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The Girls I Go With - Kevin Fowler



     
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The Girls I Go With Lyrics


This old '85 Chevrolet damn sure seen better Days
But it still get's me down the Road
The same old Job I had, for 15 year
No it ain't so bad
The Hours are long and the Pay is lowYeah but it'sGood enough for the Girls I go with
The Kind that don't mind that I ain't rich
The ones that don't need all that fancy StuffI know it looks like I ain't got a lot
But I'm a damn good Man and I work hard
Yeah Lord knows that's good enough
For the Girls I go withThree Girls at home and one good wife
Can't complain it's a real good Life
Yeah we got all we could ever wantAnd this old run down House
Ain't much to brag about
But our Love makes this House a Home(3x)
Yeah but it'sGood enough for the Girls I go with
The Kind that don't mind that I ain't rich
The ones that don't need all that fancy StuffI know it looks like I ain't got a lot
But I'm a damn good Man and I work hard

Yeah Lord knows that's good enough
For the Girls I go withFor the Girls I go withFor the Girls I go with

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Country-pop may have ruled the charts, but Kevin Fowler established himself impressively throughout Texas by making modest honky tonk-style country for regular folks. Raised in the West Texas town Amarillo, the guitarist began his musical career on both drums and piano. He left Texas at age 20 for the bright lights of Los Angeles, where he studied music at the Guitar Institute of Technology. He returned to Texas soon after and settled in Austin, where he joined the hard rock band Dangerous Toys. Following this eye-opening stint, Fowler started his own Southern hard rock band, Thunderfoot. He soon came to the realization, however, that he couldn't shake his West Texas roots and gave up hard rock for country, the style of music he grew up with.

Fowler put together a country band in 1998 and began playing Tuesday nights at Babe's on Sixth Street in Austin. Within two years, he'd begun recording albums and struck big with his self-released Beer, Bait and Ammo (2000). The album sold around 30,000 copies in the Texas area and garnered an impressive amount of airplay, particularly for the album's title track. The song became somewhat of a Texas anthem; Mark Chesnutt made the song part of his live show, and Sammy Kershaw recorded it. Fowler returned in 2002 with his third album, High on the Hog, and boasted some impressive guests, including Willie Nelson and David Lee Garza.

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Kevin Fowler