Muddy Waters Songs - Trouble No More
Muddy Waters - Trouble No More


Muddy Waters - Trouble No More Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

Album: The Essence of Muddy Waters
Released: 1955

Trouble No More Lyrics


Don't care how long you gone
I don't care how long you staying
But, good kind treatment
Gonna bring you home some day
But, someday baby
You ain't gonna trouble
Poor me, anymore

You just keep on betting
That the dice won't pass
Well you know, darling
You are living too fast
But, someday baby
You ain't gonna trouble
Poor me, anymore

I'm gonna tell everybody
In your neighborhood
That you the sweet little girl
But, you don't mean me no good
But, someday baby
You ain't gonna trouble
Poor me, anymore

Well, I know you're leavin
Well, you call that gone
Well, without love
You can't stay long
But, someday baby
You ain't gonna trouble
Poor me, anymore

Well, goodbye baby
Come on and shake my hand
I don't want no woman
You can't have a man
But, someday baby
You ain't gonna trouble
Poor me, anymore

Writer/s: MUDDY WATERS
Publisher: BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Trouble No More Song Chart
  • One of Muddy Waters more popular songs, in this one he sings about looking forward to the day his woman leaves him, which he can see coming. It's bases on a 1935 song called "Someday Baby Blues" by a country-blues singer named Sleepy John Estes. Waters transformed the song with his Chicago blues style, adding a much more prominent guitar.
  • Little Walter played the harmonica on this song, and Jimmy Rogers played the guitar.
  • The Allman Brothers, who often did their own interpretation of blues songs, recorded a popular version of this song for their 1969 debut album. It was one of 22 songs Gregg Allman brought to the band when he joined, and it was the first song they played together for an audience. That performance was on song was on May 11, 1969 when they played at Piedmont Park in Atlanta at a free festival sponsored by an underground newspaper; the paper gave them a glowing review and put them on the map outside of Macon.

    The song became a live favorite for the band; a version from a show at The Fillmore East appears on the Allman Brothers album Eat A Peach, which was released after Duane Allman died in a motorcycle accident.

    On October 28, 2014, the band played their final show, a farewell concert at the Beacon Theater in New York City. Their final song was "Trouble No More."