paroles de chanson East of Woodstock, West of Viet Nam - Tom Russell
I
slept
through
the
Nineteen
Sixties,
I
heard
Dory
Previn
say
But
me
I
caught
me
the
great
white
bird,
to
the
shores
of
Africay
Where
I
lost
my
adolescent
heart,
to
the
sound
of
a
talking
drum
Yeah,
East
of
Woodstock,
West
of
Vietnam
And
on
the
roads
outside
Oshogbo,
Lord
I
fell
down
on
my
knees
There
were
female
spirits
in
old
mud
huts,
Iron
bells
ringing
up
in
the
trees
And
an
eighty-year-old
white
priest,
she
made
juju
all
night
long
Yeah,
East
of
Woodstock,
West
of
Vietnam
Raise
high
the
roof
beams
carpenter
boy,
yeah
we're
coming
through
the
rye
In
the
cinema
I
saw
the
man
on
the
moon,
I
laughed
so
hard
I
cried
It
was
somewhere
in
those
rainy
seasons,
that
I
learned
to
carve
my
song
Yeah,
East
of
Woodstock,
West
of
Vietnam
Oh
Africa,
Mother
Africa,
you
lay
heavy
on
my
breast
You
old
cradle
of
civilization,
heart
of
darkness
blood
and
death
Though
we
had
to
play
you
running
scared,
when
the
crocodile
ate
the
sun
Yeah,
East
of
Woodstock,
West
of
Vietnam
Well
I
think
it's
going
to
rain
tonight,
I
can
smell
it
coming
off
the
sea
As
I
sit
here
reading
old
Graham
Greene
I
taste
Africa
on
every
page
Then
I
close
my
eyes
and
see
those
red
clay
roads,
And
it's
sundown
and
boys
I'm
gone
Yeah,
East
of
Woodstock,
West
of
Vietnam
Raise
high
the
roof
beams
carpenter
boy,
yeah
we're
coming
through
the
rye
It
was
a
moveable
feast
of
war
and
memory,
a
dark
old
lullaby
It
was
the
smoke
of
a
thousand
camp
fires,
it
was
the
wrong
end
of
a
gun,
Yeah,
East
of
Woodstock,
West
of
Vietnam.
Yeah,
East
of
Woodstock,
West
of
Vietnam
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