Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Let me know you're fine.
Time for a heart to heart,
So shut up for a second and I'll start.
I'm sorry I split today,
But those people were messing up my head space.
Are you building walls or bridges?
We don't have to talk about it.
But when you're ready I'm there.
No-one can do it on their own,
It just isn't fair.
Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Let me know you're fine.
Ground control to Major You:
Are you f**king this up majorly too?
Guilt free ain't a thing these days.
You gotta learn to protect ya fragile headspace.
My sorrows don't come as single spies.
They flood from the hills in battalions.
But I'm stood here next to you ready to fall.
Together we can take 'em all, just call.
Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Let me know you're fine.
This time it feels different,
The silence around you is the loudest yet.
But you've still got one true friend.
Don't do anything stupid,
Hold on and hold back your tears,
Talk to me about your fears.
Don't do anything to compromise you,
You've shone so bright,
Just don't burn through.
The agony, the guts, the instinct to try,
I know you feel alone,
But I'm by your side.
Don't do anything stupid,
You're loved!
You're loved!
Can't you see?
Just call me, call me, call me.
Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Call me on the way home.
Let me know you're fine.
supported by 11 fans who also own “Call Me On the Way Home”
viscerally affected by covid, this album has a less optimistic but more accepting message than the previous. it reaches the heart of my experience (and others'?) in a cathartic and depressing acknowledgement. it's nice to know you feel the same niq
Gutsy rock & roll from this Brooklyn group bursting with hot-rodding riffs and snarling vocals, hearkening back to classic dark punk. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 24, 2023
supported by 10 fans who also own “Call Me On the Way Home”
That album felt like coming home after a long time away but still being proud of everything I'd seen while I was gone. One minute and twenty seven seconds into "Kenver" feels like the culmination of everything I've loved about this band since I was a kid. It feels like the best parts of freedom I've felt on the best nights of my life. Scott