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Warriors of the Wasteland - Frankie Goes to Hollywood



     
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Warriors of the Wasteland Lyrics


What a wasteland?
Warriors, warriorsDiamond mine to the factory, everybody's doing
What you've got to keep on doing for society
Make this world a good place to be
Let livin' be but don't work for free
Playing isn't paying so work is what I'm saying
Working for the world go round
The battle cry don't mess with me
I've traveled the world for eternityWarriors of the wasteland
Sailboats of ice on desert sands
Warriors of the wastelandIt seems to be that the powers that be
Keep themselves in splendor and security
Armored cars for mega stars
No streets, no bars, yours wealth is ours
They make the masses, kiss their assets
Lower class jackass, pay me tax take out the trash
Working for the world go round, your job is gold
Do as you're told, they pay you less the run for congressWarriors of the wasteland

And sailboats of ice on desert sands
Warriors of the wasteland
I'm working for the world go round, go roundDiamond mine to the factory, yeah
Make this a world a good place to beWarriors, what a waste, man?
Warriors, warriors, warriors, warriors
Warriors, warriors, warriors

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Frankie Goes To Hollywood (FGTH) was one of the most controversial and commercially-successful uk pop acts of the mid 1980s. The liverpool group was fronted by vocalist Holly Johnson, supported by Paul Rutherford (backing vocals), Peter Gill (drums), Mark O'Toole (bass) and Brian Nash (aka Nasher, guitar).

The group's debut single "Relax" was famously banned by the BBC and subsequently topped the UK singles chart for five weeks, enjoying prolonged chart success throughout 1984. Following the phenomenal follow-up success of "Two Tribes" and the seasonal "The Power of Love", FGTH became only the second act in the history of the UK charts to reach number one with their first three singles.

Things began to unravel in 1985 when their fourth single; 'Welcome To The Pleasuredome' stalled at number two and their second and final album; 'Liverpool' took over a year to complete, reportedly at huge expense.

Lead-off single; 'Rage Hard' peaked at number four and it was clear that the public had moved on. 'Liverpool' sold poorly and conflict between lead singer Holly Johnson and the rest of the band led to an acrimonious split.

Johnson embarked on an initially successful solo career, but quickly spiralled into obscurity and the rest of the band broke up after several attempts to recruit a new lead singer.

Their three number one singles have been extensively remixed and repackaged over the years, and despite their limited back catalogue, the band are generally seen as being one of the defining moments of the eighties.

They also had a hit videogame based around them for the ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64.

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Frankie Goes To Hollywood