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A Little Midnight

by Lorne Behrman

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nekro6669 This album fucking owns, for fans of Jim Carroll, Lou Reed, Stiv Bator, etc. Favorite track: Harlem River Serenade.
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1.
Verse: When you’re lying in the street A heap of defeat Your arm is bloody The birds are chirping Your Head is splitting chorus refrain: I see love stumble by 3X Falling Tears of a broken sky Verse 2: Dead leaves in the morning dew 2x Still life Smells like rain and blood 2X muted chorus refrain: I feel love stumbling by 3x Falling Tears of a broken sky 4X end ring Fodder When you’re lying in the street A heap of defeat Your arm is bloody The birds are chirping Your Head is splitting muted chorus refrain – more urgent I feel love stumbling by 3X Falling Tears of a broken sky
2.
Verse 1: Took a ride on the Harlem line/Just trying to forget you And the bridges that passed/The river still as glass/tearing down a desperate path Chorus: Ain’t gonna break/Ain’t gonna beg/Just gonna sing this Harlem River Serenade 2x Verse 2: Birthdays pass like these quiet, hulking ships/It gets easier as the years ago by I hate you, and then I don’t/ hate you, and then I don’t/ hate you, and then I don’t Chorus: Ain’t gonna break/Ain’t gonna beg/Just gonna sing this Harlem River Serenade 2x Verse 3: Looking out/ to factories as planters/green reaching through bricks No hope there—/we’re shattered/ like broken bottles on train tracks Chorus: Ain’t gonna break/Ain’t gonna beg/Just gonna sing this Harlem River Serenade 2x [2nd time switch beg and break] Solo Verse 4 Took a ride on the Harlem line/Just trying to forget you And the bridges that passed/The river still as glass/tearing down a desperate path Chorus: Ain’t gonna break/Ain’t gonna beg/Just gonna sing this Harlem River Serenade [2nd time switch beg and break] 2x 4 times (3 and then last one hit and ring with sing)
3.
Verse 1: Those eyes gonna set me on fire A preacher man’s desire Those eyes gonna set me on fire A preacher man’s desire Verse: Those eyes gonna set me on fire You sweet little liar Taking me for a ride Taking you for a ride Chorus: Down/I can burn you down/Let me burn you down Verse 1: Those eyes gonna set me on fire A preacher man’s desire Those eyes gonna set me on fire A preacher man’s desire Verse 1: Those eyes gonna set me on fire A preacher man’s desire Those eyes gonna set me on fire A preacher man’s desire
4.
I remember Brooklyn Inside jokes, dollar smokes Darting in and out of bars Friday to Tuesday Speed, meth, and cocaine We were invincible and insane Laughing out loud/Dying inside Sneak to the hospital no one’s around Chorus: Tears stream down my bedroom window You aren’t there for me to call Here comes that Monday morning rain Thirty hangs over you like a noose It’s tight fitting but you wear it loose You remind them / of someone they knew Don’t end up like someone they knew Can I find hope in loss? Paid the price no matter the cost Do you forgive and do understand? There’s no redemption when you’re not around Chorus: Tears stream down my bedroom window You aren’t there for me to call Here comes that Monday morning rain Solo single chorus Chorus: Tears stream down my bedroom window You aren’t there for me to call Here comes that Monday morning rain
5.
It’s been 8:56/For six hours A broken clock/A broken you I keep looking up Thinking that second hand is gonna spring out of being stuck Your eyes are closed/Your heart is broken/This clock is stuck Well I Can’t Hold You – pick high notes arpeggio of chord and I can’t console You [harmony] [GOSPEL CHORUS VOX] I can’t sleep in this chair /You seem at peace now Something we have to live with I can’t get warm but you love it cold Hospital chill suites you You’re growing up so fast Pain does that/Again and again Well I Can’t Hold You and I can’t console You I have words for you You don’t want to hear I have stories to share but You don’t care It’s time to live your truth Away from me Sit on my hands Listen to your heart break Well I Can’t Hold You And I can’t console You Outro: One day you’ll be in the same room as the love you have and the love you want I’ll say it again… One day you’ll be in the same room as the love you have and the love you want
6.
I don’t want to run away again My problems like feathers in the wind A little midnight/ it’s alright A little midnight/does you right Cracked sidewalk/crooked roots Shoot up till you fade away A little midnight/ it’s alright A little midnight/does you right The moonlight looks on good you Not darkness just silver blue A little midnight/ it’s alright A little midnight/does you right Bridge solo to chorus A little midnight/little darlin and it’s alright A little midnight/does you right
7.
Verse 1 I know baby/it took so long Chasing ghosts and Siren songs Lost cities of my heart/Don’t Matter anymore Free like never before Pre-chorus I’m not too tired/for the road ahead Just weary/from the life I’ve lead I say… Chorus: You won’t live in this past, baby You won’t live in this past listen up, shorty Verse 2 Stumble overs words, but I fall for you Days won’t get away from me, now Lost cities of my heart/Don’t Matter anymore Free like never before [whisper] Pre-chorus I’m not too tired/for the road ahead Just weary/from the life I’ve lead I say… Chorus: D Baby A to B Chords F# G You won’t live in this past, Baby You won’t live in this past, darling You won’t live in this past, doctor You won’t live in this past Solo = prechorus + chorus 4 times through progression Chorus/End –
8.
Come on down for a wild streak You know it’s easy to do…. I can show the edge of heaven Would it get through to you Chorus: Heading out on a no way street/I hope the sun doesn’t catch us I don’t know who I’m trying to beat/just hope the sun doesn’t catch us Verse Sunset is waning/the water looks like lava It’s a lonely ride home The broken pieces Running away will never fix Chorus: Heading out on a no way street/I hope the sun doesn’t catch us I don’t know who I’m trying to beat/just hope the sun doesn’t catch us Bridge: Love like fire in my hands And I’m going to hold on Ashes pepper the ground And the wind blows me away Chorus : 2X
9.
Black Cars 02:04
Neon lights Wringing Hands Desperate skies Flush with chance Fast food funerals Fleeting forever Spirits dance And I stumble by I see those black cars coming down I see those black cars coming down Goodbye angels My falling star Red lights fade [Gun Club-y lyrical slide guitar] Hope is far Beatdown nights don’t Steal the day Cheap lives On lay-away I see those black cars coming down I see those black cars coming down Neon lights Wringing Hands Desperate skies Flush with chance Fast food funerals Fleeting forever Spirits dance And I stumble by I see those black cars coming down I see those black cars coming down
10.
Verse: It’s goodbye baby Until further on down the road Motel madness Until further on down the road Cheap regret Until further on down the road Sweetest sadness Until further on down the road Chorus: Can’t get thru/still love you Dark Destiny Until further on down the road Lost the best of me Until further on down the road Curse that morning train Until further on down the road Truth rides on by Until further on down the road Chorus: Whiskey is heaven sent Until further on down the road All my money is spent Until further on down the road I want to rise with you Until further on down the road From a bottomless sea Until further on down the road Chorus: Can’t be true/Still love you

about

LORNE BEHRMAN
(Bio, 2022)

“Real blood and guts rock and roll that bleeds with soul and redemption.” – Jesse Malin, 2021

Upon turning in the key to his Brooklyn apartment—the NYC borough that was his home for 20 years—punk rock n’ roll singer-songwriter Lorne Behrman hopped on the Manhattan-bound Q subway train, and began to reflect on his life. The movement of the train was meditative, and his mind drifted to the life he was leaving behind. There, he started a family, and lived a lifetime away from the punk ethos of his 20s. Two decades later, he was divorced a single father, sober after a 10-year substance abuse binge, newly engaged, and pursuing a solo artist career. His visceral and vulnerable debut solo album, A Little Midnight, out September 16, 2022 on Spaghetty Town Records captures a life in transition. The 10-song collection is a series of New York City vignettes haunted by shadows but guided by light.

“This album is about struggling to be reborn,” the NYC rocker shares. “Wanting to run back to the arms of toxic people or the patterns of self-destruction. It’s about clawing your way to a new existence while acknowledging all the causalities, and all you’re letting go. You glimpse a new life, but you don’t feel it yet.”

Previously, Lorne issued his critically acclaimed 4-song debut EP, When I Hit The Floor (2021). That release garnered accolades and features in Glide Magazine, New Noise, Goldmine, antiMusic, Misplaced Straws, and taste-making punk mag Razorcake. In addition, Lorne was a guest on the esteemed Couch Riffs podcast hosted by Duff McKagan’s Loaded guitarist Mike Squires, and the mental health-themed hard rock podcast Suck It! Before his solo career, Lorne played in The Dimestore Haloes, L.E.S. Stitches, The Dead Tricks, and The Sweet Things.

A Little Midnight’s lyrics are literate and lacerating, recalling the street poetics of Lou Reed, Richard Hell, Television, Jesse Malin, and Joseph Arthur. The vocals have a beat punk-poet cadence with talk-sung melodies set against finely etched songcraft. The songs are essentialized like a Ramones song without excessive musical baggage, but also featuring stark and fluid guitar playing in the spirit of The Stooges’ James Williamson, Johnny Thunders, and Lou Reed and Richard Hell axeman Robert Quine.

“I moved to New York in 1997—I wanted to walk the streets Jim Carroll and Lou Reed sang about. The City seemed like a paradise of wounded romantics, black leather, and knishes. I immediately felt at home,” Lorne says with a good-natured laugh. He continues: “There is a weird mix of cynicism and hopefulness here—like you can burn all your bridges in one enclave, and then reinvent yourself in another part of town. That feeling of a second chance runs through my songs, like you may be banned from this bar, but they don’t care about that down the block.”

A Little Midnight bangs open with the anthemic “Love Stumbles By.” Rocking but reflective, the song’s hopeful but harrowing storyteller narrative details a painfully unforgettable morning Lorne woke up hungover and bloody, passed out on the sidewalk. The song’s refrain, “I see love stumble by,” sung almost with a Richard Hell-ish, desperate pleading vocal, implies an on-the-brink-of-salvation moment.

The first trio of singles—“A Little Midnight,” “I Hope The Sun Doesn’t Catch Us,” and “Harlem River Serenade”—showcase dirty rock n’ roll scrapped off of the streets of the Bowery. Tough, tuneful, and tender, this trio of songs represent acceptance and, ultimately, forward motion.” A Little Midnight” and “Harlem River Serenade” are the type of anthemic punk rock n’ roll that could have been heard blaring out of CBGBs, Max’s Kansas City, Great Gildersleeves, The Continental, and even 1990s Coney Island High. “I Hope The Sun Doesn’t Catch Us” explores the art-punk transcendence of Marquee Moon-era Television with a hypnotic melodic arpeggio riff; an imaginative arrangement interspersed with quivers of sublime lead guitar melodies; and celestial guitar solos.

The tight 10-song collection clocks in at just 21 minutes—aiming for Ramones-style essentialism—though it stakes out its own identity through a thoughtful album sequence. Besides blasts of punky rock n’ roll, there are reflective ballads such as the George Harrison-meets-Alex Chilton-like “Black Cars,” and a Dylan-esque tale of motels and ill-fated romance on “Further On Down The Road.” Then there is the second-chance-at-love Stones-y R&B ballad, “You Won’t Live In This Past.”

Lorne played all the guitars, wrote all the songs, and sang all the leads on A Little Midnight. Joining him in the studio were drummer Hector Lopez (Alejandro Escovedo/The Sweet Things), and powerhouse vocalists Dana Athens (Jane Lee Hooker) and Paige Campbell (How Tragic). The album’s raw but polished production aesthetic is courtesy of producer Matt Chiaravalle (Warren Zevon, Joe Bonamassa, Spacehog). A Little Midnight was mastered by Grammy-nominated engineer Joe Lambert. Wyldlife bassist Spencer Alexander designed the album artwork, and it is a subtly playful homage to the cover of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ Damn the Torpedoes.

Previously, Lorne played guitar in The Dimestore Haloes who "should have been huge,” once gushed taste-making Beantown alt-weekly The Boston Phoenix, and L.E.S. Stitches, vets of The Warped Tour who made a performance cameo in Spike Lee’s Summer Of Sam. His band The Dead Tricks worked with Goldfinger’s John Feldmann, and he was most recently in The New York Dolls-y roots-punk band The Sweet Things who toured nationally and in the UK, and in 2019 released the critically acclaimed debut, In Borrowed Shoes, On Borrowed Time (Spaghetty Town Records). Up next, Lorne will be playing live around NYC and beyond.

###

credits

released September 16, 2022

All songs by Lorne Behrman (ASCAP)

Produced and Mixed by Matt Chiaravalle at Flux Studios and Mercy Sound Studios, NYC

Additional engineering at Flux Studios by Pablo Morales and John Muller

Mastered by Joe Lambert

Lorne Behrman: Vocals, Guitars
Matt Chiaravalle: Bass, Keys
Hector Lopez: Drums

Dana Athens backup vocals on “Well, I Can’t Hold You,” “Black Cars,” and “You Won’t Live In This Past”

Paige Campbell backup vocals on “Further on Down,” “A Little Midnight,” “Monday Morning Rain”

Artwork: Spencer Alexander
Pictures: Katherine Ward

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Lorne Behrman New York, New York

Punk rock n’ roll singer-songwriter Lorne Behrman’s visceral and vulnerable sophomore album, Blue Love, out February 9th, on Spaghetty Town Records is a series of New York City vignettes haunted by shadows but guided by light. The songs feature stark and fluid guitar playing in the spirit of Television, The Stooges’ James Williamson, Johnny Thunders, and Robert Quine with Lou Reed. ... more

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