World Series Songs: That’s Right (You’re Not From Texas)

Texas Rangers baseball Several years ago, a friend from Iowa and I discussed songs about various states. He proudly noted that Bob Seger’s “Turn the Page” was about his home state of Iowa. “How?” I asked. He noted the opening lyrics are “On a long and lonesome highway east of Omaha.” Then he explained, “The only thing east of Omaha, Nebraska is Iowa.”

While it is difficult to find songs about some states, like Iowa, other more populous states with a history of a thriving music industry like Texas provide a long list of state songs, including old classics like “Yellow Rose of Texas” and “The Eyes of Texas.” So for this entry on World Series Songs for the Texas Rangers, we have to choose from a number of songs, and that is not even including the reference to the Rangers in the opening line of Bruce Springsteen’s “Jungleland” (The Rangers had a homecoming/ in Harlem late last night.” But it is a great opportunity to finally get around to Lyle Lovett, featuring his song, “That’s Right (You’re Not from Texas).”

Some people may mainly know Lovett for his hair or his short marriage to Julia Roberts, but he has several wonderful albums. His songs often show a sense of humor, but he has many beautiful heart-felt songs too, like “Road to Ensenada,” which is off the album of the same name that also includes “That’s Right (You’re Not from Texas).”

“That’s Right” showcases Lovett’s humor and his love of his home state, reflecting the pride that many Texans feel about their state. In the song, the singer repeats the refrain “That’s right you’re not from Texas” in several situations. After his girlfriend asks what is so great about Texas, he tells us, “Oh the road it looked so lovely / As she stood there on the side / And she grew smaller in my mirror.”

The Rangers should be proud they are the champions of the American League and playing in the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals. Texas has its own history and large size (but not the largest) that make many residents proud, although there are some things of which some Texans may not be so proud.

Pride is both a good thing and a bad thing. While we are told from a young age that we should be proud of this or that, we are also reminded that pride is a sin. As Proverbs 16:18 warns, “Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.” I have loved my time in the beautiful Lone Star State, but Lovett does an excellent job in capturing both the grandeur and the ridiculousness in such pride. How can it be so bad if “Texas wants you anyway?”

One thing we can be sure of, though, is that if the Texas Rangers win the World Series, there will be a lot of Texas pride to go around. Fans may even sing Lovett’s song to their St. Louis, Missouri opponents:

Lyle Lovett Road to Ensenada They’re OK in Oklahoma;
Up in Arkansas they’re fair;
But those old folks in Missouri,
They don’t even know you’re there;
But at a dance hall down in Texas,
That’s the finest place to be.

  • Kenny Rogers: “The Greatest”
  • Roberto Clemente: Twenty-One Feet Tall
  • Say Hey: Willie Mays and “The Catch”
  • Purple Rain: Prince at 2007 Super Bowl
  • Early Baseball: The Glory of Their Times
  • Hammerin’ Hank
  • (Some Related Chimesfreedom Posts)

    MLK Shot This Morning, er. . . Evening

    U2’s powerful song “Pride (In the Name of Love)” commemorates this date in 1968 when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and killed on a balcony outside his room at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. King was in town to support striking sanitation workers, and the day before he had given his famous “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop” speech.

    U2’s song, which was from The Unforgettable Fire (1984) album, recounts the assassination:
    U2 Unforgettable Fire
    Early morning, April 4
    Shot rings out in the Memphis sky
    Free at last, they took your life
    They could not take your pride

    The shooting occurred at around 6:01 p.m. on this date, so why does “Pride (In the Name of Love)” refer to “early morning”? I have seen various explanations.

    Some wondered whether at the time of the shooting, the band was in Dublin.  In that city, the time is six hours later than Tennessee time, making it just after midnight and “early morning” in Ireland. But then the date for them would have been April 5, and the song still has the correct Tennessee date of April 4.

    The time change could have been poetic license, but most likely it was an error.  Perhaps the error occurred due to Bono’s memory of when he heard the news.

    Sources note that Bono eventually recognized the mistake years later and began singing “early evening” instead of “early morning.” For example, in U2’s performance at the 2009 concert to celebrate the inauguration of Pres. Obama, Bono sang the “early evening” lyrics.  Most recently, on U2’s Songs of Surrender release of new recordings of old songs including “Pride (In the Name of Love),” Bono again used the “early evening” line.

    This energetic Chicago performance also uses the historically accurate time of day starting at around the 2:15 mark:

    John Legend recorded a moving version of “Pride (In the Name of Love)” for King (2008), a series on the History Channel. His version, which also appears on the CD Yes We Can: Voices of a Grassroots Movement, is less bombastic than the U2 version, but it is still powerful.

    Legend replaces the “early morning” line with the words “late afternoon.”  Thus, he gives us a third time option in the lyrics to “Pride (In the Name of Love).” Check it out, with the time of day mentioned at around the 2:20 mark.

    Unfortunately, I listened repeatedly to the U2 albums The Unforgettable Fire (1984) and Rattle and Hum (1988).  So,I always expect to hear “early morning” as in the original music video.

    Either way, it is still a great song about a great man. And, the time of day Martin Luther King, Jr. was killed is much less important than what he accomplished in his life in the name of love.

  • The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and “We Shall Overcome”
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. Day News: From D.C. to Burma
  • Springsteen and Bono Sing “Because the Night” in Dublin
  • Martin Luther King Jr. on “The Merv Griffin Show”
  • Martin Luther King Jr.: “The Other America”
  • Springsteen and Martin Front U2 for World Aids Day
  • (Some Related Chimesfreedom Posts)