Singer/ Songwriter
Big Rock Candy Mountain
On a summer day in the month of May
a burly bum came hiking,
Down a shady lane through the sugar cane
He was looking for his liking.
As he roamed along he sang a song
of the land of milk and honey,
where a bum can stay for many a day
and he won't need any money.
Oh, the buzzin' of the bees in the cigarette trees
and the soda water fountain,
at the limonade springs where the bluebird sings
on the Big Rock Candy Mountain.
There's a lake of gin we can both jump in
and the handouts grow on bushes;
in the new mown-hay we can sleep all day,
and the bars all have free lunches.
Where the mail train stops and there ain't no cops
and the folks are tender-hearted
where you never change your socks and rocks
and your hair is never parted.
Oh, the buzzin' of the bees in the cigarette trees
and the soda water fountain,
at the limonade springs where the bluebird sings
on the Big Rock Candy Mountain.
Oh, a farmer and his son, they were on the run
to the hay field they were bounding.
Said the bum to the sun: "Why don't you come
to that Big Rock Candy Mountain?"
So the very next day they hiked away
to the mile post they kept counting
but they never arrived at the lemonade tide
on the Big Rock Candy Mountain.
Oh, the buzzin' of the bees in the cigarette trees
and the soda water fountain,
at the limonade springs where the bluebird sings
on the Big Rock Candy Mountain.
Dieses Lied entstand etwa um 1900.
Es besingt das "Schlaraffenland" in amerikanischer Vorstellung.