DamnLyrics - The center provides all the lyrics

Disappointment Number (Unknown - Steppenwolf



     
Page format: Left Center Right
Direct link:
BB code:
Embed:

Disappointment Number (Unknown Lyrics


I don't believe that I can hold you anymore
Now don't say good bye, walk out the door
Nobody's blaming you, I've been wrong before
Across the street I see shadows and candlelight
But I'm here all alone, it just ain't right
Across the street I see shadows and candlelightYou know it makes me feel like sighing
To hear their laughter in the night
The sky is crying
The tears roll down my window pane
So I go out walking in the rain
And I'm blue againHey girl, you didn't treat me right
You got me walkin' round all through the night
Can't keep my feet still
I need someone but it sure ain't you
Got a little bit mad 'cause you couldn't be true
Somebody else willFind me a bar, I'm gonna spend my bread
Wake up next morning under the bed
Feel a lot worse like a man with an elephant's head

You know I need someone but it sure ain't you
Got a little bit mad 'cause you couldn't be true
Somebody else willYou know I feel so mean
I could shoot down the morning sun
You know I feel so mean
I could shoot down the morning sun
Oh, when you hurt someone
You know you wind up on the run

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Steppenwolf is a rock band which formed in Los Angeles, California, United States in 1967. The band originally consisted of John Kay (vocals, guitar), Michael Monarch (guitar), Rushton Moreve (bass), Goldie McJohn (keyboards) and Jerry Edmonton (drums). The band is best known for their hit singles "Born to Be Wild" and "Magic Carpet Ride". They were named after the novel Der Steppenwolf by German author Hermann Hesse.

Frontman John Kay's mother escaped with him at age 4 from Soviet occupied East Germany, an event recounted in the song "Renegade" on the album Steppenwolf Seven. His family resettled in Hannover, West Germany, before moving to Canada in 1958. Kay is partially blind, hence the use of dark glasses

In 1968, Nick St. Nicholas replaced Moreve as bass player.

Steppenwolf had its origins in the Toronto blues band Sparrow, which was formed in 1964 and played coffeehouses in Yorkville. By 1967 they had settled in San Francisco.

Steppenwolf rocketed to fame after their third single, "Born to Be Wild" was used in the movie Easy Rider, as well as "The Pusher". The former song may have coined the term "heavy metal". This was followed by several more hits, including "Magic Carpet Ride" from Steppenwolf the Second, and "Rock Me" from At Your Birthday Party. Many fans consider their double album Steppenwolf Live [an extended single album in the UK] the best of Steppenwolf's releases. Monster and For Ladies Only were the band's most political albums, and are still fondly remembered by fans as two of the best rock & roll snapshots of the attitudes of the late 1960s and early 1970s.

The band broke up in 1971, and Kay pursued a solo career. Steppenwolf reformed in 1974 with the album Slow Flux, and disbanded in 1976. Afterwards, several versions of the band toured North America until Kay reformed the official version of the group in 1980.

John Kay released a solo album in 2001.



User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.

View All

Steppenwolf