The Protomen - Breaking Out lyrics

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The Protomen - Breaking Out lyrics

Joe: The city doesn't know what's coming, She doesn't feel the heat. The city won't know what hit her, What knocked her out into the streets. The city is thinking that it's over, and she's already fast asleep. So I'm breaking out of here tonight. I am ready. We're given only what we need, Only the chance to survive. And even then, it's a coin toss, A roll of the dice. There's gotta be something better, Something that feels more alive. So I'm breaking out of here tonight. I'm breaking out of here. You've got to feel it girl, Feel the wind pick up. It feels like something's gonna change, but there's no use putting it in drive if all the wheels are stuck. There's somethin' wrong here, like this whole city wants to scream, But no one makes a sound. But, you've got to feel it, baby. So I'm going to find out what it is and I'm going to tear it down Joe turned to a girl who'd been ignoring him all night, leaned in, and whispered in her ear. The engine's running, baby. We don't have time for goodbyes. I know you can't come with me. I see that look in your eyes. So kiss me fast cause there's no time to lose. Leave the light on I'll come back for you. When everything is said and done, I swear I'm gonna make it right. I'm breaking out of here tonight. Joe leaned in and stole a quick kiss from the girl. She smiled and made a move to slap him but he was already out of reach. He kicked the door open and tore out into the dark streets. Fire in his blood. He didn't know exactly where he was going. Only that he was moving. And moving was something. The slight breeze against his forehead meant that something was changing. He raised his voice, crying out against the quiet, constant hum of the city. From the windows high above the streets, a few concerned women called out to him to keep his voice down. For his own sake. For all their safety. I'm so tired of giving up. I am so tired of giving in. You wake up knowing things should change, not knowing where to begin. This city won't say where she's going, and she won't speak of where she's been. So I'm breaking out of here tonight... Breakin' out. Without noticing where he was heading, he'd reached his home - or his former home - his mother's house. She'd vanished three years ago. He hadn't been back since. His father had been gone now for nearly ten. Heading around back, he made a straight line for a small workshop, set apart from the house. His father's motorbike was there. A relic. A gas engine bolted to an iron frame. He kicked the engine a few times and the bike roared to life. As he turned onto the street and opened the throttle - the sound of combustion savaging the silence of the night air - he could almost make out the sound of the collective gasp let out by the neighborhood. He could almost imagine window after window opening above the street line. Frightened face after frightened face leaning out into the bright glow of the streetlamps. Timid voice after timid voice telling him, speaking in unison. A chorus of fear. Human Choir: Don't turn your back on the city Joe ignored the voices. He thought perhaps he was the only one who hadn't turned his back. He kicked the shifter. Joe: Say a prayer for all the children still sleeping. 3rd gear. Say a prayer for all the fathers who still remember. 4th. Say a prayer for all the girls who've learned to stand up. 5th. Say a prayer for all the boys who won't surrender. Sometimes I just want to drive until the streets run out. I want to burn until there's nothing left to burn about. This city's waiting for a better day. When I get back there will be hell to pay. But, if I'm the only one left standing, I will not be afraid to fight. I'm breaking out of here tonight. I feel a fever coming on me, burning out of control. And I hear nothing but the static. For years now there's been nothing but the static on the radio. If you can hear my voice outside these walls, if you can hear me sending out this message tonight, then break the silence, send a signal back. I'm coming, all I need is a little guiding light. ...If you can hear me. Human Choir: Don't turn your back on the city... Joe: If you can hear me... Don't turn your back on the city. Store fronts gave way to warehouses. Warehouses to abandoned factories. Factories to the slums of the city. He'd followed the line of the electric rail for almost an hour. The outskirts. A place to which men now rarely ventured. The dark streets flickered under failing street lamps. Away from the machines. Away from the people trying to keep him silent. He should be feeling free. He wasn't. He was feeling something else. A wariness. A hesitation. Joe let off the throttle. As his father's bike slowed to a crawl, he understood that feeling he'd had ever since he'd decided to leave the city. That hesitation he'd felt was the knowledge that he was being watched. Watched when he kissed the girl at the bar goodbye. Watched when he left his mother's house. Watched even now... Miles from the heart of the city. A face in the shadows... He stopped the bike in the middle of the street, silenced the engine, and lowered the kickstand. There was no traffic. No metal footsteps patrolling the streets. But the familiar sound of the telescreens reached even here. Joe stood watching the face on the screen. It babbled incessantly, but said nothing. Over the sound of the screen, Joe heard footsteps, slow and deliberate, echoing from the darkness of the alleyway. Kneeling down, Joe placed one hand on the street beside him, the other reached for the knife in his boot. He recalled the stories the children of the city loved to repeat about the red-eyed a**a**in. "Light's Monster," they called it. The footsteps emerged from the darkness of the alley and into the uneven glow of the flickering street lights. Joe stood, his hand loosening its grip on the knife. It was a gray-haired man. Joe was about to speak when the old man lifted a finger and pointed past him, into the darkness. Joe turned to see a single red light pulsing from the depths of the alleyway behind him.