Ribcage (feat. Angel Haze & K.Flay) - Mary Lambert

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Ribcage (feat. Angel Haze & K.Flay) Lyrics

Living in the darkness
I wear it like a crown
Oh I've got tough skin
Ready for my bow
All I've got is two hands
I tied them in the middle
Ready for the red tape
Open up my ribcage

I offer souvenirs
A deaf tongue and blinded ears
Can you fill the shelves in here
Come in, come in

Everybody look around
Everybody look around
I don't know how to fill the space
The invitations on the page
Open up my ribcage

I want you want to want me like I'm all you got
Mama she see it but can't make me stop
Telling the truth it might mean you keep poking but that didn't hurt
That's my method of coping
Daughter sees him like that smoke in my lungs
What they project on me what I've become
Down on my knees, unsure what to say
No I never learned how to pray

Don't know know who I've been fooling but you've got me running in circles I'm ruined
Let you inside, opened up all my wounds
Taken my ribcage and ripped it in two

Everybody look around
Everybody look around
I don't know how to fill the space
The invitations on the page
Open up my ribcage

Tie it from my tendons
Watch how they stretch
Oh I've got the muscle
Lord I'm spent
Knocking down my sternum
Again, at a young age
Too much space between
Open up my ribcage

I offer souvenirs
A deaf tongue and blinded ears
Can you fill the shelves in here
Come in, come in

Everybody look around
Everybody look around
I don't know how to fill the space
The invitations on the page
Open up my ribcage

There's impenetrable silence inside of my head
There's nothing I can buy when I'm practically dead
I get so tired of writing everything I should have said
That maybe this time I'll put my pen down and just tell you instead
You see I opened up my ribcage and violins flew out
The organs softly played through my violin mouth
I got lights hotter than love hidden beneath my tongue
Written on my skin
Tells me your the one

Everybody look around
Everybody look around
I don't know how to fill the space
The invitations on the page
Open up my ribcage

Open up my ribcage
Open up my ribcage

Open up my ribcage

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Mary Lambert is good at two things: crying and eating. Nowhere is this better reflected than on her debut EP ‘letters don’t talk’ released in July of 2012. Burrowed away with her friends in the woods of Sequim, Washington recording with the production team of Dungeness Records, she spent 2 years finessing and crafting the poignant and earnest collection of songs. Resembling the subdued softness of artists like Feist and Bon Iver, Lambert has carved a niche for herself, winding profound lyricism around breathy, haunting melodies.

As a performer, Lambert exemplifies the traditions of a singer/ songwriter while melding a background in spoken-word. With the KEXP debut of the track “the machine” earlier this year letters firmly established Mary as a formidable unsigned artist. This status was cemented when the lesbian singer-songwriter paired up with Seattle treasure and hip-hop duo Macklemore X Ryan Lewis to help write and sing their revolutionary single, “Same Love”. The track, an honoring of gay marriage, has lead Mary to tour nationally with Macklemore X Ryan Lewis, allowed her to reach millions by performing live on The Ellen DeGeneres Show and garnered over 6.5 million views on YouTube. It is no wonder that Mary has become one of the most talked about new artists in Seattle.

Mary is a music composition graduate of the prestigious Cornish College of the Arts. Surrounded by talented composers and faculty such as Janice Giteck and the Seattle Symphony’s Adam Stern, it was at Cornish that she honed her classical composition skills, wrote quartets, world music and a full symphony piece for the Seattle Philharmonic. Although established as a bright modern composer, Mary’s songs are far from the pretension of academia. Her writing is accessible and thoughtful, and her charisma and sense of humor shine on stage, providing a great juxtaposition for her thought-provoking and sometimes dark lyricism.

Lambert’s work has been featured in the indie short film “This Is How We Are,” which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival in 2012 and is also a songwriting contributor to the highly-regarded Bushwick Book Club.

Mary Lambert is also revered as an accomplished spoken word artist. She competed in Russell Simmons’ “Brave New Voices” International Competition in 2008 (on HBO), and was a co-founder of Seattle’s first College Unions Poetry Slam Invitational (CUPSI) collegiate team. Mary Lambert is Seattle’s 2011 Grand Poetry Slam Champion and the 2012 Northwest Regional Slam winner. She plans on releasing her first book of poetry independently in the upcoming months. 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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Mary Lambert