Novacaine - Amber Rubarth

Viewed 0 times


Print this lyrics Print it!

     
Page format: Left Center Right
Direct link:
BB code:
Embed: I said
"It 's feeling worse than ever
can 't you make it go away?"
He studied my heart up
and down and said
"I 've never seen one quite this bad.
I 'll wrap it up if you want me
to but I must be warning you.
A splint won 't stick
a cast won 't last
a band-aid will come unglued.
The only way to heal your heart
is keeping loving
'til one loves you."

Oooh, the doctor said
"It 's true. Now get better soon."
Well, I knew that I couldn 't wait
and he 'd walked out the door.
So I grabbed the Novacaine
and some pills from his drawer.
And when I got home
I held my heart and bandaged
all those ugly scars.
I numbed the pain
and popped the pills
until my heart went still.
And life just passed by every day
like every day before.
I felt no love, I felt no pain,
I played my part and nothing more.

Oooh
the doctor said it 's true.
Get better soon.
I couldn 't stand the pain.
I couldn 't stand the pain.
I couldn 't stand the pain
so I washed it away.
I couldn 't stand the pain.

I ran into the Doc last weekend
at the grocery super store.
He asked me
"How 's it feeling?"
and I said "It 's barely sore."
But he saw my eyes so dark and blank
and that practiced smile on my face.
He said,
"There 's one more thing to do
and I think it might cure you.
Write down every single way
you loved the one that you knew.
Then love yourself in that same way
and in no time you 'll be brand new."

Oooh
the doctor said it 's true.
Now get better soon.
Get better soon.
Get better soon.
The doctor said today
it can all go away
now get better soonLyrics provided by TANCODEhttp://lyricsever.com/" readonly=""/>

Novacaine Lyrics

He recognized
the fracture line and asked
"How bad 's the pain?"
I said
"It 's feeling worse than ever
can 't you make it go away?"
He studied my heart up
and down and said
"I 've never seen one quite this bad.
I 'll wrap it up if you want me
to but I must be warning you.
A splint won 't stick
a cast won 't last
a band-aid will come unglued.
The only way to heal your heart
is keeping loving
'til one loves you."

Oooh, the doctor said
"It 's true. Now get better soon."
Well, I knew that I couldn 't wait
and he 'd walked out the door.
So I grabbed the Novacaine
and some pills from his drawer.
And when I got home
I held my heart and bandaged
all those ugly scars.
I numbed the pain
and popped the pills
until my heart went still.
And life just passed by every day
like every day before.
I felt no love, I felt no pain,
I played my part and nothing more.

Oooh
the doctor said it 's true.
Get better soon.
I couldn 't stand the pain.
I couldn 't stand the pain.
I couldn 't stand the pain
so I washed it away.
I couldn 't stand the pain.

I ran into the Doc last weekend
at the grocery super store.
He asked me
"How 's it feeling?"
and I said "It 's barely sore."
But he saw my eyes so dark and blank
and that practiced smile on my face.
He said,
"There 's one more thing to do
and I think it might cure you.
Write down every single way
you loved the one that you knew.
Then love yourself in that same way
and in no time you 'll be brand new."

Oooh
the doctor said it 's true.
Now get better soon.
Get better soon.
Get better soon.
The doctor said today
it can all go away
now get better soon

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Amber Rubarth (born September 21, 1982, in Orange County, CA) is an American singer-songwriter, composer, and actor.

Rubarth has become a fixture in New York's indie scene, named #1 Best of NYC Songwriter by Deli Magazine and grand prize winner of NPR's Mountain Stage New Song Contest.

Her fourth album A Common Case of Disappearing produced by Jacquire King (Tom Waits, Kings of Leon, Norah Jones) highlights her raw, vulnerable voice against a driving band. The album debuted at #13 on iTunes Songwriter charts and features duets with Jason Reeves and Jason Mraz.

Over the years, Rubarth has toured Europe, Japan and the US, including appearances at Carnegie Hall and the Lincoln Center Atrium. She composed the score for the documentary Desert Runners. Her songs have attracted enthusiastic praise from NPR All Songs Considered, The Huffington Post, BBC Radio, Acoustic Guitar Magazine, and a Sun Studio Session airing nation-wide on PBS.

At 21 years old, Rubarth quit her career as a chainsaw sculptor in Nevada in order to pursue music. She taught herself guitar, began playing open mics and recorded her songs, which soon received over 1.5 million listens on MySpace through word of mouth alone. She has shared the stage with many artists including Loudon Wainwright III, Jason Mraz, Roger McGuinn (The Byrds), Colin Hay, Martin Sexton and Lisa Loeb. Rubarth now composes for films as well, most recently writing music with Paul Brill for the highly-acclaimed Sundance Film Festival winner Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work. She is also one half of Brooklyn's The Paper Raincoat with Alex Wong, an iTunes Indie Spotlight band chosen as Paste Magazine's "Best of What's Next."

For more information and a Free EP, please visit http://AmberRubarth.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

View All

Amber Rubarth