Tall Poppies

Album: The Overload (2022)
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  • Yeah

    He was the most handsome in a class of twenty-two
    And he knew it early on so his confidence kept growing
    By thirteen he had been with every girl deemed worth it
    To be with in the village, two years either side of his birthday
    He played football, boy, could he play
    He played every single day and he still does
    A scout from Crewe Alexander came to watch him once
    And they said that they were gonna be in touch

    He was the captain of the team without ever asking to be
    And without ever being told, that counts for a lot, still, believe it or not
    Lo and behold, everyone fell in line behind the hair on his legs and hair on his lip
    He was the-

    He could smoke ten a day and still run faster
    Than that whippet that could lap the racetrack rabbit
    He could dabble in the snow, rubbing shoulders with the rabble
    And still never ever touch upon a habit
    At age sixteen, he made his choice to stay
    And got a job selling houses in the village
    Which by now had become such a desirable place to settle down
    It was classed not as a village, but instead as a small town
    (On the sunny, sunny side of the borough)
    (You get two brown bins)

    Fortunately, despite the influx of newcomers including, for the first time
    A genuine authentic Italian restaurant run by a family of fantastic old school Neapolitans
    He was still the best at football, and a most handsome man
    Taking solace in that fact as his little world continued to expand
    Woo

    By the time he was twenty, he'd now been with all the girls deemed worth it in the village
    Five years either side of his birthday
    But it was time to settle down and no kiss had ever felt so electric
    As the first he'd ever felt all those years ago
    Though she had never strayed far, hemmed in by his shadow
    The torches lining the path of her own dreams had been growing dimmer by the day and so
    Faster than a dying star, she cashed in her chips and checked out
    Settled for him and subsequently threw all her own ambitions away

    A promotion followed, a mortgage, a marriage
    A dog and children, a loft conversion
    A dead dog, and a second home on the Costa del Sol
    In the hopes of stoking the coals of two long lost souls
    Which comes first, counselling or keys in the bowl?
    Put his own mother in a home
    Got made redundant twice, never once was he on the dole

    Light head, black spots on his vision, room spinning
    Clutching the curtain waving from the window, they thought he was grinning
    He was grimacing, begging them to notice him, twitching, notice no one is helping him
    The grandkids waving through the rear windshield
    As the big electric gate draws a line in between them
    A fine, fine line between benign and malignant
    So get yourself checked, book yourself an appointment
    So get yourself checked, book yourself an appointment
    So get yourself checked, book yourself an appointment
    So get yourself checked, book yourself

    The whole village and most of the town came out to mourn his end
    A full house, he would've been so proud knowing that no one said a bad word about him aloud
    He wasn't perfect, but he was my friend
    He wasn't perfect, but he was one of us
    He was one of us
    A plaque bears his full name on a bench by the water's edge
    The dates he came and went
    And a quote about life and death from a song he'd never heard
    'Cause he wasn't too fond of long songs with lots of words
    If I were him, I'd have never left the village either
    But I did, and I know full well
    That there are more handsome men and better footballers out there in Greater Manchester
    They would've cut him down to size if they could've, but what good would that do?
    He bloomed and he grew and grew, and still he was doomed
    Same as me, same as you
    Same as everyone I ever knew
    You, sometimes still, I think about you
    Out there, somewhere, floating in the ether
    Born dyed in the wool, never knowing of a belly half full
    So many of us just crabs in a barrel
    With no feasible means to escape the inevitable cull
    There are those that grow thick skins quick for the sake of their sins
    And the savvy folk that just keep their mouths shut and take it all on the chin
    We collide with each other, we submit, and we bare our teeth
    Catch fish using giant metal ships and scream with laughter
    At 4AM staggering home down moonlit country lanes
    We cry because children are dying across the sea and there is nothing we can do about it
    Whilst we benefit from the bombs dropped which we had no part in building
    We are sorry, truly we are sorry, we are just trying to get by too Writer/s: James Smith, Ryan Needham, Sam Shjipstone
    Publisher: DOMINO PUBLISHING COMPANY, Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

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