"Hope Still Runs Along The Rio Grande©"
Lyrics by M. S. McKenzie | Performed by Songs Across America, Protected by Copyright




~ Associated Colorado, New Mexico & Texas Links ~
"Hope Still Runs Along The Rio Grande"
Original Song Lyrics: Written by M. S. McKenzie, All Rights Reserved
[Instrumental Intro]
[Verse 1]
High in the shadow of the Colorado snow
Where the first cold waters gather and go
Through timberline silence and the mountain sun
The river starts young before the hard miles come
Down through the gorges, past stone and sage
Carving its story across another age
It learns how a border can be drawn by man
But water keeps moving where it always can
[Pre-Chorus]
It carries the prayers no map ever shows
The names and the sorrows nobody knows
And all of the dreams that rise and break
On the edge of the choices the desperate make
[Chorus]
Where the Rio Grande runs
Hope and heartbreak run beside it
Mothers and sons
Hold each other through the night wind
Under the stars
With fear in their blood and faith in their lungs
There's a world between what is and what was
Where the Rio Grande runs
[Verse 2]
South through New Mexico, slow and wide
Past cottonwoods trembling on the riverside
Past farms and pueblos and old adobe walls
Past towns that remember when the rain would fall
Then farther down where the hard land burns
And every wrong turn is a lesson learned
You can see the lights on the other side
So close you could touch them, too far to arrive
[Pre-Chorus]
And who gets to judge what hunger will do
When home becomes something you barely make through
When danger behind you and distance ahead
Leave nothing but motion and a prayer for bread
[Chorus]
Where the Rio Grande runs
Hope and heartbreak run beside it
Mothers and sons
Hold each other through the night wind
Under the stars
With fear in their blood and faith in their lungs
There's a world between what is and what was
Where the Rio Grande runs
[Verse 3]
Along Texas miles where the river bends
Between two countries and the lies they defend
There are men in the brush and there are walls in the sand
And there are hands still reaching for a chance to stand
Not everyone crossing is a story the same
Some carry papers, some carry shame
Some carry children half-asleep in their arms
And all of them walking toward a life beyond harm
[Pre-Chorus]
The river has seen what the speeches hide
The cost of a line and the wounds of a side
It knows there are worlds in a single face
And mercy gets lost in the language of blame
[Chorus]
Where the Rio Grande runs
Hope and heartbreak run beside it
Mothers and sons
Hold each other through the night wind
Under the stars
With fear in their blood and faith in their lungs
There's a world between what is and what was
Where the Rio Grande runs
[Bridge]
It begins in the mountains clear and wild
It ends carrying sorrow mile by mile
It does not ask who is yours or mine
It only knows movement, thirst, and time
And maybe someday we will learn to see
No river was made for cruelty
No human heart was born to live
With nothing left to lose but everything to give
[Final Chorus]
Where the Rio Grande runs
Hope and heartbreak run beside it
Fathers and daughters
Keep on moving through the midnight
Under the stars
With dust in their shoes and grace in their lungs
Still reaching out for what love becomes
Where the Rio Grande runs
Where the Rio Grande runs
[Outro]
From the Colorado snow
To the desert sun
Past New Mexico
Down where the border hums
It carries us all
The lost and the loved
Where the Rio Grande runs
Song Description
"Where the Rio Grande Runs" is a sweeping and deeply humane song that follows one of America's most symbolically charged rivers from its cold mountain beginnings in Colorado to the desert borderlands of Texas. At first, the song presents the Rio Grande as a natural force, born "high in the shadow of the Colorado snow," gathering itself from mountain runoff before moving through timberline silence, gorges, sage, farms, pueblos, adobe towns, and finally the harsh border country where geography becomes politics and water becomes witness.
The opening verse establishes the river's long perspective. Before the Rio Grande becomes a border, it is simply water: young, cold, ancient, and free. The line "It learns how a border can be drawn by man / But water keeps moving where it always can" gives the song its central metaphor. Human beings draw lines, build walls, pass laws, deliver speeches, and assign blame, but the river predates those divisions and continues beyond them. It becomes a symbol of something older than politics: movement, survival, thirst, time, and the shared human need to reach a place where life can continue.
As the song moves south through New Mexico, the imagery widens into a portrait of culture, memory, and drought. Cottonwoods, farms, pueblos, adobe walls, and towns that "remember when the rain would fall" root the song in the Southwestern landscape while also suggesting environmental fragility. The Rio Grande carries not only water, but history. It passes through places shaped by Indigenous presence, Spanish colonial heritage, agriculture, aridity, and generations of people who have depended on the river's seasonal mercy. By the time the lyric reaches the borderlands, the river has become both a geographic feature and a moral threshold.
The emotional heart of the song lies in its portrayal of migration. Rather than reducing people to categories, the lyrics insist on individuality and complexity: "Not everyone crossing is a story the same." Some carry papers, some carry shame, some carry children, and all are moving toward "a life beyond harm." That line is especially important because it reframes the migrant journey not as an abstraction, but as a human response to danger, hunger, desperation, and love. The song does not ignore the complexity of borders, but it refuses to let policy language erase the humanity of those who cross them.
The recurring chorus is where the song gathers its full emotional force. "Hope and heartbreak run beside it" perfectly captures the dual nature of the Rio Grande in this song. It is a place of longing and danger, of possibility and grief. Mothers and sons hold each other in the night wind; fathers and daughters keep moving through midnight. These images are intimate and cinematic, suggesting families traveling in fear but also with extraordinary faith. The phrase "fear in their blood and faith in their lungs" is one of the song's strongest emotional images, turning breath itself into an act of courage.
The bridge elevates the song from narrative into reflection. By tracing the river again from its wild mountain origin to its sorrow-bearing end, the lyric asks the listener to reconsider what a river is meant to be. "No river was made for cruelty" is the moral thesis of the song. It is direct, memorable, and resonant without becoming preachy. The following line, "No human heart was born to live / With nothing left to lose but everything to give," deepens the compassion at the center of the piece. The song recognizes that migration is often not a casual choice, but the final movement of people who have run out of safe options.
Musically, this song would support a dramatic, atmospheric arrangement. It could begin with a spacious instrumental intro suggesting snowmelt, mountain air, and distant terrain, perhaps with acoustic guitar, soft piano, low strings, and ambient textures. As the river moves south, the instrumentation could gradually warm: brushed percussion, desert-toned electric guitar, restrained Southwestern or Latin-influenced rhythmic touches, and subtle vocal harmonies. The choruses should feel expansive but not triumphant. This is not an anthem of victory; it is an anthem of witness, mercy, and endurance. The final chorus could open wider emotionally, with fuller drums, layered harmonies, and a sense of forward motion, before the outro returns to something quieter and more reflective.
For the *Songs Across America* website, "Where the Rio Grande Runs" stands as both a geographic portrait and a human-rights ballad. It honors the landscapes of Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas while confronting the painful reality that the same river which nourishes communities also marks one of the most contested borders in North America. The song's strength is that it does not treat the Rio Grande as scenery alone. It gives the river memory. It lets the water carry prayers, sorrow, hunger, children, history, blame, grace, and hope.
At its core, "Where the Rio Grande Runs" is a song about compassion across borders. It asks listeners to look beyond slogans and see faces, families, and impossible choices. Like the river itself, the song moves through beauty and hardship, through mountains and desert, through politics and pain, until it arrives at a simple but profound truth: no line on a map can erase the shared humanity of those who live, hope, suffer, and keep moving where the Rio Grande runs.