As he walks along the gorge's edge,
He meets a sense of yesteryear.
A window in the bank above his head
Reveals his home amidst the streets.
Subway sounds, the sounds of complaint
The smell of acid on his gun of paint.
As it carves out anger in a blood-red band,
Destroyed tomorrow by an unknown hand;
My home.
Is this the way out from the endless scene?
Or just an entrance to another dream?
And the light dies down on Broadway.
But as the skylight beckons him to leave,
He hears a scream from far below.
Within the raging water, writhes the form
Of brother John, he cries for help.
The gate is fading now, but open wide.
But John is drowning, I must decide
Between the freedom I had in the rat-race,
Or to stay forever in this forsaken place;
Hey John!
He makes for the river and the gate is gone,
Back to the void where it came from.
And the light dies down on Broadway.


Lyrics submitted by Demau Senae, edited by Undinal

Light Dies Down on Broadway Lyrics as written by Mike Rutherford Anthony Banks

Lyrics © CONCORD MUSIC PUBLISHING LLC, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

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The Light Dies Down On Broadway song meanings
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    General Comment

    I agree with most of what everyone's said here. This is a test of Rael's character. Can he resist temptation and leave behind what he's been longing for in order to save his brother, who keeps leaving him in moments of danger and has basically been acting pretty aloof and uncaring for the entire album's story? By choosing to go back and save his selfish brother, Rael proves his worth as a person and ends up being rewarded by becoming... "it." I'm still a bit confused by that, but whatever.

    I noticed the first verse is sung to the tune of The Lamia, or at least the part that says "Each empty snakelike body floats, silent sorrow in empty boats..." Also, this and The Lamia are the only songs on The Lamb that have portions written in third person.

    EnduringChillon February 11, 2013   Link

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