McFly - Room On The 3rd Floor Lyrics and Video

Room On The 3rd Floor by McFly, Music Video and Lyrics
Pretty cool video and good song, enjoy !

McFly - Room On The 3rd Floor Lyrics

Room on the third floor
Not what we asked for
I’m not tired enough to sleep
One bed is broken,
Next room is smoking,
Air conditioning’s stuck on heat.
Outside it’s raining,
There’s a guest upstairs complaining bout the room that’s got the TV to loud,
‘Cos its times like these remind me
That I gotta keep my feet on the ground

Wake up early
Round 7:30
Housekeeper knocking on my door
Do not disturb sign
The back of her mind
I must’ve left it on the floor
(Yeah)

My eyes are hurting
The cheap nylon curtains
Let the sunlight creep in through from the clouds

Cos at times like these remind me
That I gotta keep my feet on the ground

Na na na na
Na na na naaaa
Na na na na
Na na na naaa

‘Cos its times like these remind me
‘Cos its times like these remind me
‘Cos its times like these remind me
That I gotta keep my feet on the ground

Na na na na
Na na na naaa
Na na na na
Na na na naaa

‘Cos its times like these remind me
(Times like these remind me)
‘Cos its times like these remind me
(Times like these remind me)
Cos its times like these remind me
That I gotta keep my feet on the ground

McFly’s Room On the 3rd Floor represents the triumphant welding of a major label’s big-budget pop spend and bona-fide talent–a calculated attempt to win over kids who have grown cynical about the manufactured pop industry and crave something more real. Like those other “real” popstars Busted, they play their own instruments and write their own songs, but where McFly differ significantly is in their influences: they actually have some. The sound of lead single “Five Colours in Her Hair” and “That Girl” virtually (and refreshingly) pre-date the Beatles, harking back to Bill Haley and Chuck Berry, even if “Five Colours…” sounds like it’s trying too hard in places–a forgivable and charming trait. It’s a major gamble (how many 15 year olds are into the Beach Boys?) but it works. Both “Obviously” and the title track are simple, breezy acoustic strumathons (”Wake up early / Round seven thirty / Housekeeping knocking on my door”) with the filtered influence of Noel Gallagher hanging around in the background. The only weakness is in the vocals, which too often sound whiney and diluted. With such blatant influences, there’s an obvious lack of originality, but here the originality lies in actually having influences. Pop has come full circle. –Ben Johncock . source amazon.com


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