O! Look who’s out on parole!
Zoot-suited and tutti-fruited!
Cherooted! Beatifically booted!
He’s just traded in his soul
For just one more night
Of jelly roll
For a bottle of Jim or Jack
For another crack at it!
O! Look who’s putting up a fight
At the turnpike
To The Solingen Bridge Of Sword
Which spans the seas’ roar
Desiccating the hearts of The Forlorn -
Portents and loud blasts
From each of the Twelve Thrones
Alas!
For who shall be reborn?
For who shall be reborn?
supported by 10 fans who also own “O! Look Who's Out On Parole!”
I first heard Blurt on their side of the double album A Factory Quartet in 1981. They seemed to be evidence of the creative possibilities that were quite rightly the result of the implosion/explosion that had begun in 1976. Neil Procter
supported by 10 fans who also own “O! Look Who's Out On Parole!”
Love this album! Demented jazz meets experimental electronica. (Found it whie researching what I'd missed of Graham Lewis's output over the last decade while I wasn't paying attention, what with being an old fart and all that. :) Jim Jarmo