Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Run Brown, work around the world on the World Wide
West Leading Journey.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Others.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
Oh yeah. Broadcasting live in the Joseih Networks Studios in
downtown My Dinah to the thieves. It's that time a
week again. It's time for the Josie Shoes, bringing you
the most exciting music, news and deaths from around the
(00:43):
world right here on the Josie Show. Please make walking
the beautiful Hallines.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
America's Verdy else Sweetheart Business Josie Happens re open.
Speaker 5 (01:06):
Hello everyone, and happy Thursday. I'm just Bettino Boone and
I have a great show for all of you. We
have Lacy J. Dalton joining me again today and I'm
so excited. She actually recently won this past Sunday at
the ninth Daniel Jo Just Music a Ord. She won
the Ahanuel JMA Best Performance, which was voted on by
(01:29):
our attendees. And so we're going to talk to her
about her new single, Devil by a Different Name. So
let's bring her on. I hope you enjoy it.
Speaker 4 (01:37):
Hello Lacey, Hi Josie.
Speaker 5 (01:40):
How are you. I'm great?
Speaker 4 (01:42):
How are you? Oh, I'm great, I'm just great. Are
you must be a busy girl right now? Thank you
for doing this interview.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
Oh yes, it's always crazier on this time. But anytime, anytime, though,
we get a message that you know, to have you on,
you know, I bite if I want.
Speaker 4 (01:58):
To have you back.
Speaker 5 (02:01):
I'm just so excited to have you back on the show.
Speaker 4 (02:05):
I'm so excited. I'm so excited to talk to you again.
And I'm really excited about the release of the Devil,
which is the first song from the Black Sheep Project
that I was doing. Have you heard it?
Speaker 5 (02:19):
Yes, I have?
Speaker 4 (02:21):
Oh good, oh good. I've been having amazing luck with
this song. I have to tell you it's very different,
as you know. Yeah, I just got back from Colorado
last night at one o'clock in the morning. We were
out there doing the Equis Film Festival in Westwood, Colorado,
(02:42):
and we got to play in a little theater out there.
I played this song and I delivered it a little
differently live. The last verse I do on the record,
I do with humor. Live, I do it a little
more forcefully. The pernts about women. And when I finished
the verse, the whole audience jumped to its feet. Wow, okay, okay,
(03:05):
And that is not the first time that's happened with
this song. It's a it's I'm really enjoying the fact
that it's as you know, Josie, it's the song that's
saying you, look at what we're doing, look at what
we're doing trying. That's and that's the whole reason for
you know, for the Black Sheep project.
Speaker 5 (03:25):
Yes, I I just absolutely love this song and I'm
so glad it's getting such a great response, as it
should be, because I think it's a song that's much needed.
And I want to talk about your songwriting on this one,
because you tell a story like no one else. I feel,
you know, touch the subjects, but you do it so
well that it's understandable to everyone. So can you talk
a little bit about your songwriting with Devil by a
(03:46):
different Name?
Speaker 4 (03:47):
Tell us about this one? Well, you know, Josie, when
we talked before, I told you that sometimes I think
we are we write the songs down, but the songs
to us and our gifts to us from spirit, And
this is one of those songs I feel very strongly
is that kind of a song. And so when I'm
(04:10):
writing it, I'm just really trying to listen. I'm trying
to listen to how to say, look at what we're doing,
without blaming, without judging, without you know, othering anybody, but
just saying, look at what we're doing. They asked me,
They asked me, if we're a a comment about this song,
(04:32):
for a statement about it. And what I said was,
you know, this world is not a child anymore. And
we have never in thousands and thousands of years on
this planet, we have never been able to get along.
And it's time that we do. And it's time instead
of having huge divides among us, we need to build bridges.
(04:52):
We need to learn how to do how to speak
back and forth to each other with opposing viewpoints, need
to be able to respect and listen to what the
other side has to say and try to come to
some kind of Nobody gets everything they want, but we've
got to learn how to come to the middle. And
we've it seems lately, particularly, we seem so divided in
(05:15):
this country. And I speak to that in this song.
And what I what I really am saying is with
what I finally said, was you know, we'd better wise
up because good planets are hard to find. Yeah, yeah,
you know, we have to, you know, we need to
we need to get it together, and so that is
(05:36):
the whole project that this is part of. Is are
songs that kind of speak to that, and I try
to be when I'm talking about things like this, I
try very hard not to be divisive. What I try
to be is somewhere saying holding both hands out, one
(06:00):
hand out to the right, one hand out to the left,
and saying, let's come together, Let's find a way to
talk to each other, Let's find a let's find a
place where we're compromising, but we're not compromising our integrity,
where we're somewhere in the middle where we can understand
each other. Because after all, there is only one great
(06:24):
spirit in all that is, and we are one with
that spirit, and we tend to forget it. We come
here to Earth for these lessons, and we forget. We
think we ended our skin. Josie, It's true.
Speaker 5 (06:36):
It's so true. And you know, I find you know
that we're stronger together, we really are. And if we
can find that common ground, you know, we're all just
trying to live. And you know, in this planet, your
song really talks to that. And I hope everybody does
listen to this song because I think it is very,
very needed, and it's available now everywhere, right streams.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
Goal it is, it's out of all the streaming sites
and in idiots everywhere. And I did this thing. I
did a pretty I did a pretty demonic graphic for
this this song, and I didn't I realized I wanted
to do that for TikTok and for young people because
I thought that graphic might actually make them be curious
(07:19):
about the song and listen to it. That graphic is,
that graphic is probably not correct for a lot of
my my country fans. And what is this? You know
what it's beautiful? Woman was dressed up like Maleficent, you know,
and so you know, I actually was. I probably should
(07:42):
have been a little you know, had a different graphic
for different things. But actually I'm hoping that this graphic
does actually because people, especially young people, so desperate for
something to believe in, and we need to find that
thing where people can believe in some sort I don't
(08:04):
care how you come to it, but if you can
believe in some sort of a higher self, higher power.
I think people get so lost because they feel so
separate and so alone, and we're really never are we
really never are. And I know I've felt alone many
(08:24):
times myself and lonely. But I also know that there's
we're bigger than that. We're bigger than this, and we
need to get bigger than these divisive things that are
keeping us apart and at each other's throats and fighting
and all this anger and hatred. You know, we really
(08:49):
it's time to start looking at that and going this
doesn't really work. If we don't all pull together, we're
going to pull apart. The song, the first version of
the song goes called a second room, goes call me
left wing, call me right. We are split right down
the middle in this fight, divided. All that rule don't change.
(09:09):
It's just the Devil by a different name, boys, the
Devil by a different name, and the song lau as
you know to to to uh talk about other issues
of divisiveness that we have that we just need to
get beyond it. I think the thing is, people, we
need to stop judging each other because of the difference
(09:32):
on the color of our skin, or what the food
we eat, or where we live, or you know, what
nationality or are, what our sexual preferences are. That stuff's
not important. That stuff isn't important. Pay attention to your
own plate, pay attention to your own spirit. Believe me,
(09:52):
we all have to work on that at least until
we can get to the point where we can talk
to each other.
Speaker 5 (09:58):
Exactly what I love about you is you didn't leave
out anything. I mean, you talked about you know, race, sexuality,
you know being a woman, and just what I just
every single line is just so perfect and so you
as well because you do it in such a positive way,
you know what I mean. It has that like special
(10:19):
Lacy j Dalton in it, like theay.
Speaker 4 (10:22):
Well, thank you, thank you, Josie. And I hope that's true.
I hope that's true because I think in order to change,
we really have to understand that we are there, we're
going to be very different. And guess what that makes
the world really wonderful. Diversity. If you go into a
(10:43):
flower garden and or you go to Bouchard Gardens and
you see an incredibly beautiful garden, there is not just
one variety of a wild plant in there. There are
hundreds and hundreds of varieties of flowers and trees and
plants and bushes. Diversity is what life is and is
(11:04):
what makes life beautiful. And we have to learn not
to be afraid of it. We have to learn not
to other it. Oh well, that that's other than I am.
I'm better than that. Anything that you are feeling, that
you are feeling is you're making someone or you're thinking
of someone as less than. Any time you're doing that,
(11:25):
you're not raising yourself up. Nope, that's not what builds
you up. What builds you up is to find that
part of whatever it is or whomever you're othering, that
is the same as that is in you. In other words,
the spirit that is in all things. Being able to
(11:46):
see that in other people and other cultures and other
things that are different, seeing that difference, respecting that person's
right to be different. You know, you don't want to
a body to be a petunia. Got you gotta have
some iyacinths and roses and maybe even since thinking metal.
Speaker 5 (12:10):
Exactly, I love that that is, it's so it's so true,
And I love I love seeing other cultures and stuff
because you could really learn something from each culture. You
can learn something from everyone. I feel, if you really
just open your eyes, you could really learn a lot
from different people, you know what I mean. And and
we're really not you know, we're really not that different,
you know it In the scheme of things, we're all
(12:31):
just people just trying to to live our lives right
and and find love and to you know, work and
and you know all that other stuff. So it's really
interesting when you open your eyes you could really learn
so much from different people. And I just I feel
like more people need to really take that view, you
know what I mean, and we all can't be Petunia's
(12:52):
I love that it's true.
Speaker 4 (12:55):
Yeah, well, you know, I think I think that for
p cularly with young people who are there's so much
trouble with people trying to escape from all this bullying
and being othered and not being accepted for who they are.
(13:18):
That stuff. That stuff's not good. We are here to
learn how to love, and we're learned, and you know,
I know so many people. I have a song that
it's called love Yourself, and the chorus of the song goes,
you know, love God, love your neighbor, love yourself. That's
(13:38):
all that. Well was Christ's major message. If you call
yourself a Christian and you don't listen to what he
really said, he said, love God with all your heart,
mind and spirit. Love yourself. And that's the hard part.
Love your neighbor as yourself. And he said, that is
the whole of the law, and all the other laws
(14:01):
of life are based upon it. And that is what
I came to teach. That's pretty simple. That's pretty simple.
And we who call ourselves Christians, we need to walk
that talk. And if you're not walking that talk, well
need to look at that. And so that's what we
need to look at. We need to look at those
parts of ourselves that are still out there judging. And
(14:25):
when I write these songs, I'm not just writing them
to other people. I am writing these songs to me.
I can be very judgmental. I can be very much
like that. And I have to work on that twenty
four to seven, and I do. It's something I have
to work on. It's something I'm always learning. I hope
(14:45):
I learn it before I leave, before I get off
the shuffle off this mortal coil. I hope I will
have learned that lesson. Don't judge. You know, if you judge,
and judge with righteous judgment. We have to judge. We
have to you know, have our limits and our you know,
our our boundaries with with with others. Uh. And there's
(15:09):
a righteous judgment that helps you do that. But when
you're putting, whenever you're thinking that that person, that person's
less than, or that person's wrong, that person's evil, you know,
turn that flashlight back in your own back at yourself
and find out where those things are in yourself that
(15:29):
you need to improve. Because there's a lot of work
we all have to do right here at home, a
lot of to do on our own spirits every day,
and and that's why we're here.
Speaker 5 (15:40):
I really believe that I do too, I really do.
And it's just it's just it's such a great song
and a great message, and I hope others really do
take to it Devil by a different name, and uh,
make sure you download share with it, share with your friends,
because like you said, I think we all really need
(16:01):
to look in ourselves and we all need to you know,
work on it, you know what I mean, because you
know we're not all of us are there yet, you
know what I mean? And uh, it's which is not
a bad thing, but we just really got to kind
of look at ourselves and within ourselves and figure out
why we judge, why we judge this person, why, you know,
And that's why I dik I love talking talking about you.
(16:24):
You always open my eyes.
Speaker 4 (16:26):
You really do well. I always feel I always feel
so much support from you that I feel as though
I can say the kinds of things that I need
to say and I'm not being judged by you. You're
hearing what I have to say. And I think we
all want to be heard. Everybody wants to be understood. Everybody,
(16:51):
we all are looking for the same thing. And if
it's not if you don't call it love, maybe what
you call it is acceptance and you know respect, It
was assuming you know you are, you know, doing the
things that we can respect you for. But I just
I think, I really think we uh, we we have
(17:13):
a lot of work to do on our insides before
we start uttering people and judging people, and particularly if
we call ourselves Christians.
Speaker 5 (17:23):
Definitely, I love it. I know it takes a journey,
but you know, we could all get there, really we can,
and it takes little steps. And and someone that has
an honest, you know, view of the world. And that's
what I love about you is You're just so honest.
You're not afraid to speak your mind, You're not afraid
to talk to people. You know what I mean, and
which I think is so much needed in the music world.
(17:44):
You know a lot of people are you know, afraid
of saying this as being you know, politically correct and
all of that. And I feel like you do it
in such a way that it's it's understandable and and
it's helpful, you know what I mean.
Speaker 4 (17:57):
You know, I've really hoped. I hope you're right, Josie.
I hope you're right because and I take great care
when I'm writing these songs to try to be that way,
to try to be uh, to be inclusive exactly.
Speaker 5 (18:13):
Yep, And you are, and you really are.
Speaker 4 (18:16):
Well that's what I want to be. I'm not in
my spirit. There are places where I'm not so inclusive.
I have to look at those places. But I think
that our I think our work here, I think our
work in this world when we come to this world.
I think of this world as a school, and I
think of a lot of the things that we that
we are faced with. We have lessons and sometimes we're
(18:38):
not strong enough to manage those those challenges ourselves. And
there is help. And I think if if you, if
you really feel terribly alone, try believing in something a
little bigger than yourself. Try believing that all of us
(18:58):
together and everything is is one great spirit, all the
universes and all the stars, everything, there's one spirit in
all that is, and it is you know it is.
It is personal to you because it's one hundred percent
(19:19):
of you. There's no part of you that isn't part
of it. There's no part of you of it that
you are we are. Yeah, we think we we think
we ended our skin, that our spirit is in all
things that can see it. I think a good place
to start is if you don't like animals, If you're
a person who just doesn't like animals, look deeper, look
(19:42):
a little deeper. That's the same spirit that is in
you is in those animals. And I believe that with
every fiber of.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
I know that.
Speaker 4 (19:50):
I know that is true, and which is why you
know I have a foundation for wild horses and have
a dog rescue for a thousand years. I you know,
the animal teach us so much about really unconditional love mhm.
And that really and that's something we're not as good
about that as they are.
Speaker 5 (20:11):
Right, we can really learn something from animals. We really can't.
I always say that I'm like we've more people were
like you know, dogs that had horses and just had that,
you know, just that sense of just loving everybody and
being loyal, and that would be such a great world.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
Well, you know, and I think I think it is
a great world and it is wonderful. And the challenges
that we have I'm learning kind of late in life.
You know that the challenge kind of becomes the path.
The challenge is that you have in your life kind
of become what takes you forward. You know, you see
(20:52):
this thing that looks like an insurmountable, huge wall in
front of you, and you think that there's no you're
ever going to get around it or over it or
under it. But it becomes that becomes that challenge, becomes
a reason for you to grow. Growth is not easy.
Growth is not not painful. Growing inside often is painful
(21:14):
when you look at what you're what you've done or
said to someone in a in a an unconscious moment
or something, and you look at that, oh, I can't
believe I can't believe I did that. You know, that's growth.
That's not to make me feel bad. That's to teach yourself. Okay,
if I need to be gentler about the way I
(21:38):
speak to something what just happened, And it could be anything,
you know, it could just be a you know, casual
comment or trying to make a joke, and that doesn't
quite make it. It's a little mean. I think those things,
I think our challenge has become become our our lessons.
They become lessons that can be learned, and then when
(22:01):
they're learned, they become strength. And that kind of strength
you can take with you all the way. You can't
take money, you can't take power, you can't take fame,
you can't take oftentimes you can't even take human love,
like a marriage. You can't sometimes even take that all
(22:23):
the way. But those things that you learn from these
hard lessons. And I've had a very hard divorce after
a long, long period of time, and that was a
that was a terrible thing for me.
Speaker 5 (22:37):
It was.
Speaker 4 (22:38):
And I've been widowed. But they always used to ask me, well,
now that you've been widowed, you know, isn't that just
isn't it just the worst thing? And I said, no,
I don't think it is, because when someone dies, they
don't stop loving you. When they want to divorce, they
stop loving you. And right then you have to look
(22:58):
at all, right, what was my part in this? And
that can be that can put you through some real
difficult changes. And that song that I wrote, Scarecrow, is
a testament to that, that song that I had out
about a year or two ago, that thing a year
or two I think it was twenty nineteen. You know,
that's the thing, Josie. You know what they tell you
(23:20):
when people old people always say, oh, yeah, when you
get older, you know time just why and you think,
why do they saying that? Why would they say that?
That's really stupid? Then you get older, then you get older,
and then you know, really that's how I really does fly, you.
Speaker 5 (23:36):
Know, it really does. It's kind of funny. I look
back and I'm like, wow, that's just that. It feels
like it just happened. But no, that was yeah, twenty nineteen. Oh,
it's crazy.
Speaker 4 (23:50):
Well, you know, I people you know when they talk
about nine to eleven, I always think that's about ten
years ago or twelve. I know, much much much longer
than that. And I mean, it is a time is
a time is so relative. It's really relative. And as
you as you do grow and in your age, you
(24:13):
notice that it does seem to things do seem to
pass more quickly. I don't know. I don't know what
it is. I used to say to old people. I think,
why they say that, that's so stupid, I used to
I used to also say about the old ladies that
lied about their age. Why don't these old things lie
about their age? Why they do that? It's so stupid.
I'm never going to do that. I should have done
(24:33):
that because people, you know, people are naturally ages, especially
in our culture. Yeah, we don't have a lot of
respect for age. We tend to fight it, fight it
every way we possibly can. I'm horribly guilty of that,
but it happens inexorably any way. And I think that,
(24:56):
and I do think that our culture is getting better,
you know. I mean, look at the Rolling Stones or
in their seventies, Willie Nelson's ninety. We respect those people.
We do have elders that we respect, and you know,
it's a it's it's a good thing. It's a I
think our culture is growing up in that way. And
I think that's a good thing.
Speaker 5 (25:15):
That thing. Yeah, I just I just love it. I
just love everything about you, I really do. And you
know that's why I just love talking to you. It's
just because every like, I feel like, we cover so
many great topics that just need to be heard, you
know what I mean, and we do it in such
like a positive light. And this song. First off, I
want everybody to check out all of your your material
(25:37):
because you can really learn something from all of your
your repertoire, you know, so please make sure you you
you go through everything. Everybody but Devils different name. You're welcome,
You're very welcome, but Devil by a different name. You know.
It's just it's just such a great song and it's
much needed in this world today, and I hope everyone
(25:58):
checks it out. By any chance, are you going to
have perhaps maybe like a video for this one at
at any point or because I feel like it would
be a really really cool video that you would be
able to know that I.
Speaker 4 (26:10):
Think that is a really I think that is a
really good idea. It could even just be a video, uh,
just kind of showing you know, maybe a riot where
you know, left and the right are you know, trying
to bash it to bash it out in a way
that is good. And then you know, because there's a
(26:34):
lot of stuff in this song about the issues that
we're dealing with right now. These issues of divisiveness. The
issue of divisiveness is we need to come together and
find balance. Do you know the Navajo people when they pray,
they don't pray for stuff. They don't pray for like
TVs and cars, They pray for balance. I think that's
(26:59):
how powerful. I think that that's what we need. We
need to come together and find a place in the
middle where we can meet. I love the idea in
ancient from the ancient cultures, and I think it was
in Hawaii where they do this. They if the tribes
have a disagreement, they go into a they go into
a hut, a big meeting thing, and they don't come
(27:25):
out of that hut until they have arrived. They don't
come out. They talk and talk, and they're not allowed
to come out until they make up. They compromise with
one another, and I think we have to be careful
about compromise. You don't want to compromise your integrity, but
(27:48):
you do need to come halfway with people. You need
to respect people's views and come halfway, come in the
middle and try to find a balance. And I think
we all know we need to do that. We just
don't know quite how to do it we've kind of lost.
I think it's an art and it has an awful
lot to do with respecting a person on the other
(28:09):
side instead of just name calling and hate, which is
very popular right now, you know, and conspiracy stuff is
really popular right now, particularly in social media. That stuff
is that is not the way to do it. It
is not the way to do it, you know, conspiracy
theories and not fact and you know, not willing and
(28:34):
unwillingness to even hear what the other side has to say,
and only hearing one side of an argument. I learned
a long time ago that when you're not you have
a friend that's talking about another friend and they're going,
you know these this person did this, and he did that,
and he's really a jerk, and you know she was
really should get rid of it. But well I used
(28:55):
to kind of jump to a conclusion there and immediately
side with whoever, And then I realized that is really dumb.
Besides the story, You've got to hear that other side
of the story because it might surprise you, and oftentimes
it does. And where there is understanding, then there gifts
(29:16):
can be can be compatibility again you so that you
know that is what this whole project for the black
Sheet is speaking to The whole project is about that,
and it's about remembering, you know, remembering that to try
to honor the other.
Speaker 5 (29:38):
Yes, I love it. The whole Blacksheet project really is
just genius and we just I'm so excited for you
with this new song and all all the songs in
the future to come, because I know you are not done.
You have so many songs within you, my friends, that
are just ways to be written down on paper or
(30:00):
know out there to the world. And so I'm excited
for what is to come for you know, from you,
and you know we are always fans. So anytime you
have anything that you want, just please make sure you
know that you have to come out. Please make sure
you contact us, because I really I love talking to you.
Speaker 4 (30:19):
Well, I love talking to you, and I want to
please send my love to your mom and to Matt
and to the whole group out there. And I just
have to say how much I appreciate your support. You
guys have been so good and you're so good to
so many independent artists and a place for them to
actually shine and be seen, and and you know it's
(30:42):
harder for us independent artists. So we were very appreciative
of the work you're doing. And I you know, I
hope that you will be doing it for a very
very long time to come, and you know that God
will bless you totally with what you're doing.
Speaker 5 (30:57):
No, thank you so much, And like you said, time
does fly, so we I'll be I'll be eighty years old,
I'll still be doing the show.
Speaker 4 (31:04):
I love.
Speaker 5 (31:05):
That's them with fashion I have for it. That howm
with passion I have for it. I just I love.
I love helping other people and you know, to follow
their dreams and you know, and it was just such
a blessing to have you at the award show and
and for you to receive the lifetime career achievement was
so deserved and it was such a beautiful moment and
everybody got on their feet. It was such a beautiful moment.
(31:27):
I had such a hard time holding back tears. I
was like, this is what it's about.
Speaker 4 (31:32):
I love it. It was, It was truly, it was
truly a very special special thing. Uh that day, that
night and everybody was so wonderful and I had the
best time, and I just I cannot thank you enough
for your support and your continued support of myself and
all the other independent artists that you support all the time,
(31:55):
because there's a lot of great music out here now, wonderful.
Speaker 5 (32:01):
Absolutely, absolutely, and you know it's just because you're not
signed does not mean that you can't make some great music.
And you know, and and really just the fans and
and just you know, they they love they love new music,
and you know, just because you're not signed doesn't mean
you can't give them, you know, great great music and
great content and uh, and we're just so thrilled for
(32:24):
everything that you're doing, and we just cannot wait to
have you back on the Josie Show anytime. Please let
us know we would love to have you and uh
double by a different name, y'all, please make sure you
check it out. It was actually it was featured on
RFDTV and premiered by the Music Universe, which is so
so exciting. Come home now I'm hearing talk you back there.
Speaker 4 (32:52):
Yeah, they're not supposed to do that when I want
an interview. They you know, they've been taught not to
do that. And you can tell what a great dog
trainer I am. They say hello, they say hello, and
we all at this end say hello to you, and
I can't wait to see you again. Here's a giant
hunt for you as a whole group out there. God bless
(33:14):
the work you're doing.
Speaker 5 (33:16):
Oh God bless God, bless you and all the work
that you do as well. And we will talk to
you real soon. And thank you so so much for
joining me, Lady j Dalton, everybody.
Speaker 4 (33:27):
Thank you Joseph to stay next.
Speaker 5 (33:29):
Time, and we are back. We have her single devil
by a different name with us right now, so let's
play it.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
Call me witch, call me one, Call me cocaine, Call
me power, Call me than. I'm just look a different name.
Speaker 2 (34:01):
Boys, stabled by a different name, Call me a left wing,
Call me right. We just put right down the vele
in this fight.
Speaker 1 (34:14):
Divided, we fall that rule. Don't change. It's justice.
Speaker 2 (34:19):
Stevil by a different name. Boys devil by a different name,
It's beget.
Speaker 1 (34:26):
The world is dancing with the devil.
Speaker 2 (34:30):
In the wild and crazy hurdy gurdy dance, caught up
in the frenzy and the ravel.
Speaker 1 (34:40):
There's a dreadful prist to pay for this roll. Name
Call me pim, call me priest. We are brother. Step
parade is by believe with a low less faces a
ball and change. It's justice.
Speaker 2 (34:59):
Devil by a different name. Boy level by a different name.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
Call me brown skin, call me a wife.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
There's not the color of our skin that makes us right.
When somebody tells you we're not the same. That's just
the stivel by a different name. Boy s devil by
a different name. There's a still small voice that whispers inside.
Speaker 1 (35:30):
Listen, calls some new might hear it. Say there's a
light still out here, shining in the darkness. It'll be
here when you find you've lost your way. Call me
gay boy, call.
Speaker 2 (35:47):
Me straight must We stare across this cabin filled with
as if they say we were wrong, we should be ashamed.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
That's just the.
Speaker 2 (35:59):
Stivel by a different name. Boys sble buy a different name.
Speaker 1 (36:05):
I begin the world is dancing with the devil in
the wild and crazy.
Speaker 2 (36:11):
Hurdy gurdy dance, caught up in the frenzy and the rebo.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
That's a dreadful tract to pay for this role name.
I am a woman, I am strong. I've been told
that I am left than forced a long eve eighteen apples.
They say we're to blame.
Speaker 2 (36:40):
That stuff that level by a different name, boys sletble
buy a different name. Boys settled by a different, devil
by a different never buy a different name.
Speaker 1 (36:53):
And we are back.
Speaker 5 (36:55):
That was Lacy J. Dalton. Devil buy different name. Please
make sure you go and check it out and all
the music platforms where you find your music. And thank
you again to the fabulous Lacy J. Dalton for joining
us again here at the Josie Show. Please make sure
you check her out, follow her on Facebook, Instagram. She's
all over the place and went in dowbt, Google, Google
(37:15):
it out. Just by being lazy J Dalton, you'll be
able to find everything to keep in touch with her
and see where she'll be next on the road and
new music to come as well. But thank you all
so much for tuning in to the Josie Show and
we will see you all again next week. Until then,
stay safe everybody and talk to y'all soon. Bye bye Lah.
Speaker 3 (37:36):
The Josie Show was copyright and property of the Josie
Network of brands. It may not be duplicated, Authors are
edited and sold are aired without written consent from the
Josie Show owners. Any copyright brands of the Josie Show
will be subject to legal actions