DamnLyrics - The center provides all the lyrics

Down In the Park - Gary Numan & Tubeway Army



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

Down In the Park Lyrics


Down in the park
where the machmen
meet the machines
and play 'kill by numbers'
down in the park
with a friend called 'five'
I was in a car crash
or was it the war
but i've never been
quite the same
little white lies
like 'i was there'
Come to 'zom zoms'
a place to eat
like it was built
in one day
you can watch the humans
trying to run

Oh look
there's a rape machine
i'd go outside
if he'd look the other way
you wouldn't believe
the things they do
Down in the park
where the chant is
'death, death, death'
until the sun cries morning
down in the park
with friends of mine
We are not lovers
we are not romantics
'we are here to serve you'
a different face
but the words never change
Song Discussions is protected by U.S. Patent 9401941. Other patents pending.

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

Tubeway Army's main claim to fame is that Gary Webb (aka Gary Numan) first came to the public's attention here. The band was formed in London, UK in 1977 by Gary Numan and the late Paul Gardiner. What started as a British punk band would evolve into something quite different. During the recording of their self-titled first album ("Tubeway Army") in 1978, Numan came across a Minimoog synthesizer accidentally left in the studio which would end up being used in several of the album's songs. The change in sound served well for the band as their first album would go on to sell out its small initial pressing despite not charting.

The release of their second album "Replicas" in 1979 finally gave Numan the success he had been trying to achieve from the start with the single "Are Friends Electric?", the song topping the British charts for four weeks. The band's cold electronic take on minimalistic pop took a little while to catch on with the music audience at large, but proved to be of lasting influence. Combining the artistic and poetic tendencies of David Bowie (especially the Berlin years) with sequenced synthesizers along the lines of Kraftwerk presaged the whole genre of techno-pop in the 1980s.

In late 1979, after the success of "Replicas", Numan dropped Tubeway Army and went on to record as a solo artist.

It's also worthy of note that during 1979, while his band "Ultravox" were on hiatus, Billy Currie collaborated with Gary on material for both "Replicas" and Gary's first solo album "The Pleasure Principle".


The official website can be found here: www.garynuman.co.uk
Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

View All

Gary Numan & Tubeway Army