goes on and on, and on and on
We go on and on, and on and on

We leave it behind but we're still moving on
Ain't life like that, it just goes onI remember rolling in my ride to the White Stripes concert
Climbing in the back seat
Rolling up your short skirt
Steamed up windows
Then we graduated
Said good-bye to the town that we hated
Life gets harder every single day
And when you fall down, that's the rent that you pay
We used to say forever
Now we say remember
Look at all the bad and good we've seen together
I'm sorry that I lost you
Happy that I had you
My heart still beats like, boom![Chorus]Just a little more time for you
Just a little more time for me
Just a little more time that we could togetherIt's simple like that
Simple as this, boom![Chorus]Just a little more time for you
Just a little more time for me
Just a little more time that we could together [x2]Life goes on
Songwriters
VILLAREAL, FRANK J./GONZALEZ, ERNIEPublished by
Lyrics © Warner/Chappell Music, Inc., Universal Music Publishing Group, SUMAC MUSIC DIVISION LOVE/ZAGER PRODUCTIONS, INC.

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Michael Franti is a gifted and much-heralded spoken word artist and political activist from San Francisco, CA. As leader of the politically and socially-charged group Spearhead, Franti is at the forefront of hip-hop's renaissance, expanding the music's boundaries as he draws on funk and soul-driven beats. Through his music and poetry, Franti tackles a range of issues--the criminal justice system, corporatization of our daily lives, AIDS, gay rights, homelessness, the death penalty, drug addiction and suicide.

His project Spearhead produced the critically acclaimed Home in 1990. The album contained his biggest single, "Hole in the Bucket," a thoughtful lament on the plight of the homeless, and "Positive," which addressed the growing AIDS epidemic. The album boasted adept funk samplings, sinuous guitar vamps, and soulful, melodic tracks about family and social injustice. 1997's Chocolate Supa Highway was not as pop-friendly as Home, but neither did its themes of kidnappings and police brutality lend themselves to such overt accessibility. Its mixture of harsher musical styles -- techno, rock, and funk -- was a step forward for Franti as his world view broadened and deepened. In 2001, Franti released Stay Human. In it he expresses his anger at the system, his advocacy of love, and his belief in freedom through individuality and self-expression through a set of songs that revolve around a fictitious death penalty case. In it, his embrace of the genres that inspired him is achieved with eloquence.

Earlier projects of Franti include The Beatnigs and The Disposable Heroes Of Hiphoprisy, which had more of an experimental/industrial sound, but addressed many of the same social/political issues.

As a celebration of the Election of Barack Obama Franti recorded the Obama Song, offered as a free track on downloaded at their offical website, www.michaelfranti.com/.

User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.

View All

Michael Franti & Spearhead