| Well as I’m talking to you now, it’s 5: 11 on the 24th of June
|
| Here in Sag Harbour, New York
|
| where I’m in the studio, winding up the Mobile years portions of
|
| Buried Treasure
|
| What a trip this has been for me and I hope for you when you hear it
|
| But let’s just say that 5 'o clock seems to be
|
| a very popular time of day in my world
|
| There is not a show that goes by when we’re on the road
|
| that we’re not having a time check
|
| Not a sound check, a time check
|
| For 5 'o clock was on my mind, years before Alan Jackson called me
|
| in 2003 with the idea of an anthem dedicated
|
| to quitting time around the world
|
| Now Close the world at 5, was written in 1969
|
| And I think it had something to do with the fact that in those days
|
| i was actually working a 9 to 5 job before I went to my night job
|
| at the Admiral’s Corner
|
| when you keep hours like that, as Willie Nelson says
|
| Time will slip away
|
| Time has never really been figured out, although Einstein came close
|
| But, it certainly has been a great source of inspiration for writers
|
| since the beginning of time
|
| Whether you write lines about losing it,
|
| stopping it, travelling forward or backward in it,
|
| or just wanting a cocktail at quitting time
|
| Time does not stop
|
| We can’t ever really close the world at 5
|
| but I think it helps to be able to think that you can
|
| So let’s think about it,
|
| Here’s the last song on the Mobile section of Buried Treasure
|
| And a fitting song to end it, Close the world at 5 |