Total time (64.05)
The first 100 orders come with a free DVD of the first 
ever Haze show to be filmed at Stocksbridge Victory Club in 1983, videoed by 
Keith Bradley & digitally enhanced by Jon Dunnington.
The album is also available as a 
digital download/streaming from Bandcamp, 
as well as all the usual places (itunes, spotify, etc, etc)
 
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Flight Behaviour 
(words & music P McMahon & C Ashton)
Paul McMahon (lead vocals, guitars) Chris McMahon (bass, 
keyboards & vocals) Danny McMahon (drums) Catrin Ashton (flute & vocals)
with Charlie Bramald (vocals) & Jessie McMahon (vocals)
	
		| {Chris} This was a song that Cat had back when Chis was in the band, but we 
		never quite managed to make it work. Once Back to the Bones was release, 
		we started work on it again, adding the pulsing keyboard sound & Jethro 
		Tull-esq instrumental 
 {Paul} Cat started work on this on 
		piano sometime around 2013 (with baby Hazel on her knee). Influenced by 
		a song by Swedish electronic band, The Knife and lyrically based on 
		Flight Behaviour the Barbara Kingsolver book. Musically, all of the 
		vocal parts of the songs were by Cat, with some consultations over what 
		time signature the chorus should be in - we settled on 5/4 and why not? 
		After the middle 8, Cat wanted an instrumental section, and I remembered 
		a really old tune I wrote in the early 2000s which never fitted anywhere 
		- it was rhythmically similar to America from West Side Story and just 
		never made sense in a Haze song. We tried it out, with the flute taking 
		the lead tune, and it immediately came to life, with hints of Jethro 
		Tull mixed with Latin American. Yes, we know they don’t go together! 
		Chris thought it should be in 5/8 rather than 6/8, possibly he was 
		thinking of the Tull song “Living in the Past”? So we 
		compromised/complicated it by putting it into 11/8, and came up with a 
		little question and answer section in 6/8. The rhythmic change going 
		into and out of the instrumental section was a little tricky, keeping 
		the tempo constant while switching from 4/4 to 11/8, but if, instead of 
		trying to count, you just say “one thousand, two thousand, what the f*ck 
		we gonna do thousand” it all works fine. Usually. The final ingredient 
		was the intro/outro tune on the Variax sitar sound, with Danny adding a 
		Kalimba (thumb piano) counter melody. That made no sense either, but 
		there’s a bit of a theme appearing here isn’t there? When recording, we 
		used five voices in total, with me doing the first verse, Chris the 
		answering verse, Cat joining in on the “We will Come for you” line, then 
		Charlie joining Chris on the answering phrases, and Jess and Charlie on 
		the next “We will Call for you”. On the middle 8 (“You see in us what we 
		are looking for” bit), Cat usually does a high harmony, but since we had 
		Charlie there, and I know he can get up to a high B easily, we asked him 
		to have a go. He did it, we used it, it sounds brilliant!
 
 I am wing on burning 
		wing, a song you fear to sing,a scattering of sky,a deathly lullaby.
 I am fatalistic fire,the ember of desire,a 
		forest floor alight,out of sight.
 We will come for you.
 I am symmetry in flight,a whisper in the 
		night, a soft celestial sigh, the monarch of the sky.
 I could not hear nature’s call, descending 
		with the Fall,a field behind a farm,a drop of calm
 We will call for you.
 When you hear the sirens sing,
 You don’t hear the sirens ring,
 You don’t see the snow in spring.
 The monarch’s on the wing.
 
 I climbed the 
		monarch’s wing, as king descends from king, all condembed to die, by one 
		convenient lie.
 I clung to those below, a furnace under snow, slipping from the tree, in 
		agony.
 We will 
		fall for you.
 You see in us what we are looking for;
 You want for nothing, and yet you still want 
		more.
 You fear 
		death, never thinking you might die.
 You walk the earth, but still you long to fly.
 
 I am lying on the 
		ground, a fragment to be found, to find the reason why, one more dead 
		butterfly.
 I am 
		lying on the ground, but the poet has me found, found the reason why I 
		still might fly.
 We will comfort you.
 When you hear the sirens sing etc.
 | 
 
 
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Not Alone (P McMahon)
Paul McMahon (lead vocals, 6 & 12 string guitars) Chris McMahon (8 
string bass, vocals) Danny 
McMahon (drums, vocals)  with Jessie McMahon (vocals)
	
		| {Chris} Paul was trying to write something simple in the style of the 
		songs I'd been writing for Treebeard, but being Haze, it ended up with 
		all these complicated Rush bits in it! {Paul} Very rarely, I wake up with a song in 
		my head. The verse and chorus of this song appeared one morning, all I 
		had to do was grab a guitar and work out what key to do it in. The rest 
		of the band were suitably outraged by such a simple song, and insisted 
		that we must at least make the arrangement complicated, so we played 
		around with different length choruses, different chords behind the later 
		choruses, and a couple of tunes thrown in at random. One of the tunes 
		was a little thing I had recorded on my smart phone - only it was 
		originally a nice little waltz! It went into 4/4 easily enough. The 
		middle section (Don’t get me started etc.) was worked out while I was on 
		a long walk to the shops, trying to work out in my head what the chords 
		would be. The song is played on a distorted 12 string, with the bass 
		part on an 8 string bass, the intention being to create an aggressive 
		snarling sound along the lines of The Who or The Jam. 12 string guitars 
		are notoriously hard to keep in tune, but we wanted it to sound raw, and 
		didn’t fuss too much if the tuning was imperfect! Lyrically, it’s the 
		angriest song we’ve ever done, but as the saying goes - if you’re not 
		angry, you haven’t been paying attention! Listen out for Danny’s famous 
		“goat scream” behind the line “the mess they got us in”. It’s fabulous.   Do you wake up in the morning, when the sunshine hits 
your eyes?Do you shake your head, get out of bed and put on your disguise?
 Do you ever think that you've forgotten how to feel?
 That you're going 
through the motions like a hamster in a wheel?
 You're not alone, you're not 
alone.
 Do you wish the world was kinder? Do you wish the world was fair?Do you fear the news and hide your views and wallow in despair?
 Do you think 
we're led by donkeys? Do you think we're fed on lies?
 Do you think the 
howling mob drowns out the voices of the wise?
 You're not alone, you're not 
alone.
 You're not alone.
 Do you think that our democracy’s descended into farce?Do 
you wish our politicians knew their elbow from their arse?
 Do you hope for 
peace across the world? Do you fear that we're to blame?
 For all the bombs 
and bullets that are flying in our name?
 You're not alone, you're not alone.
 You're not alone.
 
 Don't get me started I don't want to know.I never thought 
that we could sink so low.
 The quick & the dead; the blue & the red;
 Don't 
they ever wonder why the
 voices in their head are all
 laughing at them?
 Will they build themselves an empire based on prejudice & 
hate?Because they think it's greed and ignorance that make a nation great.
 Will they build themselves a castle rooted deep in English soil?
 And then 
pull up the drawbridge and prepare the boiling oil?
 While the moat fills up 
with sewage and the flag is drenched in blood,
 As they drag the reputation of 
the nation through the mud.
 If kindness is a weakness and intelligence a sin,
 Do you think they're never gonna fix the mess they got us in?
 You're not 
alone, you're not alone.
 You're not alone.
   | 
 
**********************************************************************************
Waters Rising (P McMahon)
Paul McMahon (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars) Chris McMahon (keyboards, 
bass pedals, vocals) 
Danny McMahon (drums, percussion, vocals) Catrin Ashton (flute, vocals)
	
		| {Chris} We first jammed on the chord sequence for this song in one of 
		our lockdown sessions on Sunday 28th March 2021, have a listen 
		
		here. It's probably the simplest Haze song, and is 
		proving to be one of the most popular (is there a lesson here?), so was 
		an obvious choice for the 
		2weeks 2 make it video competition. We've 
		recorded an alternative version, produced by Danny McMahon & featuring 
		Lee O'Donnell on bass and Derek Nash on saxophone, which will be available as 
		a bonus track on bandcamp 
 {Paul} It must be 5 years since we 
		started writing this. We had a simple but effective chord sequence, a 
		melody which was very reminiscent of the sixties - kind of a Roy Orbison 
		feel? The problem from a songwriting point of view is that a strong 
		melody needs lyrics which fit the melody perfectly, there’s no room to 
		mess about with the rhythm of the words, they have to fit the tune. It’s 
		even more difficult if you want the lyrics to have some depth and 
		meaning rather than writing any old drivel that fits! Originally, we had 
		4 verses, but it was too long for it’s own good, so we amalgamated 
		verses 1 and 3, and cut one of the final choruses. Over the last chorus, 
		Chris sings one of the lines cut from verse 1 (on the single version, 
		Dan sings the other cut line!). Far and away the simplest song we have 
		ever done, we think it really works because of the strength of the 
		melody & lyrics. Multiple harmonies from all of the band, Jess, Hazel & 
		Lily and of course Charlie!
 | 
 
	
		| Today, I climbed the hills above the bay,I 
		looked out on the horizon,eyes on the sea.I looked down, and where 
		there used to be a town, there was nothing but the ocean, nothing to 
		see.
 You can’t stop the waters rising. All round the world they’re 
		rising.
 Fools and deniers, leaders and liars, Can’t stop the waters 
		rising.
 
 I can feel, the pain of wounds that will not 
		heal, I can feel the spirit leaving, grieving for me.Because you 
		see, we fracked the land and fouled the sea. We made a wasteland out of 
		Eden, eventually.
 
 You can’t stop the waters rising etc. Now you lie, look my children in the eye, and 
		tell them that you could do nothing; you didn’t know.They were sold, 
		their future traded in for gold. Now count your profit while the earth 
		dies; the blame lies with you.
 
 You can’t stop the waters 
		rising. (Speak for those who have no voice)
 All round the world 
		they’re rising. (Choose for those who have no choice)
 Fools and 
		deniers, leaders and liars, (Fight for those with no defence)
 Can’t 
		stop the waters rising. (Feel for those who have no sense)
 You can’t 
		stop the people rising . All round the world they’re rising.
 Leaders 
		and liars, can’t stop the fires, Can’t stop the people rising.
   | 
 
 
**********************************************************************************
The Outlandish Knight (C McMahon & P McMahon)
Paul McMahon (vocals, 12 string acousitc, electric & 
baritone guitars, guitar synth) Chris McMahon 
(lead vocals, 12 string acoustic guitar, bass, keyboards - including Mini Moog!) Danny McMahon (drums) 
Catrin Ashton (flute, vocals
	
		| {Chris} I first conceived the idea of this track back in about 2007, but 
		didn't think anyone would be daft enough to play it with me! The lyrics 
		are traditional & there are many folk versions of the song out there, 
		but I felt that the music needed to reflect the development of the 
		narative, hence it goes from folk to metal to prog, back to metal, to 
		ambient, back to prog, then folk & finally metal to wrap it all up. Many 
		versions of the song have a daft last verse about a parrot (probably 
		added to the traditional lyrics in Victorian times), but instead we've 
		added an instrumental ending that is supposed to evoke the ending of 
		'Alien' - she's just got home, thinks she's safe in bed & suddenly the 
		Alien/Knight pops out of the closed & goes 'surprise!' Well that's what 
		happens in my head anyway! 
 {Paul} The lyrics for this song - a 
		classic tale of a male villain being outwitted by a quick thinking 
		female - are several hundred years old, and the song has been done by 
		many folk artists over the years, each with their own tune and 
		arrangement. Sometime around 2008, Chris wanted us to do a version he 
		had come up with mixing folk, detuned metal and rock. It was basically 
		completely crazy, and we thought there was no way anyone would want to 
		hear it, so we didn’t try to get it on Back to the Bones. When we 
		started planning the current album, we dug it out again, and started 
		practicing it and revising it, section by section. I was in the middle 
		of writing Redemption, and was looking for a new mid section tune, 
		coming up with a slightly odd chord sequence (Am/D/F#m/C/G/Bb/F/E) with 
		a tune which makes sense of these disparate chords. I decided it didn’t 
		fit Redemption, but would go fine in The Outlandish Knight, first as a 
		flute tune between the folky verses in 6/8, then later as a prog out in 
		the ⅞ mid section. That led on to another major key tune in the ⅞ 
		section, which is played on flute, guitar and keyboard in turn, before 
		returning to Chris’s original ending for the ⅞ bit where the keys, 
		guitar and flute follow each other then join in harmony. After more 
		detuned metal, at the point where the knight is left to drown, Chris 
		revived a bit of ambient floaty (!) music from his Von Daniken days, 
		replete with looped guitars, drifting keyboards and little wriggly 
		guitar synth noises. To represent the death of the knight, we added a 
		classical sounding flute tune backed with piano and nylon strung 
		classical guitar, which is then repeated on heavy guitar with full 
		mellotron, strings and bass pedals. Perhaps he drowned in the Firth of 
		Fifth? We then steered gently back into folk, before closing the song 
		with more baritone guitar metal and the inevitable gong!
 | 
	
		| 
An outlandish knight from the north lands came, And he’s courted a lady 
fair.He promised he’d take her unto the north lands, And swore he 
would marry her there.
 Go fetch me some of your father’s gold, And some 
of your mother’s fee,
 And the two finest horses you have stabled here,
Where there stands thirty and three.
 
 
So he’s mounted on the milk-white 
steed, And she on the dappled grey,And they rode til they came to the 
saltwaterside, Three hours before it was day.
 “Light off, light off your 
steed,” he said, “and deliver unto me.
 For six fair maids I have 
drowned here, and you the seventh shall be.”
 
“Take off, take off your silken 
clothes. Deliver them to me.For I do fear they are too fine to rot 
with you all in the sea.”
 “If I must take off my silken clothes, then turn 
your back on me.
 For it is not right that such a rogue a naked maid should 
see.”
 
 
“And cut away those brambles so sharp, Those brambles from off of 
the rim.For I do fear they may tangle my hair, And scratch my tender 
skin.”
 So he’s turned his face all away from the maid, And he’s bent 
low on the cliff-side.
 And she’s caught him all around the waist, And 
tumbled him into the salt tide.
 
 
'He's swum high & he's swum low, until he reached the side, 
 
take my hand you pretty fair maid and I will make you my bride.
 
Lie there lie there you false hearted man, lie there instead of me. 
 for if six 
fair maids you have drownded here, the seventh has drownded thee
 
So she’s mounted on the milk-white steed,
And she’s led the dappled grey.And she rode til she’s come to her own 
father’s hall, An hour before it was day.
 | 
 
**********************************************************************************
Belong (P McMahon)
Paul McMahon (vocals, acoustic guitar) Chris McMahon 
(fretless bass, keyboards) Danny McMahon (drums, pedal organ)  Catrin Ashton (flute) 
with Jessie McMahon (vocals)
	
		| {Chris} Here's the first recording of 
		(and possibly first time I heard) Belong at our
		
		6th June 2021 livestream 
 {Paul} This began as a quiet 
		acoustic ballad, first written many years ago - I nearly performed a 
		version at my wedding to Catrin in 2011 - I liked the chorus and the 
		tune, but was never quite happy with the lyrics. We did an updated 
		version at one of the outdoor acoustic live streams in 2021, and sure 
		enough, not one person pressed the like button! Disheartened? Not us, we 
		decided to record it anyway. When we started playing through the songs 
		for the album, we decided it might be a nice change to do something 
		quieter, so we tried putting a swing/shuffle into the rhythm, played on 
		a full drum kit, which seemed to work well. In the studio, Dan also 
		added a pedal organ playing bass notes under the fiddle tune and Jess 
		added backing vocals, which really blended well with the lead vocal. 
		After the brutal insanity of the Outlandish Knight, this was the perfect 
		place for the song. It truly Belongs!
 
 I never believed that life was a game It seems that the ending is 
		always the same
 If you can't win, what are you competing for?  
		Why would you fight when there isn't a war?
 
 I need a place in 
		this world I belong that doesn't feel ugly and twisted and wrong
 With 
		no compromise and no pointless disguise  and so this is my promise 
		to you
 To be faithful and honest and true
 
 I can't deny there's 
		a darkness in me I buried it deep so that no-one will see
 I feel it 
		growing inside of me day by day draining the sand of my lifetime away
 
 So many roads that will lead you from home And there are some you 
		must travel alone
 But when you go, you take the bright colours too 
		Leaving me grey and the darkest of blue
 
 I've found a place in 
		this world I belong I realise it was here all along
 I opened my eyes 
		and took off my disguise and so this is my promise to you
 To be 
		faithful and honest and true.
 | 
 

**********************************************************************************
Drinking with the Devil (P McMahon)
Paul McMahon (vocals, guitars) Chris McMahon 
(bass, keyboards) Danny McMahon (drums) with Jessie McMahon (vocals) & Derek 
Nash (sax)
	
		| {Chris} Musically a bit of a departure for us, we're definitely 
		channeling some mk#3 Deep Purple & more than a little ZZ Top here, it'd 
		be a simple bluesy song if it didn't keep changing key every 8 bars! It 
		evenually settles down to a shuffle time jam with slide guitar, sax & 
		hammond organ. Lyrically it's one of Paul's 'Sympathy for the Devil' 
		songs (see also The Barrister & the Bargast) 
 {Paul} 
		Unusually, this began with the words. The line which came into my head 
		was “I was drinking with the Devil in a downtown bar, and his horny 
		little head was in his hands”. Cat told me it sounded too rude, so I 
		changed it a little, but then I had the problem of working out how to 
		finish the song and find some music to fit. I postulated a ludicrous 
		tale of Satan being made redundant as the worst of humanity had wilfully 
		parted with their souls, leaving nothing for him to collect! Sleazy, 
		jazzy, funky blues seemed to fit the bill, with restless, unrelated key 
		changes and slight style variations in each key. Our love of classic 
		Deep Purple shows through, with a riff reminiscent of the Stormbringer 
		era between the verses, embellished on the recording by Derek Nash’s 
		saxophone. There is a weird 12 note triplet guitar lick which occurs 
		twice, the first time dropping down into the “Nothing to damn” section, 
		which leads to the superb sassy “Colour & Shape” backing vocals from 
		Jess, the second time pulling the whole song from 4/4 into a triplet 
		shuffle with slide guitar, sax and steaming Jon Lordesque organ solo 
		from Chris. Why do I sing “Now dig this!” on the intro? It’s an homage 
		to the great Tony Ashton of Paice Ashton Lord from the song Silas & 
		Jerome. After Bernie Marsden passed away, we started watching the live 
		videos of the band and remembering just how extraordinary Tony Ashton 
		was as a frontman, and how great Jon Lord was. Bernie was pretty 
		fantastic as well!
 | 
 
	
		| I was drinking with the Devil in a downtown bar, 
		and his horny head was hidden in his hands. He said, “I'm good at my 
		job, I like what I do but I think my time is coming to an end.”
 I 
		said, “Satan, Satan, how can that be? From where I stand you're doing 
		very well.
 With the state of the world, they'll be bumper to bumper, 
		all along that highway to Hell.”
 The Devil smiled, looked me in the 
		eye, and said, “It really doesn't work the way you think.
 I can tell 
		you what went wrong, God knows it won’t take long, but first I'm gonna 
		need another drink.”
 I said, “What will it be? A shot of Tequila?” He 
		said, “Go ahead and make it a double.”
 So I filled the Devil's cup, 
		filled it up to the brim, I said, “Go ahead and tell me your troubles.”
 
 He said, “It's all about soul, my only goal is to whisper sweet 
		temptation to mankind.
 And if they heed what I say, when the reaper 
		comes their way, Their soul will come below and they're mine.
 But 
		today, far away, in a land to the East, I went to claim a soul that I'd 
		earned.
 A leader in his land, a cruel vicious man, who had killed and 
		maimed and tortured and burned.
 He had run out of friends, his time 
		was at an end, and a righteous mob was beating down the door.
 They 
		hanged him high, watched until he died. I was there to claim his soul 
		for evermore.
 So I waited and I waited and what did I find? Mankind's 
		latest greatest mutation.
 This man had no soul; no fear of salvation; 
		no hope of damnation; an abomination!
 
 Nothing to damn; nothing to 
		save; nothing comes from nothing, from the cradle to the grave.
 No 
		fallen angel; no heaven bound ape; nothing but a void devoid of colour 
		and shape.
 
 The Devil drained his glass, put his head back in his 
		hands.
 He said, “I'm done with you, and I will never understand.
 In Heaven and Hell we know what a soul is worth,
 but it seems that 
		they mean nothing to their owners on Earth.
 | 

**********************************************************************************/p>
Who Goes There? (C Ashton, C & 
P McMahon)
Paul McMahon (vocals, guitar, guitar synth) Chris McMahon 
(keyboards, bass pedals, lead guitar) Danny McMahon (drums, lead guitar) Catrin 
Ashton (vocals) with Charlie Bramald & Jessie McMahon (vocals)
	
		| {Chris} A simple Cat song, she didn't have high expectations of 
it, until we grabbed it & gave it the Haze treatment. We reuse one of my old Von 
Daniken synth tunes in the middle & Dan suggested that we all play guitar on it! {Paul} Sometimes a good way to get started 
		with a song is to base the lyrics on a book. We have done this in the 
		past with See Her Face, The Awakeners and Flight Behaviour. Cat read The 
		Woman in Black novel, thought it was a horrible story, and she was never 
		going to write a song based on that - but if she did, it would go 
		like…….. You can guess the rest! We recorded a very rough demo around 
		the dining table, making up bits as we went along, with Lily (aged about 
		5!) singing along. Cat never believed that we could make a Haze song of 
		it, but we played it at one of the Halloween livestreams and both me and 
		Chris thought it had potential. When planning the album, we talked about 
		including some of Chris’s Von Daniken instrumental/electronic music, and 
		this song really came alive when we tried a tune from his Electric Fish 
		suite. Because we had never played the song live, we felt free to 
		experiment with instruments and voices in the studio, and we had four 
		separate vocal parts written, and we found that Cat & Charlie’s voices 
		blended very well, as did Jess’s and mine. Dan also suggested that he 
		and Chris should play some lead guitar parts, so we took turns at 
		soloing, and played some triple lead guitar harmonies. One better than 
		Thin Lizzy! (Slightly Overweight Lizzy? Obese Lizzy?) One of the studio 
		days was a Saturday, and as we had no available babysitters, Hazel & 
		Lily were in the studio with us and they wanted to sing backing on The 
		Waters Rising. At the end of this song, we were going to use my voice 
		singing falsetto, but we got Lily to try it, and it worked really well, 
		classic horror story music, with a child’s voice singing in the 
		distance, swathed in reverb. Chilling! | 
	
		| Who goes there? Who goes there?
 Who goes there? Who goes there?
 Are you a man or a beast? A prodigal son?
 A prophet or priest or a 
		man on the run?
 I hear steps in the dark, deadened by night,
 A dog 
		with no bark, or a woman in white.
 Who goes there? The light is 
		fading fast.
 Who goes there? The tide is rising.
 Who goes there? 
		Shadows cross the path.
 Who goes there? The moon is hiding.
 Are 
		you out on your own, trapped by the tide?
 Lost and alone, a lover who 
		lied?
 Are you a friend or a fool, a thief in the night?
 A ghost or 
		a ghoul, or a woman in white?
 
 Who goes there? I have been waiting 
		here.
 Who goes there? Beside the water.
 Who goes there? I need to 
		take from you.
 Who goes there? A son or daughter.
 Are you a 
		will-o-the-wisp, a soul without form?
 A shape in the mist, in the eye 
		of the storm?
 Is it wheels on the road, feet on the track?
 The 
		call of a crow, or the woman in black?
 | 

**********************************************************************************
Parasite (P McMahon & C Ashton)
Paul McMahon (vocals, guitars) Chris McMahon (keyboards, 
bass) Danny McMahon (drums) Catrin Ashton (flute)
	
		| {Chris} A Cat song about the joys of motherhood, given the 
prog treatmet! It's not enough to get a writing credit, but I like to think it 
was my idea to go to the big prog chords for the final section! {Paul} Another song from Catrin, starting 
		with the lyrics this time. We collaborated a bit over the music, I was 
		told that the verse vocals should be a whining descending noise, and the 
		big final section should be like the chorus of Comfortably Numb! 
		Unsurprisingly, I didn’t make much progress, but one morning I was 
		noodling around on an old classical guitar and came up with a 13/8 
		arpeggio on a really weird chord change, which Cat said sounded right 
		for Parasite. It was a start! I’m not a big fan of smart phones, but 
		there is something to be said for the voice recording feature. Since 
		2019, I have been recording riffs, tunes and chord sequences in case 
		they come in useful, and it really helped with Parasite. I had already 
		recorded a heavy riff with a Steve Hillage twist and a guitar tune with 
		majestic but odd chords behind, with no thought of them ever fitting 
		together, but along with the 13/8 bit, we had the bones of the song. It 
		wasn’t easy to find a vocal melody over the 13/8, but as my brief was to 
		make a descending whining noise, it was possible! The chords behind the 
		majestic tune were easy enough to fit a tune over, even if it’s not like 
		Comfortably Numb - it sounds more Van Der Graaf Generator as Chris is 
		finding the most interesting inversions and bass notes under the chords. 
		The ending created itself, who doesn’t love a bit of Steve Hillage! | 
	
		| What is that grub, burrowing under your skin?
 Pushing the door; 
		why did you let it in?
 This blessed maggot - helpless you watch it 
		grow.
 What will it become? Do you really want to know?
 What is 
		this worm, squirming inside your hands?
 A wolf in sheep’s clothing; a 
		beast wrapped in swaddling bands.
 
 What is this creature, crawling 
		across the floor?
 Sucking you dry, but still it cries for more.
 What is this tick that's nestling in your bed?
 Feet of of ice and a 
		kick to strike you dead.
 
 A whining needle scraping at your skull.
 Your spoon's empty but its is never full.
 Will no one rid me of this 
		parasitic pest?
 The cuckoo's in the cradle; the leech is at your 
		breast.
 
 It is a joy; it is a jewel. It is a gemstone in the sand.
 It is light; it is renewal. It is sunshine in your hand.
 Sometimes 
		you wish that time would stop. Sometimes a minute lasts a day.
 It is 
		a climb to the mountaintop. It is a love these words can never say.
 | 

**********************************************************************************
Redemption (P McMahon)
Paul McMahon (vocals, guitars) Chris McMahon (keyboards, 
fretless bass, bass pedals) 
Danny McMahon (drums) Catrin Ashton (flute)
	
		| {Chris} We took advantage of the space & 
		nice acoustics in Yellow Arch to record as many of the backing tacks as 
		live as possible, all playing together (in the Cellar we always had to 
		painstakingly layer tracks up, one at a time) This techique really paid 
		off with this song, it was the last one we recorded & we just kept 
		playing through it until it felt right (I think in the end we used take 
		#3 out of 5) 
 {Paul} The music for this has been haunting me for 
		years. The hook is just eight chords, three of them repeated, but the 
		suspended notes, the inversions and the melody over them have a simple 
		power that makes it hard to stop playing them. As with The Waters 
		Rising, it needed a strong vocal tune and good lyrics to do justice to 
		the music, and to be fair, it took a while and the reject bin was filled 
		to overflowing! Chris came up with a middle 9 (a middle 8 is more 
		conventional, but we are Haze and convention is optional) and the basic 
		song was complete. The lyrics were still under constant revision, but 
		the song was coming to life in rehearsal and was shaping up to be a 
		closing track for the album. The chord sequence just begs for an 
		extended guitar solo fade and some rehearsal versions went on for ten 
		minutes or more! In the studio we intended to do a live fade at the 
		ending - playing quieter and quieter until the music disappears, but we 
		also found a lovely Ionosphere reverb effect in the guitar pedalboard, 
		and we added that in at the end while the drums and guitars slowly 
		vanish.
 | 
 
	
		| Here at the water's edge, the river runs so fast. The actors have 
		left the stage, bewildered to the last.
 There is no mercy here, no 
		slackening of pace.
 Breathless we rush toward the ending of the race.
 As soon as the ink has dried, history is dead.
 We cover the scars and 
		try to hide the tears we've shed.
 If I could wipe the page, or, 
		better still, forget.
 I could believe I've lived a life without 
		regrets.
 How do I forgive? Where will I find healing?
 The wounds 
		you left me with are still bleeding.
 All that we laboured for will 
		soon be washed away.
 Wisdom has just arrived, too late to save the 
		day.
 Every day the future sinks into the past.
 Every time we say 
		goodbye could be the last.
 | 

**********************************************************************************
We played a pre-release show at the Greystones in Sheffield 
on Saturday 25th May (also our 46th anniversary!) and played the entire album in 
order for the first time for the first set, then played a set of old favourites 
for the 2nd set. You can watch the full show here -
Set 1,
Set 2