Tag: Music: Mallonee

  • Resplendent

    Resplendent

    What to hear a perfect song? “Resplendent,” by Bill Mallonee and Vigilantes of Love, is as close as it gets. There’s the Bruce Cockburn-like guitar, that sweet snare drum shuffle, and Emmylou’s harmonies. And then there’s the lyrics. When Mallonee sings, “Honey, we’re all resplendent,” you just know that he’s right. (Thanks for this song, Candace.)

    I remember the dark clouds raining dust for days on end
    Blew all the Earth out to California
    Just left us here with the wind
    Desperate times, you know everbody’s part
    It’s your own lines you’d like to forget
    Till what you were meets what you’ve now become
    And grins and says, “Hey, haven’t we met?”

    Lost my first born that Winter
    My wife on the first day of Spring
    So I poured my sweat to the Earth
    To see what that harvest would bring
    And I remember how the fury
    Just like a plague of locusts
    Egypt’s punishment for sins of pride
    Is that now what has come over us?

    How much of this was meant to be?
    How much the work of the Devil?
    How far can one man’s eyes really see
    In these days of toil and trouble?

    Honey, we’re all resplendent,
    Yeah, Honey, we are all thrift store
    Like a wine-o with a $20 bill
    Yeah, forever and eternally yours
    And I can make you promises
    If you don’t expect too much,
    Yes, and I will run the distance
    If you’ll please, please excuse my crutch

    How much of this was meant to be?
    How much the work of the Devil?
    How far can one man’s eyes really see
    In these days of toil and trouble?

    How much of this is failing flesh?
    How much a course of retribution?
    My, my, how loudly we plead our innocence
    Long after we made our contribution