paroles de chanson Gallo Del Cielo - Tom Russell
Carlos
Zaragoza
left
his
home
in
Casas
Grandes
when
the
moon
was
full
No
money
in
his
pocket,
just
a
locket
of
his
sister
framed
in
gold
He
rode
into
El
Sueco,
stole
a
rooster
called
"Gallo
del
Cielo"
Then
he
crossed
the
Rio
Grande
with
that
rooster
nestled
deep
beneath
his
arm.
Well,
Gallo
del
Cielo
was
a
warrior
born
in
heaven,
so
the
legends
say
His
wings
they
had
been
broken,
he
had
one
eye
rollin'
crazy
in
his
head
And
He'd
fought
a
hundred
fights,
but
the
legends
say
that
one
night
near
El
Sueco
They'd
fought
Cielo
seven
times
and
seven
times
he'd
left
brave
roosters
dead.
Hola,
my
Theresa,
I
am
thinking
of
you
now
in
San
Antonio
I
have
27
dollars
and
the
good
luck
of
your
picture
framed
in
gold
Tonight
I'll
put
it
all
on
the
fighting
spurs
of
Gallo
del
Cielo
And
Then
I'll
return
to
buy
the
land
that
Villa
stole
from
father
long
ago
Outside
of
San
Diego
in
the
onion
fields
of
Paco
Monteverde
The
Pride
of
San
Diego
lay
sleeping
on
his
fancy
bed
of
silk
And
they
laughed
when
Zaragoza
pulled
the
one-eyed
del
Cielo
from
beneath
his
coat
But
they
cried
when
Zaragoza
walked
away
with
a
thousand
dollar
bill.
Hola,
my
Theresa,
I
am
thinking
of
you
now
in
Santa
Barbara
I
have
fifteen
hundred
dollars
and
the
good
luck
of
your
picture
framed
in
gold
Tonight
I'll
put
it
all
on
the
fighting
spurs
of
Gallo
del
Cielo
And
then
I'll
return
to
buy
the
land
that
Villa
stole
from
father
long
ago.
Now
the
moon
has
gone
to
hiding
and
the
lantern
light
spills
shadows
on
the
fighting
sand
Where
a
wicked
black
named
Zorro
faces
Gallo
del
Cielo
in
the
night
But
Carlos
Zaragoza
fears
the
tiny
crack
that
runs
across
his
rooster's
beak
And
he
fears
he
has
lost
the
fifty
thousand
dollars
riding
on
the
fight
Hola,
my
Theresa,
I
am
thinking
of
you
now
in
Santa
Clara
Yes,
the
money's
on
the
table,
I'm
holding
to
your
good
luck
framed
in
gold
And
everything
we
dreamed
of
is
riding
on
spurs
of
del
Cielo
I
pray
that
I'll
return
to
buy
the
land
that
Villa
stole
from
father
long
ago
Then
the
signal
it
was
given,
and
the
roosters
rose
together
far
above
the
sand
Then
Gallo
del
Cielo
sunk
a
gaff
into
Zorro's
shiny
breast
They
were
separated
quickly
but
they
rose
and
fought
each
other
thirty
seven
times
And
the
legends
say
that
everyone
agreed
del
Cielo
fought
the
best
Then
the
screams
of
Zaragoza
filled
the
night
outside
the
town
of
Santa
Clara
As
the
beak
of
del
Cielo
lay
broken
like
a
shell
within
his
hand
And
they
say
that
Zaragoza
screamed
a
curse
upon
the
bones
of
Pancho
Villa
When
Zorro
rose
up
one
last
time
and
drove
del
Cielo
to
the
sand.
Hola,
my
Theresa,
I
am
thinking
of
you
now
in
San
Francisco
There
is
no
money
in
my
pocket,
I
no
longer
have
your
good
luck
framed
in
gold
I
buried
it
last
evening
with
the
bones
of
my
beloved
del
Cielo
And
I'll
not
return
to
buy
the
land
that
Villa
stole
from
father
long
ago
Do
the
rivers
still
run
muddy
outside
of
my
beloved
Casas
Grandes?
And
does
the
scar
upon
my
brother's
face
turn
red
when
he
hears
mention
of
my
name?
Do
the
people
of
El
Sueco
curse
the
theft
of
Gallo
del
Cielo?
Well
tell
my
family
not
to
worry,
I
will
not
return
to
cause
them
shame.
1 St. Olav’s Gate
2 Outbound Plane
3 Big Water
4 Beyond the Blues
5 Spanish Burgundy
6 U.S. Steel
7 Walkin' On the Moon
8 The Angel of Lyon
9 Veteran's Day
10 The Eyes Of Roberto Duran
11 Blue Wing
12 Haley's Comet
13 Manzanar
14 Mineral Wells
15 Gallo Del Cielo
16 The Road to Bayamon
17 Box of Visions
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