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Death of a City - Barclay James Harvest



     
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Death of a City Lyrics


I look down the street but there's no one there
In the cold, in the dark, in the night air
I call out for life but my heart feels despair
There's no sign of a light in the cold dismal nightThe lights have all gone, the clothes are all torn
The people are gone but the victory's won
I call out for life but it's after the day
Now the people are gone just the city aloneEyes look from the second floor
Down to the street below
Calm now the wind is slow
See posters once on the wall
Now washed away in the rain
Peeling from buildings tallI'll follow you friends to where life never ends
Make our mistakes again as our life lines descend
Time is like dust and the dust is like snow
As it covers the ruins of the life that you knowTrees once green now turned to stone
Objects that look like ghosts
All of them overgrown
Mist all sight and mind is blurred

Lie on your back and cry
Words uttered never heardI look down the street but there's no one there
In the cold, in the dark, in the night air
I call out for life but my heart feels despair
There's no sign of a light in the cold dismal nightThe lights have all gone, the clothes are torn
The people are gone but the victory's won
I call out for life but it's after the day
Now the people are gone just the city alone

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Barclay James Harvest are an English progressive rock band. They were founded in Saddleworth, Yorkshire, United Kingdom, in September 1966 by John Lees, Les Holroyd, Stuart "Woolly" Wolstenholme (1947–2010), and Mel Pritchard (1948–2004). They are best-known for their first four albums released in quick succession from 1970-1972. The Barclay James Harvest story begins in the early sixties in the Oldham area of North-West England. John Lees and Stuart “Woolly” Wolstenholme met at Oldham Art School, and formed a band called The Sorcerers, which evolved into The Keepers.

Read more about Barclay James Harvest on Last.fm.


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Barclay James Harvest