| Oh is this the way they say the future’s meant to feel?
|
| Or just 20,000 people standing in a field.
|
| And I don’t quite understand just what this feeling is.
|
| But that’s okay 'cause we’re all sorted out for E’s and wizz.
|
| And tell me when the spaceship lands
|
| 'cause all this has just got to mean something.
|
| In the middle of the nite, it feels alright, but then tommorow morning.
|
| Oh then you come down.
|
| Oh yeah the pirate radio station told us what was going down.
|
| Got the tickets from some mashed up bloke in Camden Town.
|
| Oh and no-one seems to know exactly where it is.
|
| But that’s okay 'cause we’re all sorted out for E’s and wizz.
|
| At 4 o’clock the normal world seems very, very, very far away.
|
| Alright.
|
| In the middle of the nite, it feels alright, but then tommorow morning.
|
| Oh then you come down. |
| Just keep on moving…
|
| Everybody asks your name
|
| They say we’re all the same and it’s «nice one», «geezer»
|
| But that’s as far as the conversation went.
|
| I lost my friends, I dance alone, it’s six o’clock I wanna go home.
|
| But it’s «no way», «not today», makes you wonder what it meant.
|
| And this hollow feeling grows and grows and grows and grows
|
| And you want to phone your mother and say
|
| «Mother, I can never come home again
|
| 'cause I seem to have left an important part of my brain somewhere
|
| Somewhere in a field in Hampshire».
|
| Alright. |
| In the middle of the nite, it feels alright
|
| But then tommorow morning.
|
| Oh then you come down.
|
| What if you never come down? |