DamnLyrics - The center provides all the lyrics


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

Tough Luck Lyrics


She puts her pen to paper
Lines across their hearts
You didn't want to raise her
You left her standing in the darkThis time she's praying for silence
Hoping that you would understand
That she's just building these roadworks
So that it's clearer when they landYou can't still own what you let go
What don't you understandTough luck I said I'll be here in a month
But you waited two
Only coming back round
'Cause you heard I was with someone new
And I was waiting hear 'til you came back
My heart was bleeding black
It's tough love, I'm giving you
Yes, tough luck on youHe asks a question, she answers
He made a crossword spelling guilt
Empty boxes filled with chances
But you can't just leave a rose to wiltYou can't still own what you let go

What don't you understandTough luck I said I'll be here in a month
But you waited two
Only coming back round
'Cause you heard I was with someone new
And I was waiting hear 'til you came back
My heart was bleeding black
It's tough love, I'm giving you
Yes, tough luck on youTough luck I said I'll be here in a month
But you waited two
Only coming back round
'Cause you heard I was with someone new
And I was waiting hear 'til you came back
My heart was bleeding black
It's tough love, I'm giving you
Yes, tough luck on you

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
When Folkways sought in 1960 to return banjo man Ashley to the public eye, he brought along his neighbor Watson, a blind, flat-picking guitarist then playing in an electric rockabilly band. To say that Doc and his easy-going grace stole the show would be an understatement. It wasn’t just his crystal-clear picking style that so astonished, but also the encyclopedic bag of licks that enabled Doc to seemingly play all night without repeating any, and the equally infinite number of traditional songs he carried in his head. From Ashley’s calling-card “The Coo Coo Bird” to Watson’s solo “Sittin’ on Top of the World,” these are among the most essential sides of the folk revival.

- John Morthland Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

View All

Clarence Ashley & Doc Watson