My other lyrics are not autobiographical. Typically, I latch onto a character, and then write that person's story. "The American and the Brit" is my sole autobiographical piece. It's about a trip, several weeks long, through Central and Eastern Europe in 1996. It was just over a year after I was married, my wife was back home pregnant with our first son, and I knew we would be looking to move soon after I returned. So, the trip came at a turning point for me, and there was a lot of uncertainty about what the future would hold. This is one of the first two or three songs I wrote ("Ride," on the Bobby's Garage page, was the very first, so I guess I had travel on my mind). I write lyrics, but I don't sing or play. Thankfully, Alex Stangl--on Songramp, Strobicaxe--stepped up and turned my words into a song. Alex is a fantastic talent, and I am very grateful he worked on this. *This song was #1 on the Overall Hot 100 December 10-15, 2005. Thanks!
The American and the Brit
Lyrics by Jeff Mondak
Music by Alex Stangl
Arranged and performed by Alex Stangl
Standing on the Charles Bridge in 1996
Watched them sing and play guitar, the American and the Brit
Tossed some money in the case then rode another train
It was six a.m. in Krakow, we were walking in the rain
Turning points and open doors, climb aboard and go
This train is headed somewhere and that’s all we need to know
See the track, don’t look back, climb aboard and go
Yeah this train is headed somewhere and that’s all we need to know
Crossed a few more borders on those rusty east-bound rails
Never found old Dracula but heard his finest tales
Six nights in a cheap hotel, our longest stay so far
A Transylvanian wedding band was playing CCR
Turning points and open doors, climb aboard and go
This train is headed somewhere and that’s all we need to know
See the track, don’t look back, climb aboard and go
Yeah this train is headed somewhere and that’s all we need to know
A thousand years or yesterday, sometimes it’s hard to know
Now I have two kids, a home, and places still to go
Never would have guessed back then this life’s a perfect fit
Yet still there’s times I think of them, the American and the Brit. . .
Turning points and open doors, climb aboard and go
This train is headed somewhere and that’s all we need to know
See the track, don’t look back, climb aboard and go
Yeah this train is headed somewhere and that’s all we need to know