Infinitely Losing My Edge
Yeah, I'm losing my edge.
I'm losing my edge.
The kids are coming up from behind.
I'm losing my edge.
I'm losing my edge to the kids from Honduras and from Lyon.
But I was there.
I was there in 1965.
I was there at the first Beefheart show in Lancaster.
I'm losing my edge.
I'm losing my edge to the kids whose footsteps I hear when they get on the decks.
I'm losing my edge to the internet seekers who can tell me every member of every good group from 1967 to 1972.
I'm losing my edge.
To all the kids in Paris and Accra.
I'm losing my edge to the art-school Lyon kids in little jackets and borrowed nostalgia for the unremembered nineties.
I'm losing my edge.
I'm losing my edge.
I can hear the footsteps every night on the decks.
But I was there.
I was there in 1971 at the first Big Star practice in a loft in Memphis.
I was working on the synthesizer sounds with much patience.
I was there when Captain Beefheart started up his first band.
I told him, "Don't do it that way. You'll never make a dime."
I was there.
I was the first guy playing Qualms to the rock kids.
I played it at the 40 Watt.
Everybody thought I was crazy.
We all know.
I was there.
I was there.
I've never been wrong.
But I'm losing my edge to better-looking people with better ideas and more talent.
And they're actually really, really nice.
I'm losing my edge.
I heard you have a compilation of every good song ever done by anybody.
Every great song by Wasted Youth. All the underground hits.
All Robert Hood tracks. I heard you have a vinyl of every Soul II Soul record on German import.
I heard that you have a white label of every seminal jazz hit - 1985, '86, '87.
I heard that you have a CD compilation of every good '60s cut and another box set from the '70s.
I hear you're buying a rhodes and a linndrum and are throwing your macbook out the window because you want to make something real. You want to make a Schoolly D record.
I hear that you and your band have sold your arpeggiator and bought a marimba.
I hear that you and your band have sold your marimba and bought an arpeggiator.
I hear everybody that you know is more relevant than everybody that I know.
But have you seen my records?
Coldchain, Rosco P., Featuring Pusha T from Clipse & Boo-Bonic,
Glambeats Corp.,
Unrelated Segments,
Harmonia,
Laurel Aitken,
Richard Hell and the Voidoids,
B.T. Express,
UT,
The Count Five,
Marine Girls,
Gabor Szabo,
Arcadia,
London Community Gospel Choir,
Kas Product,
Bronski Beat,
Tropical Tobacco,
Cheater Slicks,
Camouflage,
Hardrive,
Bang on a Can All-Stars,
Public Enemy,
Tomorrow,
The Cure,
Eric Dolphy,
Kango’s Stein Massive,
Zapp,
The Dead C,
Alison Limerick,
Colin Newman,
Warsaw,
Max Romeo,
The Music Machine,
New York Dolls,
The Five Americans,
Sister Nancy,
Bluetip,
AZ,
Sixth Finger,
Robert Wyatt,
Prince Buster,
Tom Boy,
K-Klass,
Howard Jones,
The Young Rascals,
Peter and Kerry,
Half Japanese,
Schoolly D,
Erasure,
The Fall,
The Peanut Butter Conspiracy,
Sad Lovers and Giants,
Spandau Ballet,
Bad Manners,
Jimmy McGriff,
Crispian St. Peters,
The Happenings,
Youth Brigade,
Slave, Slave, Slave, Slave.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.
You don't know what you really want.