- Votes:
- Genres:
- Acoustic
- Rock
 
- Tags:
- classic rock
- female vocalist
- singer songwriter
 
- See also:
Patti Scialfa - Rose lyrics
Rose was a waitress for twenty years or more
 bringing in the change, she was heaven sent
 she taught me how to balance trays when I didn't know what to do
 and I learned to turn tables to make my rent
 She said keep your eye on the work clock, keep a dollar in the jukebox
 and there's a bottle of whiskey behind the coffee machine
 Don't talk to the boss, he's just trouble you don't want to cross
 he's the walking definition of what it is to be mean
 Well, I'm going out tonight on the streets of the city
 Going to spend my money tonight
 I'm going out on the streets of the city
 Rose, you're pushing fifty, but you sure look all right
 Well there's this guy who speaks no English, and he does the dishes by hand
 You know his pace it never slacks
 I said "Rose, he must be one of God's good children"
 She just laughs and says "Yeah, God's got him doing the dishes all night in the
 back"
 But he keeps smiling and those plates keep piling up so high
 seems he can't make a dent
 Me I'm just bitchin' by the service stationPatti Scialfa - Rose - http://motolyrics.com/patti-scialfa/rose-lyrics.html
 so tired of waiting on all these jokers for a lousy ten percent
 Well I'm going out on the streets of the city
 Going to spend my money tonight
 I'm going out on the streets of the city
 Rose, you're pushing fifty, but you sure look all right
 Now listen
 I traveled once with this rock and roll band
 and my baby was a hero at every small town bar
 and I watched that summer of '88 pass through the rearview mirror of his rented
 car
 but don't you learn hard and fast that the good times, they ain't meant to last
 and that sweet love, ain't it the first to disappear
 Rose, sometimes I get so frightened, I don't want to spend the rest of my life
 working on the graveyard shift here
 Well I'm going out on the streets of the city
 Going to spend my money tonight
 I'm going out on the streets of the city
 Rose, you're pushing fifty, but you sure look all right














