Song picture
Harder to Pretend
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Another big bang opening in the Rocket Park tradition. Heavily inspired by the Move's "What?" and the Beatles' "I Am The Walrus".
Artist picture
Rocket Park is a band that sticks out like a sore thumb in any crowd. While other bands carefully strive for genre purity and aesthetic homogeneity, Rocket Park revels in all its messy contradictions. Bassist Dave Harris whips up the crowd with his rock star/party animal leanings while lead vocalist/keyboardist Brian Andrew Marek brings a delicate, unashamedly artsy sensibility to the proceedings. Drummer Eric Moore generates enough charisma and visual pizzazz to make him seem like a frontman while guitarist Steve Minnis lurks in the shadows, coaxing sounds both beautiful and frightening from his Les Paul. The music itself defies description - a bit of classic rock, a bit of prog, a hint of psychedelia, a spirited whiff of punk, and a whole lotta rock ‘n’ roll - but no matter what the pedigree of its individual elements, the music remains very accessible, very addictive, and very fun. As a result, Rocket Park has found itself opening for a truly eclectic variety of headliners: Saigon Kick, the Marshall Tucker Band, Jimmy Buffett, the Fixx, Alex Chilton and the Strokes! Rocket Park was originally formed in 1998 by Brian Andrew Marek and Eric Moore as a studio project, but an enthusiastic reaction to their first tentative shows (with original guitarist "Manik" Myk Thompson and bass player John Sebben) encouraged them to pursue the separate but equal worlds of recording and live performance side by side. New dimensions in confidence, tightness and energy were brought to the band when Sebben was replaced by former Free Dirt bassist Dave Harris in 1999 and, more recently, when Steve Minnis took over guitar duties from Thompson. To date, Rocket Park has released two self-produced full-length albums (1999’s and 2000’s ) and appeared on three St. Louis-based compilations (, and ), earning rave reviews from the critics, a growing curiosity from the general public and even nominations for the prestigious Slammies music awards. The band’s music has been heard on numerous stations (both commercial and otherwise) across the St. Louis radio dial, and a surprise hit of the 2000 Christmas season was "Rudolph the Redneck Reindeer", Rocket Park’s warped melding of "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" and Lynyrd Skynyrd’s "Freebird" (found on the aforementioned compilation)! Rocket Park continues to win local fans through its masterfully crafted studio concoctions and energetic live performances, but recent times have seen the band "taking the show on the road", with the result that St. Louisans are no longer alone in knowing and enjoying the first class, multi-faceted, over-the-top rock ‘n’ roll that comes from Rocket Park.
Song Info
Genre
Rock Classic Rock
Charts
Peak #2,994
Peak in subgenre #237
Author
Brian Andrew Marek, "Manik" Myk Thompson and Eric
Uploaded
November 28, 2018
Track Files
MP3
MP3 6.7 MB 267 kbps 3:27
Story behind the song
The old alien foundling mythos, as popularized by David Bowie and Kurt Cobain, with a twist of Serling.
Lyrics
when he was a child he always felt he was a stranger and he dreamed of silver starships from the skies he wondered why they'd left him on this often hostile planet scanned the shortwave for an alien reply he would stay up all night waiting by his open window for the flashing lights from heaven to descend every now and then he'd say, "at last! oh, just an airplane" and he found it that much harder to pretend in his adolescence he encountered the rejection of his parents and his teachers and his peers he didn't know how to conform nor how to be himself he only knew how to express himself in tears he would stay up all night lying on his soiled mattress waiting for an emissary to befriend every now and then he'd listen to the roaring silence and he found it that much harder to pretend finally had it sized up he grew up and wised up damned his dreams as infantile made the big decision to give up his vision gave the world a winning smile then one day long after he'd abandoned his delusions and accepted his terrestrial address he was caught within a beam of purest, whitest light and he was shanghaied by the Milky Way Express he would stay up all night in his laboratory cage to greet the rescue party planet Earth would send every now and then he'd glance at fellow zoo exhibits and he found it that much harder to pretend
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