[Track Info] [The Lyrics] [Explanation]
01. Album version (05:22)
02. Edited 12" version (05:05)
03. Edited 7" version (03:30)
04. Manchester Square Demo (04:28)
05. Live (Reading, England, "Reading Rock Festival", August 29th '82) (04:25)
06. Live (London, England - "Hammersmith Odeon", April 18th '83) (05:20)
07. Live (Sheffield - "City Hall", March 6th '84) (05:12)
Notes: 2), compared to 1), lacks
the phone call ("Dont give me your problems!") at
the end of the song.
3) lacks the intro (first 25 seconds). After the line "Your
were walking with the death" it goes straight into the
instrumental part till the next couplet, but skippes a couplet
and starts with "Blank eyes.." and skipping the
"Fast feed, crystal fever..." part. It also lacks the
phone call.
4) is a demo recorded during the "Script" recording
sessions. There are several differences between this demo and the
released studio version 1). The main differences are:
- The whole introduction is missing, the songs starts with a
brief instrumental section and then continues with the first
verse "Light switch, yellow fever..".
- After the first strophe, instead of the whole refrain "He
knows, you know...", there are only two verses: "But
he's got problems, he's got problems".
- In the quiet section after the verse "...and you were
walking with the dead" a short bass guitar line introduces
the refrain "He knows, you know...".
- The verse "You should have stayed at home and talk with
father..." is replaced by "You should have listened to
your father talking...".
Live version 5) follows demo version 4) (it was recorded a few
days before), but it has the whole first refrain "He knows,
you know..." and the right verse "You should have
stayed at home and talk with father..." at the end (in the
"Marquee The Collection" LP the brief spoken
introduction is missing).
Live versions 6) and 7) follow the album version 1).
Lyrics by Derek William Dick (Fish)
Preformed Live for the First Time: 24-Apr-81
Published by Marillion Music, Charisma Music Publishing Co. Ltd.,
Chappell Music Ltd.
He knows, you know, he knows, you know
Problems, problems, problems, problems
Light switch, yellow fever, crawling up your
bathroom wall
Singing psychedelic praises to the depths of a China bowl
You've got venom in your stomach, you've got poison in your head
You should have listened to the priest at the confession
When he offered you the sacred bread
He knows, you know, he knows, you know, he
knows, you know
But he's got problems
Fast feed, crystal fever, swarming through a
fractured mind
Chilling needles freeze emotion, the blind shall lead the blind
You've got venom in you stomach, you've got poison in your head
When your conscience whispered, the vein lines stiffened
You were walking with the dead
He knows, you know, he
knows, you know, he knows, you know
He's got experience, He's got experience, he knows, you know
But he's got problems
Problems, problems, problems, problems, problems, problems.
He knows... Slash wrist,
scarlet fever, crawled under your bathroom door
Pumping arteries ooze the problem, through the gap that the razor
tore
You've got venom in your stomach, you've got poison in your head
You should have listened to your analyst questions
when yo lay on his leather bed
He knows, you know, he knows, you know, he
knows, you know
But he's got problems
Blank eyes, purple fever, streaming through the
frosted pane
You learned your lesson far to late from the links in a chemist
chain
You've got venom in your stomach, you've got poison in your head
You should have stayed at home and talked with father,
Listen to the lies he fed
He knows, you know, he knows, you know, he
knows, you know
But he's got problems
He knows, you know, he knows, you know, he knows, you know
He's got experience, He's got experience, he knows, you know
He knows, you know, you know, you know,
You know, you know, you know, you know
Problems, problems, problems, problems,
problems, problems.
Don't give me your problems.
In the edited version the purple coloured parts are missing.
Copyright © 1997 Fraser Marshall, Matthew
Anderson & Bert ter Steege.
This is a song about drugs. . .
Intro on La Gaza Ladra
Singing psychedelic praises to the
depths of a China bowl
To vomit -
Source: The Sick Book (Moran, Campbell da Vinci) (Yes, it does
exist; a book about chutney juggling! - Ed)
listened to the priest. . . the
sacred bread
Fish is clearly not a Roman Catholic, else he would know
that the host is not taken at the confession. That said, the
offer might be for a later date.
crystal fever
Meth-amphetamine or heroin are both crystalline before
melting and injecting.
'the blind shall lead the blind
This is an illusion to Matthew XV, 14.
vein lines stiffen
With injecting over a period of time, the veins become
hardened. Eventually, even with the use of a tourniquet it is
impossible to get the needle into the vein. I accidentally had
the great displeasure of seeing someone shooting up once. She
took about eight goes to get it into her arm. It was seriously
unpleasant, and not an experience Id recommend even seeing,
let alone trying!
Torsten Berger said: I figure the "chemists chain" is a pun with two meanings:
Mark Dempster feels that the second interpretation is incorrect: There seems to be some confusion around the words 'Chemist chain' - I believe this refers merely to pharmacists, generally called Chemists here in the UK; a chemist's chain is simply a retail company who deals in such things - Boots & Superdrug being probably the two biggest chains here.
Sources
Last Modified: 27 jul 2000