You should have been a rambler, a counterfeit gambler
Would you steal the sunflowers for me?
I see you've been fighting with Molotov writing
They tried to drag you under, I see
Did they try to tell you you're strange?
Did they try to push you away?
Hold on
Feed the fire, fan the flame
Till the world remembers your name
Till you found of the sight what you see
Feed the fire, fan the flame
Till the world remembers your name
Something hot in a cold country
Hold on to your spirits
You're a pain, not a poet
You're special and they know it
They can see
They throw a net that pins you to the ground
Don't let their blindness bring you down
Be stubborn and enjoy it like me
Did they try to tell you you're strange?
Did they try to push you away?
Hold on
Feed the fire, fan the flame
Till the world remembers your name
Till you found out the fire that you see
Feed the fire, fan the flame
Till the world remembers your name
Something hot in a cold country
I won't see you falling
Hold on, hold on
Feed the fire, fan the flame
Till the world remembers your name
Till you found out the sight that you see
Feed the fire, fan the flame
Till the world remembers your name
Something hot in a cold country
I won't see you falling
Hold on
- :
- Louis Armstrong: The Definitive Collection
- Hot Fives & Sevens, Volume 2
- The Jazz Collector Edition, 1925 to 1928
- The Best of the Hot Five & Hot Seven Recordings
- Say It Loud! A Celebration of Black Music in America
- Chicago South Side 1923-1930
- No Papa No / Basin Street Blues
- Jazz in the Charts 007 (1928)
- Jazz Session
- The Chronological Classics: Louis Armstrong and His Hot...
- The Complete Hot Five and Hot Seven Recordings
- "Satchmo": Ambassador of Jazz
- BD Jazz, Volume 2: Louis Armstrong / Camilo Sanin
- The Chronological Classics: Louis Armstrong and His...
- The Complete Masters 1925–1945
- The Rough Guide to Jazz Legends: Louis Armstrong
- Louis Armstrong: Portrait of the Artist As a Young Man,...
- Ken Burns Jazz-Louis Armstrong
- The Great Gatsby Musical Era
- Columbia Original Masters: The Best of Louis Armstrong