2013-01-13

3748 - MAD BUFFALO - A Good Bad Road (2004) (REPOST-2244)


MAD BUFFALO

''A GOOD BAD ROAD''

2004

52:10

1. Coyote Dreams/3:31

2. A Good Bad Road/4:31

3. Little Bird/5:19

4. Needles/3:41

5. Find the Time/3:10

6. Idaho/4:52

7. Julia/4:00

8. Prairie Home/4:37

9. Camp Disappointment/5:06

10. Tragedy of the Commons/3:04

11. Live Wire/3:46

12. Hell Hold/6:34

Randy Riviere/Guitars, Vocals

Michael Ward/Guitars

Gary McKenzie, Bob Glaub, Reggie McBride/Bass

Dave Hawkes, Nick Morrone, Gregg Thomas/Drums

Sherry Pedigo/Vocals

Marty Grebb/Keyboards, Sax

Lyrics

Coyote Dreams

Saw you down on that dusty road

With hair all tangled and free

You just turned and gave me a greasy smile

On your way down to Tennessee

Oh oh oh oh oh oh

It don’t take a village

To get you what you need

Red moon over smoky sky

Makes it hard to see

But you’ve got an edge on that rocky ledge

Where you know misfortune be

Oh oh oh oh oh oh

You can pay for all of Virginia

But these dogs will howl for free

You can pay for all of Virginia

But this dog will howl for free

I’m thinking about ragged jeans and coyote dreams

Out in the weeds where livin’ is free

I think I’ll buy an old truck and with a little luck

I’ll find a little edge for me

Oh oh oh oh oh oh

If you pave over Virginia

These dogs will go to Tennessee

If you pave over Virginia

This dog will go to Tennessee

© 2003 Randy Riviere

A Good Bad Road

Born in good grass and fields of stone

To me and the javelina this is our home

Where the air is blue and the sky is high

You can take a long walk and never say goodbye

Chorus

You won’t see me on your holiday

I’m out here in this silver sage alone

And all there is between us my friend

Is a good bad road

Raised on waves of sun unkind

Had to grow thorns just to survive

Where the sand can blow like a driving snow

I’ve never heard a sound that I don’t know

Hear the thunder

And I wonder

If I’m gonna make it home

Grown old on time I used for free

And giving back something is all right by me

Where the wind and raven touch the ground

There’s a place not needing another town

© 2003 Randy Riviere

Little Bird

Little bird sitting on the window sill

In that hard north wind there’s a bitter chill

You were fledged young and now out on your own

Has the air gotten colder now that you’re grown?

Hey hey, you’re out on your way

Can’t keep this world from turning

You’d better get down south today

There’s a ribbon of highway on the edge of town

Where you can hear the engines whining and see the wheels roll around

And inside there’s only concrete and buildings so tall

They keep the sun from shining and the trees don’t grow at all

Hey hey, you’re out on your way

Can’t keep this world from turning

You’d better get down south today

Chorus

Trouble’s not something you want

Trouble’s not something you need

No one gave you nothing to start

No one gives you nothing for free

Little bird you got away

From that iron hand of winter and all the crows that came your way

Outside there’s fields that grow

Seeds of truth and timber to stop the winter when it blows

Hey hey, you’re out on your way

Can’t keep this world from turning

You’d better get down south today

© 2003 Randy Riviere

Needles

I’m standing on top of the world

I’m standing on top of the world

I worked all day and schemed all night

Gotta get their ground just to get it all right

Have an ocean of cars to get through too

I’d have a notion for Mars if it would pencil out too

I’m standing on top of the world

I’m standing on top of the world

Chorus

Now I’m headed out through Needles

To light the desert night

I’m standing on top of the world

I’m standing on top of the world

If we build the supply we’ll create the need

And it will trickle on down to you and me

We’ll butter our bread while we make them go lean

My American dream is red, white, blue and green

I’m standing on top of the world

I’m standing on top of the world

A river runs wild if you let it go free

And if you take it all then there’s none for me

But the grass is green and the blades are long

And I aint feeling all right because it’s all gone wrong

I’m standing on top of the world

I’m standing on top of the world

© 2002 Randy Riviere

Find the Time

Little eyes see

When it is that I go

Little eyes need

What it is that I know

Chorus

I’m tired of all the running

What I need I can’t get with their money

I’ve got to find some time

A ranger walks the line

From the anger of his time

The crusader looks ahead

For what it was he left behind

The wind took down our oak

Up on the hill the other day

I tried to count the rings

But got lost along the way

© 2003 Randy Riviere

Idaho

Faces that you’ll never know

Places that you’ll never go

A stranger is standing in the morning haze

Is he coming to end your days?

Chorus

In Idaho … where the tired old warrior sleeps

In Idaho … with his anger down at his feet

In Idaho … through these snows he’s marched in time

In Idaho … it’s how he feels about human kind

The children are playing in the city square

And tomorrow will be only theirs

Yesterday’s glory is barely known

But now it’s all you own

I don’t want to talk about it

Don’t even want to think about it

And I don’t ever want to die

I can regain that feeling

My arms, legs and hands are tingling

If I could only tell you why

I’ve given my blood for leaving

But only my heart is bleeding

Does it really hurt to say goodbye?

© 2003 Randy Riviere

Prairie Home

Seventy five miles from my prairie home

Where I packed up one winter and left alone

Her eyes were tender as the morning sun

One look and I knew that she was the one

Chorus

Time has got to get along

And it won’t make way for the weak or the strong

But I still miss my prairie home…its home…its home

Mother’s coffee and a fresh made bed

The sound of the chickens from the corner shed

But father’s plow had turned to rust

‘Cause his father’s ground had turned to dust

© 2001 Randy Riviere

Camp Disappointment

It’s good to see you my old friend

They’re waiting at the gates out front again

What they’re after I don’t know?

This is just Camp Disappointment

We left smoke in the valley at Rimrock Bend

We took blood on that prairie in a driving wind

What can I tell them to make them know?

This is just Camp Disappointment

We polled up that river to an open land

To watch them fill it up with their hopes of man

What can I say to make them understand?

This is just Camp Disappointment

It’s good to see you my old friend

But those days gone by can’t come again

What can I tell you that you don’t know?

This is just Camp Disappointment

© 2001 Randy Riviere

Tragedy of the Commons

We came the way our mothers came

And we’ve run from the son’s of the older ones

We see what’s been seen by those shackled & free

We dream like our fathers dreamed

And we make with our hands tools

To move the sea and the sand

Like a gun in their hands

Our children run on roads undone

That were carved from hills that went to the sun

When you blow them away

It makes it harder to stay

Silver cars and fancy bars

You can get blinded by the light in the darkest night

We can drive to the Keys

And be there by three

In the pounding rain the levee holds

‘Cause it’s built from the blood of our young & old

Put a stone in for me

And I want it for free

Sell it high and buy it low

Melt all your gold just to watch it flow

It’ll flow & flow

So you can grow & grow

We dream like our fathers dreamed

And we make with our hands tools

To move the sea & the sand

Just like a gun in their hands

© 2001 Randy Riviere

Live Wire

Trouble down the road at Sante Fe

Trouble up the coast at Redwood Bay

There’s a fire on the ridge and we better run

They’ve got a big hunger and it’s just for fun

Trouble down the road at Sante Fe

Chorus

I’ve got a hold of a live wire

I’ve gotta pretty girl and she knows just what to do

I’ve gotta pretty girl and she knows just what to do

When the lights go out we get amused

As the world goes by outside our view

I’ve gotta pretty girl and she knows just what to do

Met the devil on the banks of the Rio Grande

Met the devil on the banks of the Rio Grande

I tried to speak but was unaware

I tried to sing but it wasn’t there

Met the devil on the banks of the Rio Grande

© 2002 Randy Riviere

Hell Hold

The scene was a land

Where the sun gave life to man

And love was their need

But they came in from the sea

Chorus

For thirteen strips of iron

They’d throw you down

In that hell hold

For six thousand miles

In a five by five

In that hell hold

If you want day light

You’d get it over the side

From that hell hold

Seeds only grow

In the ground where they are sowed

They need warmth from the sky

And the care of a watchful eye

Greed only knows

What it is that will make you grow

You’re free from day to day

Since you know that there’s a better way

© 2003 Randy Riviere

BIOGRAPHY

By Bob Doershuk

January 14, 2012

Nashville, Tennessee

Where does the Mad Buffalo roam? Wherever Randy Riviere happens to be. Most of the time, that would be somewhere in Montana, where the unique singer/songwriter crafts the songs he records and performs under that soubriquet. And just as its suggestion of animal strength, dignity, loneliness and loss stirs feelings embedded in the American psyche, so does the music Riviere creates.

If you’ve heard the work of Riviere/Mad Buffalo on his three previous albums A Good Bad Road, Fool Stand and Wilderness, then you understand this connection. A wildlife biologist who has worked independently and in official positions to preserve the integrity of threatened environments, Riviere (pronounced “Ri-VEER”) is also a student of American history – not just through the names of presidents and battlefields but also in the sense of its spirit and soul. You don’t have to live in the heartland to feel this in his work. From city centers to suburban sprawls, coastlines to mountaintops, we all can sense something in his poetry of his lyrics and raw, rootsy sound that captures part of who we are as a people.

This timelessness is a precious exception to much of the musical “product” being manufactured today. Yet Riviere lives in our present too, as his latest album demonstrates. For all its grounding in tradition, Red and Blue is tuned into the challenges of today.

“We’ve gone through an economy that’s been the worst in my lifetime and we’re not out of it yet,” says Riviere. “It’s affected all of us: neighbors, friends and us too. This sent me back to writers who’ve thought about the human condition and how we can integrate ourselves with the landscape. So my family and I are working now on how to sustain ourselves and be as self-sufficient as possible.”

This decision represents not a retreat from contemporary uncertainties but rather a return to the sources of our national identity. “I’ve gone back to our rural country roots,” Riviere says. “You don’t have to go very far back in time to when there were lots of farmers in America, a lot of folks working and living off the land. It’s a major part of our framework. It’s the quilt of our tradition, if you will.”

Recorded in the studio of his co-producer Chad Cromwell and performed by some of Nashville’s most empathetic musicians, Red and Blue reflects on this dissonance between what once brought us together and what divides us nowadays. Each of its songs is a story, not so much relayed in specific details as suggested through vivid, sometimes dreamlike images. “Tides” is a down-tempo monolog in which observations about threatening weather (“It rained some today and there’s more that’s on the way”) intersperse with enigmatic asides and images (“Found a note slid under my door: ‘You ain’t coming here no more.’”) A story unfolds not through traditional means but through implication.

Similarly, the ambitious title track evokes places that aren’t specific and yet somehow feel familiar. We’re “up on the family farm, over by Eagle Run and out on the prairie sun.” And then Riviere takes us “up on the boulevard. We got our start with a union card.” Moment by moment, over keening steel guitar and a steady, slow beat, he lays out a series of pictures: houses built by honest labor, babies being cradled, people surviving floods and draughts. There’s no plot, no beginning and end, but every track on Red and Blue is a journey that’s both elusive and powerfully emotional.

Where does this technique come from? “I took a writing class in school – ‘Literature of the American West,’” Riviere remembers. “One thing that struck home with me was the professor saying, ‘If you can write like a Native American talks, you would really be something.’ Native Americans often paint pictures with their words. They talk in metaphor. It’s like, ‘September is the moon of the falling leaves.’ I try to do things like that.”

Underlying this is Riviere’s reverence for the land and its meaning in our history, a theme that takes its clearest shape on “Big Joe Walker,” whose striding rhythm and mythic protagonist conjure the romantic optimism of Johnny Appleseed. “I think a lot about the landscape,” he says. “It’s the only one we have. If we use it up, it’s done. These resources are finite. And I also think a lot about the human condition. It’s not about politics and all that manipulation, which I try to address in ‘Emily’: ‘pissing down our back and trying to tell us it’s raining.’”

Political issues do surface in Red and Blue, but only within the construct that defines Riviere’s artistry. “Set the World on Fire,” driven by Dave Roe’s slap-back acoustic bass, looks at the darker side of American can-do ambition. Then the haunting song “Shiloh” draws from one particularly bloody and tragic time, but again its power comes from images more than exposition. Over an insistent guitar rhythm punctuated by the a drum booming low like distant artillery, Riviere sings at the top, “Sun and thunder cross the sky … Blood and thunder rode the wind down at Shiloh. Could it happen again?” The message is in the rhetorical question, but the magic is in the context in which it’s asked.

Many questions are left unanswered throughout Red and Blue. It’s a technique of Riviere’s to append them onto the titles of his songs: “Be Here Tomorrow,” for example, addresses on the illusory lure of materialism (“If I were born rich in a fancy home, would we Be Here Tomorrow?”), “Tides” meditates on the larger scope of life and fate (“I want to know why the Tides ebb and flow. Why do they come and go?”). And the sauntering “Walk This Life Alone,” a drama that positions a privileged young man before the tainted legacy of his birthright, personalizes the choices we all make when confronted with the consequences of our actions (“Do I Walk This Life Alone?”).

“Maybe I took too many philosophy classes in college,” Riviere says, laughing. “But the truth is that there isn’t any recipe to life. It’s not like you want to raise a kid so you find a book and read ‘Chapter One: How to Raise a Kid’ and you’ll be fine. There are so many ways to go and so many things to ponder. Life is full of questions. How we answer them or don’t answer them is how we end up living.”

By creating vivid scenes and leaving it to listeners to consider the riddles of our time, Riviere opens his music to us all as few writers are able to do. The eloquence of his lyric and the simple elegance of his composition brand him as a distinctive voice in modern Americana. And thanks to Red and Blue, he stands as well at that crossroads between timelessness and the urgent present, with a perspective that’s too rarely attained yet more critical than ever.

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