Please Don't Go
Them Lyrics


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Baby, please don't go
Baby, please don't go
Baby, please don't go down to New Orleans
You know I love you so
Baby, please don't go

Baby, your man done gone
Well, your man done gone
Well, your man done gone, left the county farm
He had his shackles on
Baby, please don't go

Before I be your dog
Before I be your dog
Before I be your dog to get you way down here
I make you walk alone
Baby, please don't go
Hey

Baby, please don't go
Baby, please don't go
Baby, please don't go down to New Orleans
You know I love you so
Baby, please don't go

Before I be your dog
Before I be your dog
Before I be your dog get you way down here
Make you walk alone
Baby, please don't go

Know how I feel right now
My baby leavin', on that midnight train
And I'm cryin'

Baby, please don't go
Oh, baby please don't go
Baby, please don't go down to New Orleans
You know I love you so
Baby, please don't go, yeah

Before I be your dog
Before I be your dog
Before I be your dog to get you way down here
I make you walk alone
Baby, please don't go, yeah





Alright

Overall Meaning

The song "Baby Please Don't Go" by Them is a plea from the singer to his lover not to leave him and go down to New Orleans. He begs her to stay with him and not leave because he loves her so much. He talks about how her mind has wandered away and how it has left the county farm. He does not want to be her dog, and he says that he would rather have her walk alone than be with him. The singer expresses his feelings of heartbreak that occur when his baby leaves him on that midnight train. The song's haunting melody, raw emotion, and sense of desperation all contribute to the overall feeling of loss and longing that the singer experiences.


The lyrics of the song reflect the struggles of black Americans living in the rural South during the early 1900s. The songwriters borrow from traditional blues music to create a modern rock sound that speaks to the generation of the 1960s. The tune has a wild and frenzied sound that only adds to the sense of loss and heartbreak that the lyrics convey.


Line by Line Meaning

Baby, please don't go
Please don't leave me, my love


Baby, your mind done gone
I can tell you're not thinking clearly


Well, your mind done gone
You're not yourself anymore


Left the county farm
You left our safe, familiar home


You had the shackles on; baby, please don't go
You were once held back, but now you're free - don't leave me


Before I be your dog
I refuse to be your puppet


To get you way down here
I won't do anything just to keep you close


I'll make you walk alone; baby, please don't go, hey
If you leave, I won't follow or beg you to stay


Know how I feel right now?
Do you understand the pain you're causing me?


My baby leavin' on that midnight train, and I'm cryin'
You're leaving me and it hurts so much


Oh, baby, please don't go
I'm begging you not to leave me


You know I love you, so, baby, please don't go yeah
Please don't leave me because I love you so much


I make you walk alone; baby, please don't go, yeah
I won't follow you or try to make you stay




Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, Universal Music Publishing Group, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: Joseph Lee Williams

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Comments from YouTube:

@Muziekgenot

In those days it was almost impossible to hear bad music. We were wherever we went surrounded by fantastic, exciting, enchanting music. In shops, pubs, clubs and private parties and when visiting friends. Everywhere fantastic music and completely different atmospheres. From folk to jazz, from soul to rock and so on, but always brilliant. It was pure abundance.

@oldhippie6179

Very true

@sabineludowigs6750

We were the very lucky ones!

@boomerrob9223

Van The Boy!

@linshanhsiang

Green Tambourine by the Strawberry Alarm Clock?

@roderickmaclean8229

Absolutely, every other week there was a new song or group, really exciting times, we were indeed very lucky!

78 More Replies...

@krishnamurtiism

Man, just listened to this in Wild At Heart film and didn’t realise it was a Belfast band, or Van Morrison. So much to learn about the 60s. What an era.

@notmyrealname8006

This song is almost 60 years old, and it isn't just still good, it is still awesome, if not better every time you hear it. And not just Van Morrison's voice but the guitar, the drums, the harmonica, the whole vibe of that song is simply so great, it makes me wanna get in my car and just drive.

@KC-gy5xw

So true. I've seen Van so many times live, so good and so pure.

@vicentepena-villalba6335

its almost 80 years. it was composed in 1935

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