Bring On The Dancing Horses

Album: Songs To Learn & Sing (1985)
Charted: 21
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  • Jimmy Brown
    Made of stone
    Charlie Clown
    No way home

    Bring on the dancing horses
    Headless and all alone
    Shiver and say the words
    Of every lie you've heard

    First I'm gonna make it
    Then I'm gonna break it
    'Til it falls apart
    Hating all the faking
    And shaking while I'm breaking
    Your brittle heart

    Billy stands
    All alone
    Sinking sand
    Skin and bone

    Bring on the dancing horses
    Wherever they may roam
    Shiver and say the words
    Of every lie you've heard

    First I'm gonna make it
    Then I'm gonna break it
    'Til it falls apart
    Hating all the faking
    And shaking while I'm breaking
    Your brittle heart

    Brittle heart
    Brittle heart
    Brittle heart
    And my little heart
    Goes

    Jimmy Brown
    Made of stone
    Charlie Clown
    No way home

    Bring on the headless horses
    Wherever they may roam
    Shiver and say the words
    Of every lie you've heard

    First I'm gonna make it
    Then I'm gonna break it
    'Til it falls apart
    Hating all the faking
    And shaking while you're breaking
    My brittle heart
    Brittle heart
    Brittle heart
    And our little heart
    Goes

    Bring on the new messiah
    Wherever he may roam
    Bring on the new messiah
    Wherever he may roam
    Bring on the new messiah
    Wherever he may roam
    Bring on the new messiah
    Wherever he may roam Writer/s: Ian Stephen McCulloch, Leslie Thomas Pattinson, Peter Louis Vincent De Freitas, William Alfred Sergeant
    Publisher: Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 4

  • Iambull from Abq NmBuzzcutgtr got it right. It is about drug use and all the metaphors of heroin use. This is not inline with the.image Ian and bunnymen had going at the time. A song about drug use disguised as self reflection pretentiousness, (as claimed by its author ) and marketed into a teenage love story movie. When worlds serendipitously collide.
  • Dave Socal from Playa Del ReyThis band had a impact on this man/child in the 80s. Looking back it was definitely pretentious but that's what we (part of this generation) were looking for. Vapid lyrics make them mean what ever you want them to mean. It reminds us of the time as with most music that touches youth. It still sounds like a freedom I can never truly relive.
  • Buzzcutgtr from Lebanon, Nh, UsaI've read the other posts on this page, and now I'm kinda bummed out LOL! I took this song as being in love with a heroin (horse) addict and coming to the realization that - for your own survival - you've got to break it off with him/her. "Hating all the faking, shaking while I'm breaking your brittle heart..." I suppose you could take a lot of snippets of lyrics out of this song and misinterpret them (as I apparently have) -- Jimmy Brown as slang for heroin, "sinking sand, skin and bone" suggesting what drug addiction does to the body. And while I've never personally been in love with a heroin addict, I have attempted romantic entanglements with alcoholics, meth addicts, pill-heads... None of which ever comes to light, of course, until after I've left "my brittle heart" a little too exposed. Anyway, another Gen-Xer heard from. :-)
  • Tony from San DiegoSeriously how am I the first person commenting on this incredible song? One of the alternative 80s classics. Oh, this and The Furs, The Cure Oh, Yaz...
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