Spitting Venom - Modest Mouse

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Spitting Venom Lyrics

We were spitting venom at most everyone we know
If the damned gave us a road map then we'd know just where to go
Now let it drop, let it all drop, let it all drop
Oh let it all fall off
Well you were talking soda pop you talk it quite a lot
The opinions that I do not give and the opinions I ain't got
So let it drop, let it all drop, let it all drop
Let it all fall off, there oh, oh

Well you were spitting venom at most everyone you know
If you truly knew the gravity you'd know which way to go
Well let it drop, let it all drop, let it all drop
Oh let it all fall off
My ears were pressing firmly right against your mouth to hear
When you tried to spit the venom out your words were not so clear
Now drop

Hold on to what you need, we've got a knack for fucked up history
Hold on to what you need, we've got a knack for messed up history

Well we went downtown, and we sat in the rain
Both looking one direction and waiting for a train
I thought over, thought over
I don't know who kept track, I didn't know there was a score
Well it looks like you're the winner I ain't gonna play no more
It's over, game over

Well we walked real stiff and our cane's hit the ground
You hit me with yours and said you're gonna stare me down
It's over, oh it's over
You can say what you want but don't act like you care
It takes more than one person to decide what's fair
It's over, think it over

You were spitting venom at most everyone you know
If the damned gave you a road map then you'd know just where to go
So we carried all the groceries in while hauling out the trash
And if this doesn't make us motionless I do not know what can
So who's to say what a rotten thing to say such an awful thing to say
I didn't mean to bite you sorry
What I always did, what I always did, what I always had to sling
So let it drop, let it all drop, let it all drop
Oh let it all fall off
Let it drop, let it all drop, let it all drop
Oh let it all fall off

Cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had

Cheer up baby, it wasn't really always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't really always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't really always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Cheer up.

Cheer up baby, it wasn't really always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had
Well, cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had

Cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad
For every bit of venom that came out the antidote was had

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Modest Mouse is an alternative rock band which formed in 1993 in Issaquah, Washington, United States. The band's original lineup consisted of guitarist Isaac Brock, drummer Jeremiah Green and bassist Eric Judy. Since being signed to Sony's Epic Records in 2000, Modest Mouse has attained significant popular success with songs such as "Float On" and "Dashboard."

The band's current configuration is Isaac Brock (vocals, guitar), Tom Peloso (strings, horns, bass, keyboards), Jim Fairchild (guitar), Eric Judy (bass), Jeremiah Green (drums) and Joe Plummer (drums). Plummer has recently become the new drummer for The Shins.

Brock came up with the name "Modest Mouse" when he read the Virginia Woolf stream of consciousness essay The Mark On the Wall in which the author described the working middle class as "modest mouse-coloured people"

Brock frequently moved around with his mother when he was a child. Around this time, his mother left his father for his father's brother (Brock's uncle). Brock's mother's house flooded and forced them to move into his mother's new husband's trailer, but there was no room for Brock. Brock stayed behind, living in the second story of the flooded house, until he was eventually evicted by police. He then moved into a shed next to his mother's house and it is said this is where Brock, drummer Jeremiah Green and bassist Eric Judy first began playing music.

In 1994, the band recorded their debut EP, Blue Cadet-3, Do You Connect?, at Calvin Johnson's Dub Narcotic Studios, which was then released on Calvin's record label K Records. Then followed a single with Sub Pop that was recorded by producer Steve Wold at Moon Studios. Wold, who in the mid-2000's would begin to perform under the name Seasick Steve, would also perform on the band's albums, but was never an official member of the band. After moving to Up Records Modest Mouse put out several releases recorded at Moon Studios, including 1996's This Is A Long Drive For Someone With Nothing To Think About. This double LP was produced and recorded by Steve Wold. The next offering on UP was Interstate 8; also produced by Steve Wold. 1997's The Lonesome Crowded West, (also recorded at Moon Studios, by Scott Swayze) turned out to be the band's breakthrough album. The Lonesome Crowded West gained the band a cult following and is now widely considered by many critics to be one of the defining albums of mid-90s indie rock.

In 2000, Modest Mouse released The Moon And Antarctica, their first album on a major label (Epic Records). The band enjoyed some success on alternative radio with the singles "3rd Planet" and "Gravity Rides Everything." Lead singer Isaac Brock has since put out an album with his side project Ugly Casanova on Sub Pop Records.

In 2003, drummer Jeremiah Green quit the band; the official word was that he was quitting to work with his side project, Vells. He was replaced with two members, drummer Benjamin Weikel (who also drummed for The Helio Sequence) and guitarist Dann Gallucci (Murder City Devils). Weikel being new to the band and Gallucci returning to the band for the first time since This is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About. On April 6, 2004, Modest Mouse released the platinum-selling Good News For People Who Love Bad News, which scored two hits with "Float On" and "Ocean Breathes Salty". In 2004 Jeremiah Green returned to the band, and Benjamin Weikel now drums exclusively for The Helio Sequence. Dann Gallucci left the band in August, and they toured with Hutch Harris of The Thermals during the fall of 2004.

Modest Mouse was mentioned by name in the 2005 Supreme Court decision in the case of MGM v. Grokster. Justice Souter wrote that on the Grokster P2P network, "Users seeking Top 40 songs, for example, or the latest release by Modest Mouse, are certain to be far more numerous than those seeking a free Decameron, and Grokster and StreamCast translated that demand into dollars."

In 2005, multi-instrumentalist Tom Peloso, who already played various instruments on Good News For People Who Love Bad News, officially joined the band. In 2006, Johnny Marr, former guitarist for The Smiths, became an official member of the band.

On March 20, 2007, the band released their fifth album, We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank. Four singles were released from the album: "Dashboard", "Missed the Boat", "We've Got Everything" and "Little Motel". The album debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 album chart. James Mercer of The Shins provides backing vocals on three songs.

In 2009, they released No One's First And You're Next, an EP of unreleased songs from around the time Good News and We Were Dead were recorded, and two songs that had already been released, "I've Got It All (Most)" and "King Rat". The video for King Rat was directed by late actor Heath Ledger.

In 2009, Johnny Marr left the band and was replaced by Jim Fairchild, formerly of Grandaddy. The band performed at several festivals throughout 2009 and 2010, including the main stage of the Reading and Leeds Festivals in 2010.

After an 8 year wait, the band's latest full-length is "Strangers To Ourselves", released March 17th, 2015- two weeks after the original release date, March 3rd, 2015. The album art is an aerial photo of an RV resort located in Mesa, Arizona. Five singles were released before the album, "Lampshades on Fire", "Coyotes", "The Ground Walks, with Time in a Box", "The Best Room", and "Of Course we Know". 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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