Liverpool Revisited

Album: Resistance Is Futile (2018)
Play Video
  • As I wake to a sunset
    The light dances on the Mersey
    And I think of the 96
    As the tears fall down on me

    There is courage, there is pride
    You can see it in your eyes
    Fight for justice, fight for life
    There are angels in these
    Skies

    As the night falls around me
    I see joy and devotion
    These times will never leave
    Like the rain on the ocean

    There is dignity and pride
    There is poetry and life
    There are ghosts within these stones
    There's defiance in these
    Bones

    And all the hatred they tried to throw at you
    But you stayed so strong
    Yeah all the hatred, it never was the truth
    So keep keeping on

    This is forever (woah)
    We'll never leave you now
    This is forever (woah)
    We'll never leave you now Writer/s: JAMES DEAN BRADFIELD, NICHOLAS ALLEN JONES, SEAN ANTHONY MOORE
    Publisher: BMG Rights Management
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Little Big Town

Little Big TownSongwriter Interviews

"When seeds that you sow grow by the wicked moon/Be sure your sins will find you out/Your past will hunt you down and turn to tell on you."

Millie Jackson

Millie JacksonSongwriter Interviews

Outrageously gifted and just plain outrageous, Millie is an R&B and Rap innovator.

Don Dokken

Don DokkenSongwriter Interviews

Dokken frontman Don Dokken explains what broke up the band at the height of their success in the late '80s, and talks about the botched surgery that paralyzed his right arm.

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17Songwriter Interviews

Martyn talks about producing Tina Turner, some Heaven 17 hits, and his work with the British Electric Foundation.

Sending Out An SOS - Distress Signals In Songs

Sending Out An SOS - Distress Signals In SongsSong Writing

Songs where something goes horribly wrong (literally or metaphorically), and help is needed right away.

John Lee Hooker

John Lee HookerSongwriter Interviews

Into the vaults for Bruce Pollock's 1984 conversation with the esteemed bluesman. Hooker talks about transforming a Tony Bennett classic and why you don't have to be sad and lonely to write the blues.