Watch the Moon Come Down - Graham Parker & The Rumour

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I'm going to watch the moon come down
Watch the moon come down
I'm gonna watch the moon come down
Watch it come down

If I stay out all night, test the midnight train's headlights
Follow the tracks beyond sight to the bend
Now who've I got to let down
Tell me somebody with their head down

Bargin' into solid ground in the end
In the end, yeah in the end
Waitin' for the end, arrive to the end, hey, hey
I said, "Baby, baby, baby, baby, baby"

Watch the moon come down
Watch the moon come down
Watch the moon come down

Yes, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Yeah, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Like a midnight train uh huh

Uh, uh, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Watch it come down
Yes, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Like a midnight trainLyrics provided by TANCODEhttp://lyricsever.com/" readonly=""/>

Watch the Moon Come Down Lyrics

In this dirty town there's nothing going for me
No show's going down that I would want to see
Nothing but the midnight train

In this shady street on a top floor flat
Women take their sheets down to the laundromat
And as the night falls on this town

I'm going to watch the moon come down
Watch the moon come down
I'm gonna watch the moon come down
Watch it come down

As the workmen walk home, reflected in the car chrome
Splashing through the gutters and the sand
The birds move in the rafters hearing echoes of the laughter
From children in a playground close at hand

And hands inside my pockets, staring at the light sockets
Everyone's been blown out everyone's been thrown out
I said, "Baby, baby, baby, baby, baby"

I'm going to watch the moon come down
Watch the moon come down
I'm gonna watch the moon come down
Watch it come down

If I stay out all night, test the midnight train's headlights
Follow the tracks beyond sight to the bend
Now who've I got to let down
Tell me somebody with their head down

Bargin' into solid ground in the end
In the end, yeah in the end
Waitin' for the end, arrive to the end, hey, hey
I said, "Baby, baby, baby, baby, baby"

Watch the moon come down
Watch the moon come down
Watch the moon come down

Yes, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Yeah, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Like a midnight train uh huh

Uh, uh, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Watch it come down
Yes, I'm going to watch the moon come down
Like a midnight train

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Graham Parker and the Rumour (led by British rock musician Graham Parker, with Brinsley Schwarz and Martin Belmont on guitars, Bob Andrews on keyboards, Andrew Bodnar on bass and Steve Goulding on drums) formed in the summer of 1975 in London, England, and began doing the rounds of the British pub rock scene. The band was also augmented at times by a four-man horn section known as The Rumour Brass: John "Irish" Earle (sax), Chris Gower (trombone), Dick Hanson (trumpet), and Ray Bevis (sax). Throughout their time with Parker, the Rumour were also recording artists in their own right, releasing three albums: Max (1977), Frogs, Sprouts, Clogs And Krauts (1979), and Purity of Essence (1980).

The first album by Graham Parker and the Rumour, Howlin' Wind, was released to acclaim in 1976 and was rapidly followed by the stylistically similar Heat Treatment. A mixture of rock, ballads, and reggae-influenced numbers, these albums reflected Parker's early influences (Motown, The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan,Van Morrison) and contained the songs which formed the core of Parker's live shows -- "White Honey", "Soul Shoes", "Lady Doctor", "Fool's Gold", and his early signature tune "Don't Ask Me Questions", which hit the top 40 in the UK.

Parker and the Rumour built a reputation as incendiary live performers: the promotional album Live at Marble Arch was recorded at this time and shows off their raw onstage style. Like the pub rock scene he was loosely tied to, the singer's class-conscious lyrics and passionate vocals signaled a renewal of rock music as punk rock began to flower in Britain.

Bob Andrews left The Rumour in early 1980, and was not officially replaced. However, in studio sessions for the next album (The Up Escalator), Nicky Hopkins and Danny Federici (of The E Street Band) sat in on keyboards.

1980's The Up Escalator was Parker's highest-charting album in the UK and featured production by Jimmy Iovine and guest vocals from Bruce Springsteen. Significantly, the front cover of the album credited only Graham Parker, not "Graham Parker and The Rumour".

The Up Escalator would prove to be Parker's last album with the Rumour, although guitarist Brinsley Schwarz would reunite with Parker in 1983 and play on most of the singer's albums through the decade's end. As well, bassist Andrew Bodnar would rejoin Parker from 1988 through the mid 1990s, and drummer Steve Goulding would play on Parker's 2001 album Deepcut To Nowhere.

In early 2011, Parker reunited with all five original members of The Rumour to record a new album. The record, titled Three Chords Good, was released in November 2012. 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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Graham Parker & The Rumour