Welcome To The Boomtown

Album: Boomtown (1986)
Charted: 37
Play Video
  • Ms. Cristina drives a nine four four
    Satisfaction oozes from her pores
    She keeps rings on her fingers
    Marble on her floor
    Cocaine on her dresser
    Bars on her doors
    She keeps her back against the wall
    She keeps her back against the wall

    So I say
    I say welcome, welcome to the boomtown
    Pick a habit
    We got plenty to go around
    Welcome, welcome to the boomtown
    All that money makes such a succulent sound
    Welcome to the boomtown

    Handsome Kevin got a little off track
    Took a year off of college
    And he never went back
    Now he smokes too much
    He's got a permanent hack
    Deals dope out of Denny's
    Keeps a table in the back
    He always listens to the ground
    Always listens to the ground

    So I say
    I say welcome, welcome to the boomtown
    Pick a habit
    We got plenty to go around
    Welcome, welcome to the boomtown
    All that money makes such a succulent sound
    Welcome to the boomtown

    Well the ambulance arrived too late
    I guess she didn't want to wait Writer/s: DAVID FRANCIS BAERWALD, DAVID RICKETTS
    Publisher: Universal Music Publishing Group
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 7

  • Ad2 from Vail ColoradoThis song is and always was an anti drug warning message to young people in the 80s. This one hit wonder band came at the end of the original MTV video era using a Les Paul custom with clean sustain, two hand hammer pull off technique, and top 40 mainstream melody that was groundbreaking at the time. Anyone who interprets this piece as glorifying drugs or pro drugs is completely missing the whole point.
  • Grayson from The DesertGreat album from a great decade.
  • Palomarjack from TehachapiWhat? No flip comments from the drug and booze... "lusers"? Come on, any song that dramatizes it, gets all kinds of compliments and narratives about how great their party days were/are and how it all should be legal. Oh well. That's the way it goes.

    By the way, the version that plays here is not complete. Miss Christina, you know, the rich skank in the first verse? Well, she dies, because "the ambulance was too late". Not in my opinion, they arrived just in time to pick up her corps. And no, Miss Christina was not a smuggler, just another "luser". Remember? "The ambulance arrived too late." They don't link to that one here because it is "inseeeeee...nsitive" to her demise.

    "In a way, it's an anti-drug song." Uh, really? Ya' think?

    Recently you could easily put "crank" in the place of cocaine. It reminds me of a woman my wife knew that used crank very heavy a few years after this was released. She was north of Palmdale Ca and had a head-on at the rail road tracks in the center of Sierra Highway with a drunk driver. They both died, "A match made in heaven", don't ya' think? She was found packed up under the dashboard with her mirror and her face covered with crank. Why is this relevant? Her name was Christen, her nickname for Christina.
  • Michael from Okc, OkAltho this song is easily about drugs, I also think it paints a very bleak picture of the devastating effects it causes on the characters. In a way, it's an anti-drug song.
  • Nick from Tampa, FlI assumed this was a song about Miami, based on when it was recorded and the subject matter. Miami during the 80s could be viewed as a boomtown, where the economic boom was not caused by mineral strikes, but by the flourishing illegal drug trade.
  • Joshua from La Crosse, WiActually the song is about people involved in different aspects of the illegal drug trade - "Miss Christina" the smuggler and "handsome Kevin" the low-level dealer (the lyrics don't say whether he's selling to street-level pushers or directly to users).
  • Don from San Antonio, TxI read somewhere that David R really got turned off by touring, because the "Boomtown" guitar solos drew the wrong type of audience they were expecting. I'm assuming it was lots of hard rock metalheads that wanted to rock out. I have to admit myself, that I'm not really the folk-type and it was those beautiful Randy Rhoads-type solos (think "Tonight" or the "Little Dolls" exit solo) that led me to buying that album. But I'm glad I did, I've been a fan ever since. Dave B moved to Austin, not sure if he's still here?
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Dean Pitchford

Dean PitchfordSongwriter Interviews

Dean wrote the screenplay and lyrics to all the songs in Footloose. His other hits include "Fame" and "All The Man That I Need."

Is That Song Public Domain?

Is That Song Public Domain?Fact or Fiction

Are classic songs like "Over The Rainbow" and "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" in the public domain?

Chrissie Hynde of The Pretenders

Chrissie Hynde of The PretendersSongwriter Interviews

The rock revolutionist on songwriting, quitting smoking, and what she thinks of Rush Limbaugh using her song.

The Police

The PoliceFact or Fiction

Do their first three albums have French titles? Is "De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da" really meaningless? See if you can tell in this Fact or Fiction.

Famous Singers' First Films

Famous Singers' First FilmsSong Writing

A look at the good (Diana Ross, Eminem), the bad (Madonna, Bob Dylan) and the peculiar (David Bowie, Michael Jackson) film debuts of superstar singers.

Jon Anderson

Jon AndersonSongwriter Interviews

Jon Anderson breaks down the Yes classic "Seen All Good People" and talks about his 1000 Hands album, which features Chick Corea, Rick Derringer, Ian Anderson, and many other luminaries.