Momus - Peter Grimes

To Rate
Great Bear in the trees
And the Pleiades
Turning like a funfair ride
O my missing twin
Where do I begin
To tell you how I turn inside

Two of us were born
Then there came a horn
Then there came a storm
Somebody was lost at sea
In the pandemonium
Of the non existent sun
Now I cannot tell
In the rising swell
If the brother lost was me

Hullo Peter Grimes
Hunted for your crimes
To your agonistic lair
They say you killеd a boy
Why would you destroy
Anyone so young and fair?

Why would you enjoy
Simply to dеstroy
Your apprentice boy
When God is in the sky
In the pandemonium
Of the non-existent sun
Great Bear in the trees
And the Pleiades
Turning with your destiny
A second murder now
Anchor from the prow
How the hell hounds growl for you
The boys they said you killed
Both are living still
The only one who's lost is you

I will make a pyre
Of money and retire
Money and desire
For Ellen, your abandoned bride
In the pandemonium
Of the non-existent sun
And on the day I die
You will die as well
For you are living here inside

Glitter on the waves
Poison in the glade
Hanging from a rope of trees
Now I cannot tell
On the rising swell
If the fisherman was me

Pandemonium
A non-existent sun
Now I cannot tell
In the rising swell
In the pandemonium
Of the non-existent sun
O my missing twin
How do I begin
To tell you how I feel inside

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More Momus lyrics

Momus - Night Clinic
When you pretend You want control In the end you just lose control And down's been down so so long It smells like love In the night clinic All alone

Momus - Friendly World
To an earth windy with winter winds You came naked as a child begins You lay freezing, not owning anything And a woman wrapped you in a nappy No one's angry, just

Momus - Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous
I'm sorry It didn't seem important I was wrong Photographs by the paparazzi Joy rides in his Maserati Invites from every arty fashion victim To every

Momus - Righthand Heart
Walking down the hall feeling like a jerk So detached it hurts I meet this girl with a righthand heart I notice nothing until we start to kiss And my hand goes beneath her

Momus - Self-Identity
You do you and I'll do me But I’ll probably do me better cos I did me first And I know if you were me You'd lack the digital skills and you'd do me worse This is

Momus - Pocket Apocalypse
The battery life of a pocket apocalypse A sea of bright yellow-bellied cockroach lies Lines laid down, pretty puppy put a sock in it Off to your bed with your drippy-droppy thighs

Momus - The Art Creep is Dead
The art creep is dead His name was Fred He hanged himself from a gallery wall In a decolonising biennial He was the lone bobo The great white fail Cos he failed to

Momus - The Beast
I have three arms to hold you Four hands to touch you there A horse’s phallus to console you In the stench of country air I am coarse and hairy With a cast that hides a

Momus - Heliobore
Grippergrumps and fizzyrads Dinky creepergruffs with metrograds Whizzycrashing round the clive Patterclash at mixy troglodrive Brinky spearing on a collymaloose Jimpo and his

Momus - Make Way
Make way, make way for more of the same Like it, lump it, nothing's gonna change Raise your hat to a system with no name No escape and nobody to blame Stamp your foot,

Momus

Nicholas “Nick” Currie (born 11 February 1960), more popularly known under the artist name Momus (after the Greek god of mockery), is a Scottish songwriter, author, blogger and former journalist for Wired.
For over thirty years he has been releasing, to marginal commercial and critical success, albums on labels in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Japan.
Momus began by recording post-punk material with ex-members of Josef K in a group called The Happy Family in the early 1980s and was associated with the musicians around Postcard Records (although he never recorded for that label). His debut solo album Circus Maximus (1986, él records) explored biblical themes in dark, almost Gothic acoustic style. His debt to the influence of Gallic pop was clear from a subsequent, sardonically self-referencing cover of Jacques Brel’s “Jacky”.
In 1987, when he lived in London, he signed to Creation Records and began to record the hyper-literate, quirky pop songs for which he is best known. A trio of albums, The Poison Boyfriend, Tender Pervert and Don’t Stop The Night, blended accessible dance-pop with such heavy lyrical themes as paedophilia, necrophilia and adultery. The latter album almost yielded a hit in the UK with “The Hairstyle of the Devil” which peaked at No. 94 in the UK Singles Charts in May 1989, and was a local hit in San Francisco, reaching #32 on a year-end list from SF’s KITS Live 105 radio station. Subsequent albums on Creation included Hippopotamomus, a scatological tribute to Gainsbourg, as Momus continued to push boundaries of acceptability within accessible pop structures.
By 1994, however, when Creation signed Oasis, his music began to seem wildly out of place compared to the newer, more ‘laddish’ and commercial sounds Creation started to produce. He moved to Paris and signed to Cherry Red Records. Since then he has lived in other countries and, while less popular in Britain, has had a reasonable level of commercial success, especially in Japan, where he wrote and produced records for successful singer Kahimi Karie, including the hit single “Good Morning World”, which was originally written as for a cosmetics advert.
He has been sued twice. The first time was from Michelin UK, for the song “Michelin Man”, which compared the mascot to a blow-up doll, on Hippopotamomus (1991).
He was sued by Wendy Carlos for the song “Walter Carlos” (which postulated that the post-sexual reassignment surgery Wendy could travel back in time to marry her pre-surgery self, Walter) on The Little Red Songbook (1998). The case was settled out of court for a fee of $30,000, withdrawal of the song, agreement not to use Carlos' name for any purpose, and payment of damages and attorney’s fees to Carlos. To pay off the debt, Momus wrote 30 songs, one about each person or group who commissioned a song for $1,000, compiling Stars Forever (1999). Patrons included artist Jeff Koons and Japanese musician Cornelius. Stars Forever also features the winners of a karaoke contest started on The Little Red Songbook (1998).
He has continued to regularly release Momus albums.
In the last two decades, Momus has lived in London, Paris, Tokyo, New York and Berlin. He has made Osaka his home since 2010.
In December 1997, he contracted acanthamoeba keratitis in his right eye due to a contact lens mishap sustained whilst on holiday in Greece, causing loss of vision on that side. Although his sight subsequently improved following surgery he has suffered lingering effects from the infection since, causing him to often be photographed in an eyepatch, very dark glasses, or squinting.,