First day with the jar
You find
Everyone lies
First day with the jar
You find
Everyone lies, nobody minds

Everyone lies
Where is the man you respect?
And where is the woman you love?
Where's the woman you love?

Third week with the jar
You find
Everything dies
We won't vote Conservative
Because we never have

Everyone lies, everyone lies
Where is the man you respect?
And where is the woman you love?
Where's the woman you love?

Everything of worth
On Earth
Is there
To share

I used to dream, and I used to vow
I wouldn't dream of it now
We look to Los Angeles
For the language we use
London is dead, London is dead
London is dead, London is dead
London is dead, London is dead
Now I'm too much in love
I'm too much in love

I know
I'll go
Empty hand
From the land


Lyrics submitted by weezerific:cutlery

Glamorous Glue Lyrics as written by Alain Gordon Whyte Steven Morrissey

Lyrics © Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., Warner Chappell Music, Inc.

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Glamorous Glue song meanings
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  • +1
    My Interpretation

    I used the think the first lines were, "First day with the job you find everyone lies."

    So the song was about somebody young, starting out in a career, launching out into life, and becoming disillusioned and disappointed upon the realization that he has not found what he had expected or hoped: a man to respect (this could be a professional mentor or political leader to look up to, or even a reference to himself), and an adult relationship, in this case, a woman he loves.

    But the word is not "job," it's "jar" and nobody seems to know what that's a reference to.

    As for the title? Maybe the glue is what keeps even the most well-intended people stuck together in a big mess with everyone else. Expectations of a fulfilling life, of progress and moving on to better things, that are pulled stopped and stuck instead by the culture that to a young person seemed so desirable and glamorous but then reveals itself to be corrupt and dead.

    Whatever the specifics, this song is one of Morrissey's most scathing critiques of England. And one of my favorites.

    RayNashvilleon August 26, 2014   Link

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