Jokes1 min ago
song lyrics but need help!
I have the lyrics to a song or what i think the lyrics are but as I have tried them in google and had no luck I think I may be barking up the wrong tree.
But maybe somebody here can help. Its a recent song I heard it on Radio 1 the lyrics are "we'll take a holiday you know i'd love you better".
Its a kinda dance song with fairly husky female vocals.
Any help appreciated
Thanks in advance xxx
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Random Order
Virgin, 2005
ater morphing her major label pop band 1 Plus 1 into the grittier, more rock-oriented MNQNN (Mannequin), singer-songwriter Juliet Richardson found herself without a record deal. A couple of years later, her old label, Elektra Records, performed its own kind of morphing (it was absorbed by sister label Atlantic) and Juliet the solo artist landed at Virgin. Still proudly sporting that rock residue, she teamed up with producer/keyboardist Stuart Price (alias Jacques Lu Cont of Les Rythmes Digitales), whose made a name for himself by remixing some of the biggest names in the biz in the past few years. That her debut album Random Order's best track, "Avalon," sounds like a remix of something else completely is no surprise. Stuart excels at didactic composition�that is, peeling away the layers of the original track and slowing rebuilding it until it's virtually unrecognizable, a skeleton with no flesh if you will, a skull with empty sockets, which is exactly what many of the songs here sound like. Juliet's lyrics about a fizzed-out relationship that can only be salvaged by absence ("We'll take a holiday/You know I'd love you better") are minimally crisscrossed with Stuart's stiff disco beats, dubby delay, and, in the end, lush strings. .
Random Order
Virgin, 2005
ater morphing her major label pop band 1 Plus 1 into the grittier, more rock-oriented MNQNN (Mannequin), singer-songwriter Juliet Richardson found herself without a record deal. A couple of years later, her old label, Elektra Records, performed its own kind of morphing (it was absorbed by sister label Atlantic) and Juliet the solo artist landed at Virgin. Still proudly sporting that rock residue, she teamed up with producer/keyboardist Stuart Price (alias Jacques Lu Cont of Les Rythmes Digitales), whose made a name for himself by remixing some of the biggest names in the biz in the past few years. That her debut album Random Order's best track, "Avalon," sounds like a remix of something else completely is no surprise. Stuart excels at didactic composition�that is, peeling away the layers of the original track and slowing rebuilding it until it's virtually unrecognizable, a skeleton with no flesh if you will, a skull with empty sockets, which is exactly what many of the songs here sound like. Juliet's lyrics about a fizzed-out relationship that can only be salvaged by absence ("We'll take a holiday/You know I'd love you better") are minimally crisscrossed with Stuart's stiff disco beats, dubby delay, and, in the end, lush strings. .