
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Straight Time´
´´Merci....this is a song about a fellow who gets out prison and
uh.....trying to find his way back into the world, back into his family....trying
to change himself....everybody´s struggled to do a little straight time....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Highway 29´
´´Thank you.....this is a, uh, song about sudden insight, insight´s
usually expensive....uh, unfortunately only comes after you´ve fucked
up very badly, most of the time....this is ´Highway 29´....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Point Blank´
´´Thank you.....I´d appreciate it if you didn´t use
those little cameras, uh, no (chuckles).... somebody requested this the other
night, he said he was gonna be here tonight so.....last time I was in Montpellier
I didn´t play it so (chuckles)....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´For You´
´´(chuckles) Voici un chanson pour mes vieux amis (chuckles)....for
my old fans out there
.....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ‘Red Headed Woman’ (following
´For You´)
´´That was a good try....I picked the guitar out of tune on that,
alright (chuckles) this is a song, uh .....wanna get it right tonight ‘cause
I got it wrong last night and it seems that I said....´Are there any women
with red horses in the house ?’, I’m not sure (chuckles) alright,
let me see if I (chuckles) what I’m trying to say is, uh (chuckles) uh,
uh (?) femmes aux cheveux, cheveux, not ´chevaux´, cheveux (chuckles)(?)(chuckles)
bring out those red horses, you know, I´d like to see those (chuckles)....here’s
a song about cunnilingus, uh, favorite pastime in the States but it was probably
invented right here in France, I got a feeling (chuckles).... (?)(chuckles)....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Two Hearts´ (following
´Red Headed Woman´)
´´Thank you....I heard those horses....alright, this is for my red
headed woman.....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Dry Lightning´
´´Thank you, this is a song, uh.....about men and women....I know
those words (?)....uh.... hommes....about women, les femmes.....le....l´amour,
sex.....sex.....tres difficile, correct (chuckles) but....(?)....it´s
about one of those relationships where, uh.....there´s some good things
going on but.....might´ve worked out, like I like to say, if you hadn´t
been so busy sort of fucking it up all the time.....and uh.....everybody´s
got a few of those along the way.....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Sinaloa Cowboys´
´´(?) alright, this is, uh, Kevin Buell, my friend.....and the only
Tom Joad band member, that´s right (chuckles) this is a, uh.....this is,
uh, the next four songs are set in the Southwestern part of the United States,
uh....I was traveling through Arizona about six years ago and I was in a little
motel in this little desert town and uh....it was one of those little, one-story
motels, you know, I like to say, where you lay down at the end of your bed and
the door´s open, you can reach out and touch your car in the parking lot
and know it´s still there, you know (chuckles) but uh, it was just, uh,
it was late at night and these two Mexican men came in from the west and came
over and started looking at our motorcycles, took the room next to us.....and
one had had a younger brother that died in a motorcycle accident in Southern
California....and he talked about his younger brother for quite a while.....and
uh....I don´t know how people survive that kind of loss, how they get
the world to feel right again ....but uh....this is a song about, uh, two brothers
who get caught up in the Central California drug trade....and uh, I was thinking
of him when I wrote it so I dedicate it to him every night ....my mysterious
friend, wherever he might be, this is called ´Sinaloa Cowboys´....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´The Line´
´´Thank you.....this is a song about, uh....it´s set on the
San Diego-Tijuana, Mexico-border and uh, a lot of young guys come out of the
army and they end up going to work for the California border patrol, that´s
a confusing job.....and uh, it´s an issue that was pretty badly abused
in the last American election, there´s politicians always ready to....to
cease on that immigration issue and I think in the States there´s always
been people coming across our southern border, doing jobs that nobody else wants
to do for a pay that nobody else wants to take and uh.....at the behest of American
businesses and in return their kids would have a shot for a better education
and maybe some medical care, anyway, this is a song about a young border patrolman
trying to figure out where the line really is down there....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Balboa Park´
´´This is a song about children, I think once you, once you have
your own children, you´re..... sensitive to, uh....to the fate of all
children, in some fashion, I always like to say that children are....they got
a window onto the grace that´s in the world, it comes, that´s their
birthright, every child is born with that and, uh, they bring that grace into
your life but it´s the, uh, adults´ job to sort of protect that
grace that surrounds them until they´re old enough to, uh, protect themselves
and, uh, this is a song about children that don´t have somebody to do
that for ´em....and, uh, what happens when that grace is violated and,
uh.....you end up lost and out on your own.....at an age when you shouldn´t
be, this is about some young kids that come across the Tijuana River into San
Diego, to this strip called Twelth Street and Balboa Park .....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Across the Border´
´´Thank you....I grew....I grew up in a, thank you, I, I grew up
in a house where there wasn´t a whole lot of talk about culture or books
or, or the part that those things were supposed to play in your life and, uh,
the first thing I really remember was that when I was a little boy, my mother
was still a young girl and she liked that rock and roll music, you know, I´d
come down into the kitchen in the morning and she´d have the radio on
on top of the refridgerator and I´d sit there and eat my cereal and listen
to all that great music....and all those records and all the singers, and all
those great singers was the first thing that really gave me a sense of the world
outside my little town and the idea that there were other lives to be lived
than the lives that I saw being lived all around me.....and, uh, there was something
in the singers´ voices, their voices were filled with happiness and sadness
and, and, uh, fun and sex and, and, uh, it seemed, all, all those records had
a little secret message ´There´s a party going on, you´re
missing it´ (chuckles) you know.....and uh....for a long time those records
really, really sustained me, they still do, they still do and they played the
part for me that culture is supposed to play for you, opening up your vision
into that world outside, you know.... presenting you with ideas, possibilities....when
I was 26, a friend of mine showed me John Ford´s Grapes of Wrath and that
movie and the Steinbeck novel did for me what those great records always did....there
was something in the film and in the book that I felt like I....that I recognised,
in some fashion....and uh....the idea, I guess, the, the movie, the film and
the novel were heroic, they were heroic in a very old-fashioned sense that there
was a character who was sacrificing for an idea that was bigger than he was,
was educating himself and then trying to save himself and to salvage his community
against forces much greater than he could (?)....I always found inspiration
in the film and in that novel, still do....and uh, this is a song about hope,
about the kind of hope that people carry even after there´s no reason
to hope sometimes, uh, it´s what makes us human beings, I think....so,
uh, I wanna do this for, uh, for you tonight, wishing you the best (makes a
dedication in French).....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Working on the Highway´
´´No, no, no....I got work to do, can´t be fucking around
up here (chuckles)....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´This Hard Land´
´´(?)(chuckles)....alright.....this is a song about brotherhood,
sisterhood, trying to find out where you belong....it´s an immigrant song.....alright.....´´
16.05.97 Montpellier, France, intro to ´Galveston Bay´
´´(?)(chuckles)....alright, uh.....alright....this is a song, uh,
I´d like to thank everybody for coming down to the show tonight, thank
you very much.....Montpellier, thank you.....this is a, uh....song set on the
Gulf Coast of Texas, it´s about an incident that happened in the mid-80´s
in the United States, at the end of the Vietnam War, had a lot of refugees that
came out of, uh....South Vietnam and ended up settling in the Gulf Coast of
Texas, this is a song, they went into the fishing industry, there was a lot
of tension between the Vietnamese fishermen and the Texas fishermen....so this
is called ´Galveston Bay´....´´
Compiled by : Johanna Pirttijärvi