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The End of a Perfect Day - Kirsty MacColl



     
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The End of a Perfect Day Lyrics


I want to tell you something
It's not a secret or anything
You're not alone in being alone
At the end of a perfect dayAnd if you leave all your dependents
Then they will gain their independence
Don't make a martyr of yourself
It's just the end of a perfect dayAnd it's never how it seems
The rain may fall on the best laid schemes
But in a written testimonial I'd say
I never really knew you anywayI want to tell you something
Now don't go crazy or anything
Just want to tell you that it's over
It's the end of a perfect dayDo you want sign language?
Don't want a knuckle sandwich
Now you can love or you can hate
It's just the end of a perfect dayYou can't get inside of someone
So don't ask me if we're close
I really couldn't tell you

But I know you wouldn't really listen anywayIt's a pain you got to bear
And it's always going to be there
But if you disappeared tomorrow
Then the world would carry on without you anywayMind over matter it seems
Can stop you falling apart at the seams
It's a matter of honor with me
I should write out a hundred times
Put my hand on my heart and say
That I don't want to lie, don't want to lie
Don't want to lie about the way it isI want to tell you something
Don't act surprised now or anything
Now you can revel in yourself
'Cause it's the end of a perfect dayNo it's not a pretty world out there
With people dying of their own despair
But in a written testimonial you'd say
You never really knew them anywayI'll never satisfy you, I'll never even try to
I really couldn't tell
It just depends what you remember
At the end of a perfect day

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

Kirsty Anna MacColl (Croydon, England, UK on 10 October 1959 - 18 December 2000) was a British pop singer-songwriter. She was the daughter of dancer Jean Newlove and noted folk singer Ewan MacColl. MacColl began her career in the late 1970s UK punk rock scene, singing backing vocals for Drug Addix. Her UK hits included the 1981 single "There's A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis", a cover of Billy Bragg's "A New England" in 1985, a duet with Shane MacGowan of The Pogues on "Fairytale of New York" in 1987, and a cover of The Kinks' song "Days" in 1989.

Read more about Kirsty MacColl on Last.fm.


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Kirsty MacColl