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Tales From PA 6

by Tom Flannery and Bret Alexander

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1.
I Ain't Gonna Grow Old In This Place Anymore You reach a certain point when things fit through your head that are better off where they were...better left unsaid You cry for the wrong reasons you drink to get away you find a little hiding place to get through the day Graveyard burstin' at the seams with the junkies and the whores well I ain't gonna grow old in this place anymore Spin the bottle..wiffle ball...catching fireflies while Daddy takes a powder and never says goodbye Ten jobs in 4 years and the bank closing in just a picture in a scrap-book now...a casualty of sin My mother working double shifts out at the Wal-Mart store well I ain't gonna grow old in this place anymore Dreams come true on movie screens and inside battered veins the rest make do with Friday Nights and watching passing trains fools wave the stars and bars singing country songs 6 packs of Natty Ice searching for what’s wrong you digest everything and then realize you're bored well I ain't gonna grow old in this place anymore When you ain't got heart to break when the pain becomes a ache stop looking for something new and run out of things to do destined to sweep the floor no more...no more... Minds about as closed as the factory downtown the weeds have taken over and the cops don't come around gang graffiti on the loading docks..peace signs in the can broken glass to navigate just where I am School spirit and football games...cheerleaders by the score well I ain't gonna grow old in this place anymore Graveyard burstin' at the seams with the junkies and the whores well I ain't gonna grow old in this place anymore
2.
Amantha Ray 05:53
Amantha Ray Bottles lined up across the TV / You binge watch your dreams like you’re on a crime spree You hear the cars on the gravel outside your door / And you’re ready to leave but you don’t know what for Mountains they block the horizon round here / So it’s down to the quick stop for some imported beer That yearbook is tempting….but she ain’t aged well / Too many nights giving you hell Don’t feel much like moving so you might as well stay / Someday she’ll come back...your Amantha Ray Got some shifts at the big box out on 29 / Long as you don’t get sick you’ll get along fine Never needed much sleep them pills help out some / But that ain’t much of nothing where we come from One and a half years at college...and them loans are like ghosts / Chipping away at the interest at most You see all these kids out late at the bars / Too dumb to realize how smart they are A hangover tomorrow...but that don’t stop the day / Someday she’ll come back...your Amantha Ray Bridge Head in the sky / feet on the ground / Never suspecting a thing But if she only knew / what you had in mind / She might never have never hocked that ring Got as far as Boulder…..before she stopped and looked back / With a kid half her age to pick up the slack Took your mother’s suitcase and your GPS / said she’s looking for something and ain’t found it yet This town gets in the blood then it boils / We spread out like dry leaves and leave all the spoils But the stars...they ain’t got the time / To give a damn for what’s yours and what’s mine Crows-feet and the ones made of clay / Someday she’ll come back...your Amantha Ray Bridge Maybe we run out of things to say / It stands to reason that things might happen that way When the stories grow stale like bread in the drawer / And you can’t find nothing there’s always the door Resistance is futile sayeth the Lord / Especially when you’re 50 and bored When the things you wanted are already gone / Hit the highway….and stifle a yawn What the hell does it matter / you’re already grey / Someday she’ll come back...your Amantha Ray
3.
Rolling On 04:27
Rolling On Took the car your daddy bought you / after your time away just what set it all in motion / no one would ever say headed down the turnpike / to anyplace south searching for a feeling / like a taste in your mouth Running from Jesus / in a black oldsmobile She shimmies over 60 / but he got it for a steal your sister she’s re-born again / said she's glad your gone moved into your bedroom / with another ex-con But you’re rolling on...rolling in / Chasing away the childhood sin Growing up growing old / Tired of doing what you’re told Your brother went to grad-school / for the lack of a plan And to avoid coming back here / for as long as he can There’s been whispering about your mother / and the preacher for a while Guess figuring if she gets there / best do it in style Daddy holding court down at Paulie’s bar When he runs out of excuses starts blaming FDR Enough meat in the freezer / to outlast them all got the Ten Commandments mounted on the wall But you’re rolling on...rolling in / Chasing away the childhood sin Growing up growing old / Tired of doing what you’re told Find a bridge and peer on over Clutching a roadside 4-leaf clover Just another irish rover Just another irish rover Every other Christmas / you try to make it home Trying to recognize the faces / that they send you on their phones Heads hung heavy / in the morning light The same empty bottles / and the same old fight Uber to the airport / and you fall into the bar Wondering how you managed / to even get this far All their eyes like slits / only open on a dare Looking for their love / not their thoughts and prayers But you’re rolling on...rolling in / Chasing away the childhood sin Growing up growing old / Tired of doing what you’re told
4.
Morning Eyes 03:59
Morning Eyes Phone buzzing by the night light/ she still don't understand the morning commute for some / is 4am in Disneyland trying to break this thing wide open / get while the gettin's good today for what we can do / tomorrow for what we should I stole you from your Daddy / when he was at the bar when he'd drag himself back home / he could never see very far So we'd hide out in backseats / and motels with neon lights rooms rates by the hour / and a clerk too tired to fight chorus When dreams ain't enough / to keep it all tied down Will we be together / will we still be around wanna see those morning eyes / but there's nothing in my head no more morning eyes / sleeping in my bed Post-it notes and postcards crossing in the mail all the memories sold...at another fire-sale doctor's on speed dial...the mills all know my name just one more hit of Oxy...might make me feel the same / get me back in the game chorus Maybe I should have stayed and you should have flown it's always the stranger who ends up alone tonight I'm sitting in this roadhouse / as they sweep under my chair ain't no last call here / you just feel it in the air / best clear out of here When the head says run and the heart says stay it's time to find a bottle and look the other way Gotta burn it down to save it….toss the embers in the air Act like all this is normal….and like we do not care chorus
5.
The Death of Joe Strummer What happens when the heart is too big for the chest and it just can't keep up with all the rest what happens when it takes you on and wears you down until you're gone what do we take from that Joe? what do we take from that Joe? now that you're gone I got these sounds in my head they make no sense so we're stuck instead with recycled trash and computer chips rock and roll for food and tips what do we take from that Joe? what do we take from that Joe? now that you're gone You were Woody Guthrie with a mowhawk and a scratching loud guitar a ravaged voice from screaming telling us where we are now you're knocking at the backstage door trying to get in panhandling on the boardwalk wondering what might have been It still don't feel right that you're gone without the blaze of glory of a deathbed song so used to watching 'em waste away eaten to the bone by a brand new day what do we take from that Joe? what do we take from that Joe? now that you're gone
6.
As Good a Choice as Anyone When you’ve used up all your second chances And you curse your set of circumstances And you’re turning into a ghost that haunts A house he really didn’t want You want to scream but it doesn’t make sense To waste your words in your own defense And you’re told to embrace the thing you hate Because good things come to those who wait Don’t give up A change is gonna come Don’t give up I can feel it rustling in the wind Take my hand We’ll go wandering through the dark We’re as good a choice as anyone To find the light again When all your plans go up in smoke And turn into a running joke And the people living in the past Say they knew it wouldn’t last Don’t give up A change is gonna come Don’t give up I can hear it singing in the night Take my hand We’ll go wandering through the dark We’re as good a choice as anyone To finally get it right There are curses in the sidewalk Of this cold and bitter town That get inside your head as you’re wandering They don’t care what you’re feeling They don’t care what you think They don’t care what you’re dreaming Now young men sing and genuflect To the patron saint of lack of respect And the old and angry build their case To put those bastards in their place And you try to scream but it doesn’t make sense To waste your words on ignorance From the people living in the past Who say that you will never last Don’t give up A change is gonna come Don’t give up I can hear it rustling in the wind Take my hand We’ll go wandering through the dark We’re as good a choice as anyone To find the light again To find the light again
7.
Stephen Foster’s Ghost Follow the road / follow the river Indian nation / Indian giver Pill-mills laid out / across the track Crumbling factories / and smoke-stacks What you remember / and what you see Is just memory / playing tricks on me Used to walk but now we ride….up and down and side to side Used to walk but now we ride….up and down and side to side In an old village flop house / By the Chelsea Hotel Where Sid and Nancy both got sick and never did get well You bleed for what you love and I’ll try and do the same We’ll share our pennies at the gate and split the picture frame All glassy-eyed / and shuffling past from all them promises / that never last They’ll be no future / for those who stay And let the past / get in the way I should be / carved up in stone Instead of dying here / all alone I had one more song to sing...but first I gotta pawn this ring I had one more song to sing...but first I gotta pawn this wedding ring Pass the past and dollar stores / And all the reservation whores The do-littles and do-mores / Railroad tracks and meth sores SSI or join the corps / Dream behind a bedroom door On your knees to scrub the floor / Tell me what are we fighting for Brill building and tin pans / Back alleys...waylaid plans Taxi cabs and Times Square / Ready to take you anywhere Rumbling for your daily bread / paying with a busted head Or a needle jabbing at a vein / that ends it all once again In an old village flop house / By the Chelsea Hotel Where Sid and Nancy both got sick and never did get well You bleed for what you love and I’ll do the same We’ll share our pennies at the gate and split the picture frame
8.
Twilight In the Shadowlands We’d heard about old Sullivan….my baby and me Marching up the highway…..being all that he could be Trying to make a nation from a valley of tears Of my father’s father’s father, and his father’s ‘cross the years Provisions as the crow flies….all put to the flame The white man and the hand of god wiping out our name Nothing red allowed to live ‘cept the blood rolling down These wretched endless mountains...under a thorny crown Clips on the floor boards….with Johnnie Walker Black One to leave a legacy...and one to walk it back Magazines left behind….like rice on a wedding ground We’d make love along the river bed….and never make a sound The short wave radio...and Duracell by the score And 100 dollar bills….from the fresh jacked general store It’s easier than you think my friend...when you’re cold to the touch And the scraps they left behind for you….don’t amount to much Twilight in the Shadowlands Loose dirt through closed hands Ain’t gonna make you understand I’m gonna go out like a man Headlights bearing down on us through the Pennsylvania trees Megaphone blaring….got my hands between your knees If they wanted me alive they shoulda seen up close and slow The fear in that old man’s eyes….before I let him go The heart is what you took...the heart is what I gave Just bury us together….in my Daddy’s grave Twilight in the Shadowlands Loose dirt through closed hands Ain’t gonna make you understand I’m gonna go out like a man
9.
County Line 03:59
County Line Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na (2) Highway lines and the radio Getting you where you need to go Riding the world in the left lane Running away from graveyard pain yea yea yea Bury it all and move along And hope you never hear a song That brings it back one more time While you’re straddling that county line yea yea Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na (2) You come to town and you bring the war Slap your back then lock their doors There ain’t no gray....just shots and doom Seen you lay out an entire barroom yea yea yea But a heart like glass on a mantle top will never survive that kind of drop hands in the dark like a lonesome pine While you’re straddling that county line yea yea yea Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na Saturday nights Sunday morning Both come on with no warning Redemption sin rinse repeat All them pills and two crows feet now... yea two crows feet now What they do to a child is what builds the man And that bit nobody understands a town full of ghosts with secret eyes Nothing written down...so you memorize yea yea yea Nobody and everybody knew all them things that they’d done to you Turning dirty water into wine While you’re straddling that county line yea yea yea Na na na na na na na na na Na na na na na na na na (2)
10.
Shelby Cobra 03:05
Shelby Cobra Daddy was a fighting man / learned to walk then he ran earned what he could / to steal what he can mamma she'd just shake her head / thankful for the warm bed and them little pills / that kept her living in her own head I grew up in between the doors in the hall / bought a record player and bounced off the wall learned to play a guitar / never got very far singing Badlee songs in the back of some dive bar free townie women and drafts all night / wake up in the morning with another case of stage fright Cheetos and a road trip / learn to leave and learn to tip ain't afraid of nothing 'cept a little bit of kinship Shelby Cobra is my name / and with it comes all the shame of all the things I've done to keep you feeling just the same told I got a son / coulda been anyone I guess that's what you get for 30 years of one and done Beer and chasers and a credit card / Burstin’ at the seams from trying too hard Creepin’ time, creepin’ gray / Gonna get you anyway So why not leave a corpse that looks good during the day Roll up my wisdom in a sleeping bag / And listen to Levon sing ‘Rag Mama Rag’ Feel lonesome feel bad / Feeling sick or feeling glad At least you feel something that’s the best I ever had They used to say “join the corps../ Maybe you’ll get a war” Get yourself a medal and bury it in your drawer Maybe a GI loan / Get some blood from a stone At least you got some stuff to remember when you’re all alone But I sleep ‘till noon that’s a natural fact / Had a 9 to 5 but I ended up sacked Lazy is as lazy does / Sometimes just because I was all that I could be before I know what all that was Dying is a drag I must’ve read that somewhere / Got myself a flower and wore it in my hair So that’s how I got here / It all seems pretty clear Until I put my shaking hands on this here steering wheel Watching movies in my head / Go to sleep when I’m dead Tried to take the fork but I wound up here instead Argue with an echo / Wanna stay but then I go Split the bloody difference by pulling out real slow Rear view mirror ain’t got nothin on me / ‘Cause I only look at what I wanna see Maybe I’ll write a book / That takes a deeper look At all the scar tissues that forms like a new crook ‘Learnin’ all the ropes at the foot of a man / With no self doubt so he couldn’t understand Hey ho rock and roll / Population overflow Maybe you do need a weatherman to know that the wind blows
11.
A Greater Generation Has everybody gone insane I’ve never seen such hate Give in to fear the end is near But no one hesitates I find it sad and narrow minded This course we’re sailing now When all you see is heresy When you look over the bough But I’ve been hopeful as of late Though I admit I had my doubts A greater generation waits To kick these bastards out Listen to the silence And the heartbeats all around From children far too long laid out Like cordwood on the ground Tears they fall like railroad tracks Rolling down the line From the seeds of betrayal Uprooted one more time But I’ve been hopeful as of late Though towns and crosses burn A greater generation waits In line to take it’s turn Rise up all you vagabonds Put on your marching shoes Ain’t no one said you couldn’t dance To some old gut bucket blues And so a child shall lead them And all are welcome here Your saints and all your sinners And all that you hold dear But I’ve been hopeful as of late The better angels are aligned A greater generation waits No more nevermind Yes, I’ve been hopeful as of late Though I admit I had my doubts A greater generation waits To kick these bastards out

about

01 - I Ain't Gonna Grow Old In This Place Anymore (Flannery)
02 - Amantha Ray (Flannery)
03 - Rolling On (Flannery)
04 - Morning Eyes (Flannery)
05 - The Death of Joe Strummer (Flannery/Alexander)
06 - As Good a Choice as Anyone (Alexander)
07 - Stephen Foster's Ghost (Flannery)
08 - Twilight In the Shadowlands (Flannery/Alexander)
09 - County Line (Flannery)
10 - Shelby Cobra (Flannery)
11 - A Greater Generation (Flannery/Alexander)

copyright 2018 all rights reserved
recorded at Saturation Acres in Dupont, PA
produced by Bret Alexander

Tom Flannery – guitar, vocals
Bret Alexander – guitar, vocals, mandolin, piano, harmonica

credits

released June 21, 2018

“Their songwriting chops are touched by the gods on this 11 song set. I don’t think any other duo does it better right now”

— 88.5 WRKC radio

“‘Twilight In The Shadowlands’ is a haunting track….Alexander transfers this listener from the streets of north Belfast Ireland to the rugged and haunting mountains of Northeast Pennsylvania…..With its embattled stories of love, life and death ‘Tales From PA 6’ matches the intensity and standard of what the two men have done before. We can only hope that this isn’t the last collaboration between these 2 American gems”

— Seán Ó Sirideán
Belfast Poet, author of ‘The Ramblings of a Bessbrook Boy”

“Tom Flannery and Bret Alexander do it again. Two different voices, but one soul. And that soul shines within these new songs as it did on their 2016 release ‘Dupont Back Porches’.

Their latest release Tales from Route 6 is sharp, focused, and poignant. It’s filled with tales of America. Tales of all of us caught in the middle trying to make the best of thing…keeping our chin up…moving forward. Their style is in the vein of Springsteen, LaMontagne, and Drake. It’s Americana, it’s gritty, and it’s real. Alexander breathes into his harp and it wails in a Nebraska style. Many of these songs could easily fit nicely between “Mansion on the Hill” and “Used Cars”.

..even in the most melancholy or heartbroken lyrics there’s a sense of hope…Flannery and Alexander are two truly gifted individuals. Not sure if there’s anyone better locally to tell our stories.”

–Keith Perks – 1120 Studios / AntiHero Magazine

“Tom Flannery’s songwriting has always been distinctive for its defiant exuberance in the face of loss. In his latest, Tales from PA 6, with Bret Alexander, he takes it step further, claiming the mantle as coal country’s answer to James McMurtry. From the stunning, nuanced opening lines of “I Ain’t Gonna Grow Old in This Place Anymore,” into the evocative picaresque, “Stephen Foster’s Ghost,” all the way through the rocker “Shelby Cobra”, Flannery and Alexander catch the soul of a region – and a country – making damned sure if it’s bound for hell, it’s gonna squeeze every drop out of life before it goes.”

— Seamus McGraw – Author of ‘The End of Country: Dispatches from the Frack Zone’, ‘Betting The Farm On A Drought: Stories From The Front Line Of Climate Change’, and ‘A Thirsty Land The Making of an American Water Crisis’

“…Universal and articulate; powerful ruminations on life, family, love and death. An exception album of rock-driven acoustic story-telling…. the songs from Tales from PA 6 are thoughtful, mature and empathetic stories that have a familiarity that rings true no matter what road you are on.”

–Vinyl Voyage Radio

“Throughout its stirring 11 tracks, ‘Tales From PA 6’ takes you on an imaginative and highly descriptive creative journey. With each number, singer/songwriters Tom Flannery and Bret Alexander take you inside the lives of people that we’ve all seem to have known or encountered, and its done with a thoughtful sense of poignancy. It’s folk music at its best from two of the region’s finest songsmiths.”

—Alan K. Stout, music journalist and radio host, 105 The River

-- NOTES --

My favorite line from Tales Of PA 6 is this: “Resistance is futile saith the Lord/Especially when you’re 50 and bored”.

You have to be 50(or close to it) to feel that line. If you are half a century old AND a musician you feel it quite a bit more. The ghost of that line keeps showing up time and time again throughout the record. In character after character and in every story.

Tom and I discussed this record for the first time at a bar. We didn’t talk much about marketing it or doing shows to support it. We just talked about Pennsylvania. Love it or hate it, Northeastern PA is a unique place. It’s the kind of place that deserves a song or two written about it.

I wanted to do a collection of tunes about the people and places along Rt 6. I have spent a lot of time on that highway, and I thought there were treasure troves of stories on the side of that road. Tom had half the lyrics written before I decided whether I really liked the idea or not. That’s the way it is with him. We are a good combination, no doubt.

When I was in middle school my favorite short story was “A Piece Of Steak” by Jack London. It was a tale about an old prize fighter trying to win a match against a young man. The one fought for his family and the rent, the other for glory. Experience lost, youth won.

Years later, my favorite movie was “Cinderella Man”. A similar story but with a happy ending.

I don’t know what it is about fighters that I love so much. And if they know they are fighting a losing battle, I’m totally smitten. Resistance is futile, indeed.

As Rocky famously put it “It’s not about hitting hard. It’s about getting hit.”

That’s what I get out of these tunes. Everybody is out there, still in the game. Maybe they win, maybe they are still waiting to win. Sure, things didn’t go according to plan. That was years ago. But, like The Winter Warlock, they still have a couple magic beans….. and goddammit it’s time to use them. Probably they are fighting a losing battle, they know that. But there they are anyway.

Any 50 year old can relate to that.

— Bret Alexander

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

So we were sitting in this bar….

It was last summer. Bret and I decided to meet over drinks and discuss working together again. So we found a joint halfway between his place and mine, and started in on the whiskey and lager.

Our first effort was a record called “Dupont Back Porches” which we released in 2016. We met and wrote and recorded it in a sort of creative blur, skipping the parts where you’re supposed to rehearse, and going right to the parts where you hit the “record” button and hope you remember the bridge that you just finished writing 30 second ago. Somehow we pulled it off, and became good friends in the process. Music does that.

When we get together to talk new music we usually spend a few hours talking about everything else first. Our kids (we both have 2 daughters, around the same ages), our shared love of Levon Helm, the books on our respective nightstands, the current state of our nation. There’s no fixed starting point, and no roadmap. It’s a whirlpool of laughing and head shaking and sometimes astonishment that we’ve managed to make it this far without committing a felony. We kept the bartender busy, needless to say.

But back to the music. We discussed writing and recording an entire record in a single day. Neither one of us thinks the idea is insane….which should tell you all you need to know about who you’re dealing with. Anyway, someday we’re gonna do that. But we were looking for something else on this night.

Bret had this idea of getting in his car and following route 6 and the river, writing songs about what he encountered along the way. He also started to get really technical and talked about building an app for your phone that would pinpoint your location on route 6 and cue up the appropriate track…..like having a tour guide in the passenger seat who played guitar. I loved the concept but my non-technical eyes glazed over at the thought of downloading something from the app store…..and right around this moment somebody came into the bar and played The Beatles “Revolution 9” from the White Album on the jukebox.

I cannot convey to you just how weird of a moment this was.

You know the tune, right? Eight minutes of some guy chanting “number 9 number 9” over noises that sound like a barnyard being strafed by fighter jets. It’s how you spend your time when Yoko takes over, and the drugs run out of ideas. Why in the world anybody would play this song on a public jukebox is best left to deeper thinkers than I.

Bret and I both kind of looked at each other. Initially I thought maybe a herd of cats were fighting in the street, but no, it really was Revolution 9 on the jukebox. The volume was, it should be noted, at a level akin to a Motorhead concert.

A guy teetering on the edge of sobriety walked over to the (digital) jukebox. He assumed there was a record inside and that it was skipping. He was beating on it like the Fonz in a frenzy...to no avail. “Number 9 Number 9 Number 9….” continued unabated. He couldn’t take it anymore. Things were getting surreal.

We suddenly had the bar very much to ourselves. Everybody in the place had disappeared like they were raptured. The faces on potential patrons walking in was one of horror. What is that screeching sound? What kind of place was this?

And then, it was finally over. I think the next song was some vintage Chuck Berry, so at least the culprit had a wicked sense of humor. The bar re-filled and everybody pretended that what just happened didn’t really happen. And me and Bret emptied our glasses and silently decided that we’d do a sort-of concept album about a mythic road trip filled with rogues and tramps and saints and sinners and gamblers and thieves, all searching for redemption and little slices of dignity, and all not worrying about the sins of Saturday night until Sunday morning rolls in. We’d write songs about guys who might play “Revolution 9” on a jukebox in an Old Forge bar, in other words.

And then I went home that night and wrote the lyrics to “Twilight In the Shadowlands” and soon after Bret had the tune and we were off and running. We encountered Stephen Foster and Sid Vicious and Joe Strummer in our travels, discovered a man paralyzed by blind faith, waiting for his Amantha Ray. Men and women were scattering in all directions, running both towards and away from each other, numbed by religion or pills or booze or one-night-stands. Or just plain old 9-5 alienation. Three and four minute movies is what I discovered we were making. And we were pooling our voices together….showing solidarity with each other and the folks we were writing and singing about.

And just when we felt bereft of happy endings, kids the age of our own daughters stood up and said “no more”. Those long moments of silence from Emma Gonzalez at the March for Our Lives in DC were the first cracks under the feet of the casually cruel white men who stopped caring about us and the people we write about a long time ago.

The times seem to be a-changin. A greater generation indeed…..and so that seemed a good place to stop until the next time.

We hope you dig it.

In a bit…

--tf

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Tom Flannery Scranton, Pennsylvania

"One of the most gifted songwriters to emerge at the turn of the century"
-- The All Music Guide

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