Heavens Gate - The Wolfgang Press

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Heavens Gate Lyrics

Allen / cox / gray
One is for the decent times
And two is for the same
Well number three is for the big fat sinners
And four is heaven's gate

There's a soul invasion here
The soul invasion is mine
Love is in a vacant tree
I'm going to pick and choose what's mine

There's a show inside of heaven's gate
And the sinners are taking a bath
Heaven is a season and the season is time
I'm going to sit right back

Ha ha ha
Ha ha ha

With you by my side
I hardly know I speak the truth
I'm an easy equation
As I step inside of heaven's gate

Here beside heaven's fountains
I'm washing my hands with time
I'm washing my legs with truth
I step inside of heaven's gate
I walk inside of heaven's gate
I run inside of heaven's gate

Ha ha ha
[x4]

Keyboards: Mark Cox, Andrew Gray
Bass: Leslie Langston
Voices: Michael Allen, Michelle Levi
Drums: Andrew Gray, Rew
Programming: Rew, Andrew Gray
Engineered: John Madden
Produced: Drostan Madden, T.W.P.

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Enigmatic, moody, and challenging, Britain's Wolfgang Press were one of the most mercurial talents of the post-punk era, restlessly moving from gothic noise to dark balladry to eccentric funk; paradoxically, the group was also the 4AD label's longest tenured artist -- even their stylish album packages were all the product of the same designer, Alberto Ricci.

Formed in London in 1983, the Wolfgang Press comprised vocalist Michael Allen, guitarist Andrew Gray, and keyboardist Mark Cox. Allen and Cox first teamed in the group Rema Rema, which also featured Adam & the Ants alum Marco Perroni; after reuniting in the short-lived quartet Mass, the duo recruited Gray, and as the Wolfgang Press issued their cacophonous, gloomy debut LP, The Burden of Mules, in 1983. An EP trilogy co-produced by Cocteau Twin Robin Guthrie followed in quick succession: while 1984's Scarecrow was a lighter, more streamlined affair, 1985's Water spotlighted ominously sparse torch songs, and the same year's Sweatbox explored deconstructionist pop. The three EPs were later collected on The Legendary Wolfgang Press & Other Stories.

The Wolfgang Press' second full-length effort, 1986's Standing Up Straight, incorporated industrial and orchestral influences into the mix, while the Big Sex EP's "God's Number" offered a soulful backing chorus, a harbinger of things to come. Indeed, after 1988's hypnotic Bird Wood Cage and its leadoff single, "King of Soul," introduced strong elements of dub, reggae, and R&B, the trio took the full plunge into the dance arena with 1991's Queer, an idiosyncratic outing admittedly inspired by De La Soul's landmark 3 Feet High and Rising; the first single, a surreal cover of the Randy Newman-penned "Mama Told Me Not to Come," was a minor hit. 1995's Funky Little Demons completed the Wolfgang Press' transition into white funk; prior to its release, however, Cox exited the group's ranks. 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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The Wolfgang Press