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Craig Finn - A Break from the Barrage Lyrics



Craig Finn - A Break from the Barrage Lyrics
Official




They say the opposite of love is indifference
And there's a physical consequence for each and every action
Once they started rolling around, the coins fell from his pocket
And the whole thing just felt like a transaction

When she showed up at the bar last night
She didn't intend to stay out late
But here we are again with the sunrise
Scraping at the remnants of a high time
She shuts her eyes and lets it spin
And calls in sick to work again
Leaves a message when she knows they won't be in yet
Timing is of the essence

You finesse it where you have to
But sometimes it's not an option
That's when you kick the door in
And right now it's hanging from its hinges

So she drops him off at the place that he stays at
Picks the coins up from the floormat in the backseat
And pulls in to the Speedway and buys a cup of coffee
And gets back into her car
Sits there and listens to the silence
And tries to figure out what to do about today

And all the village idiots
Shoplifting some Starbursts and some Parliaments
(And claiming that they're Stick-Up Kids)
We always fixate on facades
When it's hard to see the benefit
The taverns are a decent way
To seal off all the stimulus
(There's something close to death for just a little bit)
A little break from the barrage

So she pulls onto the highway and drives out of the city
And forty minutes into it
It opens up and lessens all the tension
She was feeling about everything
Fakes friends along the bars
And the boys and the bills you have to pay
She pulls into the bottle shop and gets a pint of Popov
Goes into her phone to find the showtimes of the movies
Reads all the summaries
Sees what's at the mall and what they're showing is a matinee

In just a little bit, she gives her ticket to some teenage kid
Who rips it back into her hand
Gets behind the popcorn stand
Lets herself be upsold into a Cherry Coke
That looks less like a beverage than a bathtub

The vodka's in the soda cup the split-second the film comes up
And the edges get all blurry and she tries to pay attention to the story
Of a superhero she's not really sure she's ever even heard of

(And all the arch-enemies plotting all their evil deeds
Conspiring with their henchmen
To overthrow the justice and the liberty)
We're up against impossible odds
(Some suburban cinema's a perfect place to hide out
And hide out in the cover from the damage you've inflicted on yourself)
And all you fleeting lovers, a little break from the barrage

The kid that sold her ticket is now shaking her awake
And he says, "Miss, the movie's over and you should probably go now"
He tips the empty bottle, she gathers up her stuff
And walks out to her car and gets in the backseat
Grabs a blanket and stretches out

She sleeps a few more hours
And when she comes to, it's dark now
She gets into the driver's seat and pulls onto the highway
And drives back to the city, walks into the bar
And she finds an open stool and sits down

She motions to the server and the server takes her order
And she's hoping no one noticed that she didn't change her outfit yet
She turns to the scan the room to see if anyone she knows is around

But it's just all those village idiots
The same ones she's been dealing with for decades now
(Parliament at the party house
Drinking from a fridge in the garage)

When it's hard to see the benefit
The taverns are a decent way
To seal off all the stimulus
Feel something close to death for just a little bit
A little break from the barrage

A break from the barrage
Feel something close to death for just a little bit
A break from the barrage
Feel something close to death for just a little bit
A little break from the barrage
[ Correct these Lyrics ]

[ Correct these Lyrics ]

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English

They say the opposite of love is indifference
And there's a physical consequence for each and every action
Once they started rolling around, the coins fell from his pocket
And the whole thing just felt like a transaction

When she showed up at the bar last night
She didn't intend to stay out late
But here we are again with the sunrise
Scraping at the remnants of a high time
She shuts her eyes and lets it spin
And calls in sick to work again
Leaves a message when she knows they won't be in yet
Timing is of the essence

You finesse it where you have to
But sometimes it's not an option
That's when you kick the door in
And right now it's hanging from its hinges

So she drops him off at the place that he stays at
Picks the coins up from the floormat in the backseat
And pulls in to the Speedway and buys a cup of coffee
And gets back into her car
Sits there and listens to the silence
And tries to figure out what to do about today

And all the village idiots
Shoplifting some Starbursts and some Parliaments
(And claiming that they're Stick-Up Kids)
We always fixate on facades
When it's hard to see the benefit
The taverns are a decent way
To seal off all the stimulus
(There's something close to death for just a little bit)
A little break from the barrage

So she pulls onto the highway and drives out of the city
And forty minutes into it
It opens up and lessens all the tension
She was feeling about everything
Fakes friends along the bars
And the boys and the bills you have to pay
She pulls into the bottle shop and gets a pint of Popov
Goes into her phone to find the showtimes of the movies
Reads all the summaries
Sees what's at the mall and what they're showing is a matinee

In just a little bit, she gives her ticket to some teenage kid
Who rips it back into her hand
Gets behind the popcorn stand
Lets herself be upsold into a Cherry Coke
That looks less like a beverage than a bathtub

The vodka's in the soda cup the split-second the film comes up
And the edges get all blurry and she tries to pay attention to the story
Of a superhero she's not really sure she's ever even heard of

(And all the arch-enemies plotting all their evil deeds
Conspiring with their henchmen
To overthrow the justice and the liberty)
We're up against impossible odds
(Some suburban cinema's a perfect place to hide out
And hide out in the cover from the damage you've inflicted on yourself)
And all you fleeting lovers, a little break from the barrage

The kid that sold her ticket is now shaking her awake
And he says, "Miss, the movie's over and you should probably go now"
He tips the empty bottle, she gathers up her stuff
And walks out to her car and gets in the backseat
Grabs a blanket and stretches out

She sleeps a few more hours
And when she comes to, it's dark now
She gets into the driver's seat and pulls onto the highway
And drives back to the city, walks into the bar
And she finds an open stool and sits down

She motions to the server and the server takes her order
And she's hoping no one noticed that she didn't change her outfit yet
She turns to the scan the room to see if anyone she knows is around

But it's just all those village idiots
The same ones she's been dealing with for decades now
(Parliament at the party house
Drinking from a fridge in the garage)

When it's hard to see the benefit
The taverns are a decent way
To seal off all the stimulus
Feel something close to death for just a little bit
A little break from the barrage

A break from the barrage
Feel something close to death for just a little bit
A break from the barrage
Feel something close to death for just a little bit
A little break from the barrage
[ Correct these Lyrics ]
Writer: CRAIG A FINN, JOSH KAUFMAN
Copyright: Lyrics © CLARABELLE SONGS, Songtrust Ave, Hipgnosis Songs Group

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Craig Finn - A Break from the Barrage Video
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Performed By: Craig Finn
Language: English
Length: 6:08
Written by: CRAIG A FINN, JOSH KAUFMAN

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