Lyrics The Bluegrass Widow - Robert Earl Keen
It′s
been
five
years
come
this
autumn,
she
remembers
well
the
day
The
day
the
fever
got
him,
and
took
him
far
away
Far
away
from
always
knowing
that
the
love
they
shared
was
true
Far
away
the
fiddler's
bowing,
the
grass
forever
blue
It
was
in
the
dead
of
winter
when
her
man
first
caught
the
chill
And
he
said
he
heard
the
angels
singing
"Cabin
on
the
Hill"?
Through
the
springtime
he
was
groaning
"The
good
times
are
past
and
gone"?
By
the
summer
she
was
moaning
"Old
lover
please
come
home"?
Chorus:
Now
she
stands
out
in
the
midnight
in
the
moonlight
all
aglow
She
prays
to
Carter
Stanley
"Won′t
you
please
tell
Bill
Monroe
Rather
be
in
some
dark
hollow
or
some
dark
deep
shady
grove
Than
to
be
a
bluegrass
widow"?
Spoken
word
break:
I
started
listening
to
bluegrass
music
in
Bryan
Duckworth's
rust
red
1970
Ford
Maverick.
Had
an
eight
track
tape
deck
and
an
eight
track
tape
of
Bill
Monroe's
Greatest
Hits.
We
used
to
skip
second
period
chemistry
and
go
over
to
the
Shamrock
station
across
the
street
from
the
high
school
and
get
a
case
of
Texas
Pride
beer.
Charge
it
on
my
dad′s
credit
card
and
get
′em
to
write
it
up
as
oil
so
dad
never
knew
the
difference.
Then
we'd
ride
around
and
drink
Texas
Pride,
listen
to
Bill
Monroe.
Soon
we
got
to
be
bluegrass
experts.
And
we′d
stop
in
another
Shamrock
station
and
get
another
Texas
Pride
case,
Drink
that
and
listen
to
the
Stanley
Brothers
and
then
we'd
go
get
a
tape
of
Jim
and
Jesse
and
it
was
on
to
the
Kentucky
Colonels
and
Mack
Wiseman
and
the
New
Grass
Revival,
Peter
Rowan,
and
finally
I
got
the
brilliant
idea
one
day
to
take
all
the
greatest
bluegrass
song
titles
in
the
world
and
string
′em
together
to
make
this
song
right
here,
The
Bluegrass
Widow.
Quite
possibly
the
worst
bluegrass
song
ever
written.
I
did
this
in
tribute
to
the
Front
Porch
Boys,
which
was
a
bluegrass
band
I
was
in
in
College
Station,
Texas.
We
were
a
little
four
piece
band,
we
played
weddings
and
parties
and
out
on
the
porch
and
beer
joints
and
one
weekend
on
a
handful
of
cheap
amphetamines,
we
decided
to
go
to
Crockett,
Texas.
We
entered
the
International
Bluegrass
Band
Competition
and
took
second
place.
We
could
play
faster
than
anybody
in
the
competition.
The
other
two
bands
took
first
and
third,
respectively.
I
met
some
friends
and
went
off
into
the
night
separated
from
the
Front
Porch
Boys
and
met
back
up
with
them
in
the
cold,
gray
light
of
dawn,
as
the
bluegrass
songs
say.
They
were
standing
underneath
a
giant
pine
tree
there
in
Crockett
singing
the
rudest,
most
grotesque,
nastiest
bluegrass
songs
you've
ever
heard
in
your
life.
I′m
talking
about
the
kind
of
song
where
not
only
is
the
character
in
the
song
dead
by
the
end
of
the
song,
but
he's
been
dismembered
as
well.
And
the
Front
Porch
Boys
stopped
and
looked
up
at
me
just
long
enough
to
say,
"We're
taking
bluegrass
music
where
it′s
never
been
before.
And
we′re
not
taking
you
with
us
'cuz
you
don′t
have
that
high
and
lonesome
sound
that
bluegrass
music
requires."?
Well,
I'm
not
one
to
fight
failure.
I
packed
up
my
stuff
and
left.
The
Front
Porch
Boys
broke
up
three
days
later
when
they
realized
I
owned
the
PA
system.
"Will
you
miss
me
when
I′m
gone"?
were
his
final
words
to
her
"Darlin'
think
of
what
you′ve
done,"?
then
replied
his
Knoxville
girl
And
the
leaves
had
started
turning
when
his
mind
began
to
fail
Then
he
broke
down
in
a
breakdown,
now
she
wears
a
long
black
veil.
And
she
stands
out
in
the
midnight
in
the
moonlight
all
aglow
She
prays
to
Carter
Stanley
"Won't
you
please
tell
Bill
Monroe
Rather
be
in
some
dark
hollow
or
some
dark
deep
shady
grove
Than
to
be
a
bluegrass
widow"?
And
she
stands
out
in
the
midnight
in
the
moonlight
all
aglow
She
prays
to
Carter
Stanley
"Won't
you
please
tell
Bill
Monroe
Rather
be
in
some
dark
hollow
or
some
dark
deep
shady
grove
Than
to
be
a
bluegrass
widow"?
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