Genius Lyrics
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Not with Haste
|
“Not With Haste” is a companion song to “After The Storm” from their previous album, Sigh No More. There are multiple similarities in the lyrics, and both songs come at the end of
|
|
Mumford & Sons & Birdy – Learn Me Right
|
[Verse 1] / Though I may speak some tongue of old / Or even spit out some holy word / I have no strength with which to speak / When you sit me down and see I’m weak / [Pre-Chorus
|
|
Mumford & Sons – I Will Wait
|
[Verse 1] / Well, I came home / Like a stone / And I fell heavy into your arms / These days of dust / Which we've known / Will blow away with this new sun / [Pre-Chorus] / But I'll
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Broken Crown
|
Ah yes, the requisite single. But unlike “Little Lion Man”, this one’s a darker, more menacing tune.
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Reminder
|
Rumor has it this song is about the decaying relationship of former couple Marcus Mumford and English folk musician Laura Marling.
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Whispers in the Dark
|
The second of a two-punch opener showing renewed lyrical elegance from Marcus Mumford and the disc’s first trace of electric guitar ambience. The song’s slightness keeps it far
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Lovers' Eyes
|
The seventh track from Mumford and Sons Babel, “Lover’s Eyes” is about the weight of regret and the deterioration of a relationship
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Holland Road
|
A slow-burning fist-pump featuring some of the record’s first flecks of grit. It’s jarringly somber after I Will Wait, although, as with any self-respecting Mumford song, it gets
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Where Are You Now
|
With Where Are You Now, Mumford has saved one of the best songs for last. A simple, yet beautiful song that anyone can relate to, Marcus wonders about a long-ago ex, asking, Where
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Lover of the Light (Live)
|
And in the middle of the night / I may watch you go / There'll be no value in the strength / Of walls that I have grown / There'll be no comfort in the shade / Of the shadows
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Roll Away Your Stone (Live)
|
[Intro] / You want that? / [Instrumental] / [Verse 1] / Roll away your stone, I'll roll away mine / Together we can see what we will find / Don't leave me alone at this time / For
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Babel
|
#LOOK AT ME NOW
Here’s the official announcement of the sonic upgrade – when the title track from Sigh No More hit your speakers, it never sounded poor, but it didn’t sound like
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Hopeless Wanderer
|
[Verse 1] / You heard my voice / I came out of the woods by choice / Shelter also gave their shade / But in the dark I have no name / [Verse 2] / So leave that click in my head
|
|
Mumford & Sons – Below My Feet
|
One of the more epic-sounding songs on the album, “Below My Feet” is a deep reflection on Marcus' faith and life experience. Both his father and mother are prominent in the UK
|
|
Mumford & Sons (Ft. Jerry Douglas & Paul Simon) – The Boxer
|
Mumford & Sons cover Simon & Garfunkel’s classic ballad of misplaced anger and powerlessness. The song also appeared on Jerry Douglas’s album Traveller. Douglas, an unparalleled
|
|
Mumford & Sons – For Those Below
|
[Verse 1] / Helpless, she lies across the stairs / Haunting your days, consuming your prayers / There will be healing, but don't force this girl to stand / As she's counting the
|
|
Johnny Rain – Ten
|
[Intro] / [Verse 1] / This a tale of one lost awkward suburb / Two kids in a world we have yet to discover / When I saw a butterfly trapped in a small worm / Before she spread her
|