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Total ratings: 2157
Length: 2:45
Plays (last 30 days): 3
To greet you with a smile
My camel looks so tired
It's hardly worth my while
To tell you of my travels
Across the golden East
I see your preparations
Invite me first to feast
Take me I'm yours
Because dreams are made of this
Forever there'll be a heaven in your kiss
Amusing belly dancers
Distract me from my wine
Across Tibetan mountains
Are memories of mine
I've stood some ghostly moments
With natives in the hills
Recorded here on paper
My chills and thrills and spills
Take me I'm yours
Because dreams are made of this
Forever there'll be a heaven in your kiss
It's really been some welcome
You never seem to change
A grape to tempt your leisure
Romantic gestures strange
My eagle flies tomorrow
It's a game I treasure dear
To seek the helpless future
My love at last I'm here
Take me I'm yours
Because dreams are made of this
Forever there'll be a heaven in your kiss
If you're a real Squeeze fan, spring for "Spot the Difference" wherein they take their greatest hits and rerecord them almost note for note.
The difference? They own these performances and so the purchase benefits the band instead of A&M records.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Cracker did the same thing with their Greatest Hits-Redux: re-recorded the songs. And then dropped it on the same day Virgin Records put out their unsanctioned greatest hits album. Gotta love it when a band sticks it to a label that's sticking it to the artist.
Is this the inspiration for Sweet Dreams?
So you think sweet dreams were made of this? Who am I to disagree

More Squeeze please. What about 'Up the Junction'?
Agree, Up the Junction is their best song IMO
Vocals are tricky. Most of the time I'm looking for a strong lead and, if we're lucky, a one- or two-part harmony. With the better bluegrass and vocally oriented pop bands (Mamas and Papas, Spanky and Our Gang, Beachboys, Beatles, etc.) three- and four-part harmonies abound. Tilbrook and Difford are different because they sing the same melody line, but with entirely separate tones (Tilbrook's the tenor; Difford the baritone), creating a harmony which is not a harmony at all, but still works.
It's more like singing in unison; they sang several of their tunes that way.
Love this acoustic version
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W04Y5kfxNd8
It looks like they were having fun here too. How time have changed...if he wore that Fred Perry shirt today, it would be assumed that he was a tiki torch-bearing neo-Nazi.
I'm with you
Always noted the similarity with Crowded House.

Squeeze - Jools + Paul Carrack.
Look after the king of R n R please
It's a game I treasure dear
To seek the helpless future
The difference? They own these performances and so the purchase benefits the band instead of A&M records.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
This song is outstanding!
Agreed, love the catchy 80's synth/electronica!
This song is outstanding!
No, it's really not. But I guess you had to be there ...
I'm with you
Another victim of corporate radio throughout the 70s and 80s. Enjoy your new discovery.

Squeeze - Jools + Paul Carrack.
Ah, the late, great, Trouser Press. I'm FB friends with Ira Robbins but he rarely talks about those days. But it's great to have someone in my friends list who's more bitter about the state of things than I am...

Squeeze - Jools + Paul Carrack.
Still love it now...

Squeeze - Jools + Paul Carrack.

Upvoted.
You're right; it's not a harmony, it is more like unison - in different octaves.
How do you write a song like this? each component is so very wrong, but put it all together and its fantastic. 9


I take it back. Not all lizards rule.
I agree, they're a great live act. I saw them decades ago with Jools Holland still in the band and as Difford & Tilbrook in support of that non-Squeeze album, and I saw a little of Chris Difford solo at a festival umpteen years ago too. Always cool.
I'll be seeing them in Milw. on Sunday night for the first time (live) in 31 years. I've seen both the with Jules and post Jules Holland eras of the early eighties, and each was delightful.
I also somehow remember hitting the bathroom during "I Think I'm Go Go" (not one of their better ditties) at First Avenue in Mpls. with Paul Carrack in the fold. Have they aged at all from this?

I just saw them live and was expecting a decent and enjoyably nostalgic show. It was AMAZING! My friend has since purchased about 4 Squeeze albums.
They put on a fantastic show (at a middling venue in Baltimore). They rocked hard and Tilbrook's voice sounded as strong as ever.
I just bumped up my rating from 9 to 10.
I agree, they're a great live act. I saw them decades ago with Jools Holland still in the band and as Difford & Tilbrook in support of that non-Squeeze album, and I saw a little of Chris Difford solo at a festival umpteen years ago too. Always cool.
I just saw them live and was expecting a decent and enjoyably nostalgic show. It was AMAZING! My friend has since purchased about 4 Squeeze albums.
They put on a fantastic show (at a middling venue in Baltimore). They rocked hard and Tilbrook's voice sounded as strong as ever.
I just bumped up my rating from 9 to 10.


have seen them so many times live. each time it was sooo much fun.
i'll never get tired of difford and tilbrook.
WonderLizard wrote:
They sang like that on a few tunes. "'Signature sound' marketing strategy"? I think their success had much more to do with the great melodies and lyrics they wrote. I think people should be able to sing as they want.
I just saw Squeeze open for Cheap Trick (summer of 2010). Good
Terrific stuff...




Annie Get Your Gun. Whoa.... — that in itself is a 20. Come on Bill,play us some more Squeeze, please.










LOL, it seems you have mixed feelings about this.
Yeah—Up The Juction is marvelous pop ditty I seem to enjoy every time I hear it (unfortunately not here).

Well said. It reminds me of the village people.



Saw them at the Senator Theater in Baltimore years ago. Fantastic show in a classic old movie house.

That must have been great; The Senator is a pretty venue. I saw them in D.C. back in the late 80's at the Smith Center on GWU's campus (I think?). Not the same atmosphere, but what a great show!
Saw them at the Senator Theater in Baltimore years ago. Fantastic show in a classic old movie house.

Then you'd better get your gun, Annie.
I'm pulling mussels from the shell.
"SQUEEky" + "fuZzy"...I do believe you're getting it.

More Squeeze!!!
here, here!























And don't forget: Wild sewerage tickles Brazil!