Marie Laveau
(专辑: N'awlinz: Dis Dat Or D'udda - 2004)
Now there lived a
conjure-lady, not long ago, In New Orleans, Louisiana! named Marie Laveau. Believe it or not, strange as it seem, She made her fortune selling voodoo, and interpreting dreams. She was known throughout the
nation as the
Voodoo Queen. Folks come to her, from miles and miles around, She sure know how to put that, that voodoo down. To the
voodoo lady they all would go, The
rich, the
educated, the
ignorant and the
poor. She'd snap her fingers, and shake her head, She'd tell them 'bout their lovers! living or dead. Now an old, old lady named widow Brown, Asked why her lover, stopped coming around The
voodoo gazed at her and squawked I
seen him kissing a
young girl, up at Shakespeare's Park Hanging on an oak tree, in the
dark. Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Marie Laveau, the
Voodoo Queen, From way down yonder in New Orleans. Ya, ya, ya! ya, ya, ya! ya, ya, ya! yaaaaa Now old, old lady, she lost her speech, Tears start to rolling down her checks, Voodoo say, Hush my darlin don't you cry, I
make him come back, by and by. Just sprinkle this snake dust, all over your floor, I'll make him come back Friday morning, when the
rooster crow. Now Marie Laveau she held em in her hand, New Orleans, Louisiana was her promised land. Quality folks, come from far and near, This wonder woman, for to hear. They was afraid to be seen, at her gate, They'd creep through the
dark, just to hear their fate. Holding dark veils, over their head, They would tremble to hear, what Maria would say. Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Marie Laveau, the
Voodoo Queen, From way down yonder in New Orleans. Ya, ya, ya! ya, ya, ya! ya, ya, ya! yaaaaa And she made gris-gris, with an old ram horn, Stuffed with feathers, shuck from a
corn. A
big black candle, and a
catfish fin, She make a
man get religion, and give up his sin. Sad news got out one morning, at the
break of day, Marie Laveau had done pass away. St. Louis cemetery, she lay in her tomb, She was buried one night, on the
wake of the
moon. Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, The
folks still believe, in the
Voodoo Queen, From way down yonder in New Orleans. Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Marie Laveau, the
Voodoo Queen, From way down yonder in New Orleans. Marie, Marie Laveau, Oh Marie Laveau, Marie Laveau, the
Marie Laveau, Marie Laveau, the
Voodoo Queen.