Broken Homes - Tricky

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Broken Homes Lyrics

CHOIR
Those men will break your bones,
Don't know how to build stable homes.
Those men will break your bones,
Don't know how to build stable homes.

PJH (* = and Tricky)
Those men will break your bones,
Don't know how to build stable homes.
* We lose our voice more each year,
* Maybe we won't breathe soon.
* Is there Cancer in the throat, No Stress.
Maybe its supposed to kill the success?
* Because success needs killing,
Murder is media.
Forced laugh, Forged autograph,
* First my body, now my corpse.
Those men will break your bones,
Don't know how to build stable homes.
Life is pain, Murder is fame.
* And if you're famous you might get acquitted, if you did it.
There's nowhere to run away.
* Damn you, I hope you pay.
And finish the day-to-day;
The games we play.
* Those men will break your bones,
* Don't know how to build stable homes.
I'm a stay-at-home,
* And talk on the telephone.
'cause nothing in this world I want from you,
Don't fool yourself, I won't cry.
Too scared to live,
Too quick to die.
* Those men will break your bones,
* Don't know how to build stable homes.
* Those men will break your bones,
* Don't know how to build stable homes.
* Those men will break your bones,
* Don't know how to build stable homes.

CHOIR
Don't know how to build stable homes.
Those men will break your bones.
Don't know how to build stable homes.
Those men will break your bones.
Don't know how to build stable homes.
Stable Homes,
Those men will break your bones.
Stable homes,
Those men will break your bones.
Stable homes,
Those men will break your bones.

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Adrian Thaws (born 27 January 1968), better known as Tricky, is a rapper and musician from Knowle West, Bristol, England who is important in the trip-hop scene (despite loathing the tag) and remains influential on the British scene more generally.

He is noted for an asthmatic whispering lyrical style that is half-rapped, half-sung. As a producer and a musician he is known for having an aversion to perfection preferring to build up a dark, rich and layered sound. Culturally, Tricky bridges white and black Britain particularly in his fusion of rock and hip-hop, high art and pop culture. He drew his influences from rap (Public Enemy) to post-punk (he covered a Siouxsie and the Banshees's song Tattoo).

Throughout his work, Tricky blurs the normally clear sexual definitions found within hip hop. Despite the heavy influence he drew from American hip hop in his debut album, Maxinquaye, he fights against typical sexual representations by, for example, dressing as a woman on the side sleeve of his album cover. Within many of his tracks he blends elements of varying types of music, and use his lyrics to create a much more ambiguous and blurry reality of sexuality.

Maxinquaye remains his most commercially and critically successful album to date. About it, Tricky originally said in an interview with Raygun in October 1996 that he wanted to make an 'out-an-out punk record' and that "I thought it was going be heavier. I thought it was just going to be an out-an-out punk record. But you end up straying. What I wanted to do was a total fast album. Some of the tracks are fast and hard, but they didn't come out like that." He also said that he hated being stuck with the trip-hop tag so "That's why I did Nearly God, and that's why I did Pre-Millennium Tension. You can't see them as trip-hop albums. So I just keep running away from it. But the farther you run, it's still there. They'll find you." Ever since, Tricky' style has evolved away from obscure, sample-based textures to a more contemporary, electronic sound.

Tricky was in Massive Attack and appeared in the movie The Fifth Element as well as the music video for Parabola by Tool. He has collaborated extensively with other artists on tracks on his various releases, including Bjork, Alanis Morissette, Cyndi Lauper, Anthony Kiedis , John Frusciante and Flea (of the Red Hot Chili Peppers), Martina Topley-Bird, and Alison Goldfrapp of Goldfrapp also many others.

After his initial success in the latter 1990's, he started his own label called Durban Poison. Currently he is heading a new imprint called Brown Punk. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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