Sunday 27 July 2014

Song of the Day 10 : Where the Devil Don't Stay : Drive By Truckers

I think of Where the Devil Don't Stay as kind of the bastard son of Steve Earle's Copperhead Road.  A great rock and country song at the same time (as opposed to Country Rock).  It was the song  that really sold me on the Trucker's greatness.

It was great to watch Sam at practice with his band step up to microphone and sing lead on their cover of the song.








My Daddy played poker on a stump in the woods back in his younger days
Prohibition was the talk, but the rich folks walked to the woods where my Daddy stayed
Jugs and jars from shiners, these old boys here, they ain't miners
They came from the twenty-niners
It didn't take a hole in the ground to put the bottom in their face

Back in the thirties when the dust bowl dried
And the woods in Alabama didn't see no light
My Daddy played poker by a hard wood fire
Squeezing all his luck from a hot copper wire
Scrap like a wildcat fights till the end
Trap a wildcat and take his skin
Deal from the bottom, put the ace in the hole
One hand on the jug but you never do know

Son come running
You better come quick
This rotgut moonshine is making me sick
Your Mama called the law and they're gonna take me away
Down so far even the Devil won't stay
Where I call to the Lord with all my soul
I can hear him rattling the chains on the door
He couldn't get in I could see he tried
Through the shadows of the cage around the forty watt light

Daddy tell me another story
Tell me about the lows and the highs
Tell me how to tell the difference between what they tell me is the truth or a lie
Tell me why the ones who have so much make the ones who don't go mad
With the same skin stretched over their white bones and the same jug in their hand

My Daddy played poker on a stump in the woods back when the world was gray
Before black and white went and chose up sides and gave a little bit of both their way
The only blood that's any cleaner is the blood that's blue or greener
Without either you just get meaner and the blood you gave gives you away

2 comments:

  1. This was my intro to DBT, and despite collecting them both before and after this release, I think this one epitomises them at their best, and with my favourite line-up. Shonna Tucker and Jason still hanging in, and such memorable songs as "Carl Perkins Cadillac". Recommended album for late night depression, after a few whiskeys and you want to keep chilling, not if you want to cheer up. It is worth chasing down the lyrics for these songs.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Daniel - I have this and Decoration Day on vinyl now and the lyrics are nice and easy to read - the album covers look amazing in 12" rather than CD format. The new album is worth a spin

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