Lyrics Logan Mize – Never Gonna Change
Text:
Well people call me crazy,
Just a little thrown off,
Cause the road they travel,
Ain’t the path I’m on,
When I left Kansas swore I’d never look back,
But now that I’m gone it makes me laugh,
When I look in the mirror everything’s still the same.
Well my best pair of jeans got holes in the knees,
Grease stains, and a Copenhagen ring,
My truck’s to loud,
And I still drink that cheap light beer.
Somethings ain’t ever gonna change,
Like a burnin’ sun down on the plains,
Stiff grease still turns the wind mill,
The stars light up the midnight sky,
Tornadoes and black clouds in May,
Grain trucks on a dusty old highway,
The kids are still draggin’ Main every Friday night,
And the old men talk about the good old days,
I guess somethings ain’t ever gonna change.
I drove my four wheel drive to this six string town,
While all my buddies are settlin’ down,
I’m just doin’ my best I can at gettin’ by,
Well the longer I’m gone, the more I see,
The city brings out the country in me,
And finds it’s way into every song i write.
That’s why I sing about dirt roads, fisshin’ holes,
The story of my life to a couple of chords,
And it all goes good with that cheap light beer.
Somethings ain’t ever gonna change,
Like a burnin’ sun down on the plains,
Stiff grease still turns the wind mill,
The stars light up the midnight sky,
Tornadoes and black clouds in May,
Grain trucks on a dusty old highway,
The kids are still draggin’ Main every Friday night,
And the old men talk about the good old days,
I guess somethings ain’t ever gonna change.
Every time I go back home,
My old truck drives itself,
Back over to her house,
My heart still lays where it fell.
Somethings ain’t ever gonna change,
Like a burnin’ sun down on the plains,
Stiff grease still turns the wind mill,
The stars light up the midnight sky,
Tornadoes and black clouds in May,
Grain trucks on a dusty old highway,
The kids are still draggin’ Main every Friday night,
And the old men talk about the good old days,
I guess somethings ain’t ever gonna change.
Never gonna change.
This Kansas boy’s still the same.