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Two Dead Cops - Parquet Courts



     
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Two Dead Cops Lyrics


Framed plant portrait
On the wall
Christmas commercial
How many times
Somebody shouted
"Last call?"
And I knew he means it
At least this night
Stained white sweater
Fluorescent light
One quarter short
"Get me next time"
Somebody shouted
"Get outside"
And we fell in rank to
Watch him bolt by
"Where the fuck is he?"
"Down the stairs"

"What did he look like?"
"Dark and tall"Somebody shouted
"They had it coming"
"Freeze!"
Bang!
Bang!
"Shoot!"Protect you
Is what they say, but
Point and shoot
Is what they doProtect you
Is what they say, but
Point and shoot
Is what they doWhen shots are heard
When lives are lost
Nobody cares in the ghetto
For two dead cops
Off-duty portrait
Cracked from the cold
Quadalupe canole
No permit for fire
Bears holding hearts
And some a roseSaid a police bastard
"We lost two lives"
G-train delayed
"What else is new"
B-43 dead
"Called a car"
Tompkins is blocked
And there's helicopters
Floodlights and guards
Somebody follows you
Home in the dark
Can't look back
All the gates are down
He could do anything
There's no one around
Plant a bag in my pantsProtect you
Is what they want, but
Point and shoot
Is what they do
Protect you
Is what they want, but
Point and shoot
Is what they do
Protect you
Is what they want, but
Point and shoot
Is what they do
Protect you
Is what they want, but
Point and shoot
Is what they doNobody cares in the ghetto
For two dead cops
Songwriters
SEAN YEATON, ANDREW SAVAGE, MAXWELL SAVAGE, AUSTIN BROWNPublished by
Lyrics © DOMINO PUBLISHING COMPANY

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

Parquet Courts is a band from New York City. At the center of the group is A. Savage, who at this point is known for his collaborations with projects like Fergus & Geronimo, Teenage Cool Kids and Wiccans. Savage is joined by three other musicians (“three quarters Texans and three quarters Pisces”) and describes the bands’ debut release as The Fall meets Neil Young. On the band’s debut release, “American Specialties”, this all makes sense. The quartet wanders through the American and British underground, picking away their favorite parts with confidence.

Read more about Parquet Courts on Last.fm.


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Parquet Courts