Old Coyote Town was a single released from Don Williams‘ album Traces.
The song peaked at #5 on Billboard’s Hot Country Singles chart in 1989.
He's got a U.S. flag on his front porch
To remind everyone where he lives
And up in the attic
There are papers that prove the old house is finally his
After thirty-five years
The grass still don't grow
In that rock hard west Texas ground
Where my old dad still clings to that old coyote town
Chorus:
Like horses the pick-ups are parked out in front
Of a cafe that don't need a name
Where the old men rock
And the tumbleweeds roll
Past the boarded up windows down Main
Waist high weeds hide a for sale sign
At the drive-in where my innocence died
With a rusty advertisement dangling by a nail
Says "Popcorn and Pepsi for a dime"
And down at the depot where I left for good
There's a hobo with his three-legged hound
Waitin' for a train that no longer comes
To that old coyote town
And the interstate rumbles like a river that runs
To a rythm that don't ever slow down
As cars and trucks and time pass by
That old coyote town
Daddy falls asleep in the living room
On the sofa with the TV on
Sometimes he waits for a phone call from me
Sometimes he waits too long
But I still think of the people and the place that he loves
How much longer will they be around?
Till its ashes to ashes
Dust to dust
For that old coyote town
Chorus:
Like horses the pick-ups are parked out in front
Of a cafe that don't need a name
Where the old men rock
And the tumbleweeds roll
Past the boarded up windows down Main
And the interstate rumbles like a river that runs
To a rythm that don't ever slow down
As cars and trucks and time pass by
That old coyote town
God bless that old coyote town
Old Coyote Town was written by Larry Boone & Gene Nelson & Paul Nelson.
Old Coyote Town was produced by Garth Fundis & Don Williams.
Don Williams released Old Coyote Town on Wed Oct 14 1987.