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Welcome to Amie Street

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Genres: Rock

Release Date: Nov 29, 2007

Listens: 365

Recs: 0

Format: MP3, 320 kbps Contextual Help marker

Length: 36:21

Tracks: 10

Record Label: Johnny Citizen

© (C) 2007 Johnny Citizen

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Happy Sounding Sad Songs $1.50

1.
Listen to Don't Tell Me by Johnny Citizen
41plays4:11 $0.15
No Recommendations
2.
Listen to Painful Tired by Johnny Citizen
36plays2:43 $0.15
No Recommendations
3.
Listen to High Tonight by Johnny Citizen
39plays3:26 $0.15
No Recommendations
4.
Listen to Humanity's Playbill by Johnny Citizen
36plays4:27 $0.15
No Recommendations
5.
Listen to I Don't Know What To Do About That by Johnny Citizen
36plays3:30 $0.15
No Recommendations
6.
Listen to I Radio Heaven by Johnny Citizen
32plays3:59 $0.15
No Recommendations
7.
Listen to Sucker For Love by Johnny Citizen
39plays2:58 $0.15
No Recommendations
8.
Listen to Cliche by Johnny Citizen
37plays3:35 $0.15
No Recommendations
9.
Listen to Beatiful And Tragic by Johnny Citizen
32plays3:33 $0.15
No Recommendations
10.
Listen to American Dream Town by Johnny Citizen
37plays3:59 $0.15
No Recommendations
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About Happy Sounding Sad Songs

The man wondered the streets aimlessly, unaware of where he went or if it would get him in any trouble. He hadn't been drunk for months, and it was a bad thing. He was too happy, too content, and everyone knew it. He was becoming a failure.

Another block passed under his hurriedly-shod feet, and he remembered back to a few months ago, back to when he had hit bottom. Things were better then. More simple. The drunken conversations spoken into pools of vomit dutifully deposited in the parking lots of steaming pubs, they brought a dry, sickening consistency to the hot, much too bright mornings when he drug himself into the chaotic, unsympathetic fluorescents of his workplace.

Yet another block, yellow streetlights burning acid holes in the pitiful streets of his adopted new hometown. Another cigarette burning acid holes in the pitiful alveoli in his chest, raising bumps on his gums and removing all ability for taste from his tongue. He found himself under the bridge where the homeless set up camp. He stared over at the small communities huddled around trash fires, wondering what conversation might ensue if he was human enough to go initiate them, what wise stories would appear out of the retreating eyes of a stranger.

A drink was required, and yet none was to be found, and so yet another cigarette passed his lips, the sound of the Zippo in his hands a small comfort.

He felt himself getting older as the concrete squares drew underneath, slowly at first, then faster and faster until they swept behind like children running into their bedrooms, frightened by imaginary ghosts in dark hallway corners. The lines on his face deepened with each step, his skin dried and scaled with each drag from the cigarette. Finally he walked by the glass façade of some unidentified structure and dared to turn his head. Surprise, shock-horror, should have been returned for the reflection's aged stare, but instead there was only a dim, bored recognition of what was known all along.

A drink was in order. Yet no order was to be placed. No solace in the dirty, dark, smoky corners where ex-pat Englishmen yell obscenities to no one in particular. No familiar conversations with the barkeep who has your drink poured before you reach the rail.

Just a street and a smoke and the cracks that disappear underfoot and reappear strewn across the gills, staring blindly past the next broken light, shining its darkness down for no one to see, not lighting a street to anywhere, anywhere but here.

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