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10000 Maniacs

A Room For Everything
A Campfire Song
All That Never Happens
Across The Fields
Even With My Eyes Closed
Anthem For Doomed Youth
Because The Night
Beyond The Blue
Big Star
Candy Everybody Wants
Cant Ignore The Train
Cherry Tree
Circle Dream
City Of Angel
Daktari
Death Of Manolete
Dont Talk
Dust Bowl
Eat For Two
Eden
Just As The Tide Was A Flowing
Everyday Is Like Sunday
Few And Far Between
Girl On A Train
Gold Rush Brides
Green Children
Gun Shy
Hey Jack Kerouac
How Youve Grown
Im Not The Man
Jezebel
Scorpio Rising
Noahs Dove
Like The Weather
Love Among The Ruins
More Than This
Rainy Day
Stockton Gala Days
Shining Light
Whats The Matter Here
The Painted Desert
These Are Days
Trouble Me
Verdi Cries
You Wont Find Me There
10000 Maniacs : Gold Rush Brides

[ Spoken intro from: Women's Diaries of the Westward Journey (by Lillian Schlissel) ]

"While the young folks were having their good times
some of the mothers were giving birth to their babies.
Three babies were born in our company that summer.
My cousin, Emily, gave birth to a son in Utah,
forty miles north of the Great Salt Lake one morning.
But the next morning she traveled on
'til noon when a stop was made and another child was born,
this time Susan Mollmeyer.
And gave the baby the name Alice Nevada."

Follow the typical signs, the hand-painted lines, down prairie roads.
Pass the lone church spire.
Pass the talking wire from where to who knows?
There's no way to divide the beauty of the sky from the wild western plains.
Where a man could drift, in legendary myth, by roaming over spaces.
The land was free and the price was right.

Dakota on the wall is a white-robed woman, broad yet maidenly.
Such power in her hand as she hails the wagon man's family.
I see Indians that crawl through this mural that recalls our history.

Who were the homestead wives?
Who were the gold rush brides?
Does anybody know?
Do their works survive their yellow fever lives in the pages they wrote?
The land was free, yet it cost their lives.

In miner's lust for gold, a family's house was bought and sold, piece by piece.
A widow staked her claim on a dollar and his name, so painfully.
In letters mailed back home her Eastern sisters
they would moan as they would read accounts of
madness, childbirth, loneliness and grief.


Common misspellings on this band:
manicas , manics , maniiacs


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