Lyrics by Enola Gay

Do you love Enola Gay's songs? Here you'll find the lyrics to Enola Gay's songs so you can sing them at the top of your lungs, make your own versions, or simply understand them properly.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Enola Gay.

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  1. Awakening
  2. Back To Prison
  3. Browsing
  4. Desire
  5. Different I's
  6. Disappointed
  7. Eleanor Rigby
  8. Enola Gay
  9. Escape From Reality
  10. Escare From Reality
  11. Heaven And Hell
  12. Into The Void / Anxious Thoughts
  13. Intrusions
  14. Near The End
  15. One Way Trip
  16. Pain
  17. Psycho Lover
  18. Rapacious Attack
  19. Sick Society
  20. Thrill Of It All
  21. Where The Mountain Meets The Sky
  22. Who's My God?

The Enola Gay () is a Boeing B-29 Superfortress bomber, named after Enola Gay Tibbets, the mother of the pilot, Colonel Paul Tibbets. On 6 August 1945, during the final stages of World War II, it became the first aircraft to drop an atomic bomb in warfare. The bomb, code-named "Little Boy", was targeted at the city of Hiroshima, Japan, and caused the destruction of about three quarters of the city. Enola Gay participated in the second nuclear attack as the weather reconnaissance aircraft for the primary target of Kokura. Clouds and drifting smoke resulted in Nagasaki, a secondary target, being bombed instead. After the war, the Enola Gay returned to the United States, where it was operated from Roswell Army Air Field, New Mexico. In May 1946, it was flown to Kwajalein for the Operation Crossroads nuclear tests in the Pacific, but was not chosen to make the test drop at Bikini Atoll. Later that year, it was transferred to the Smithsonian Institution and spent many years parked at air bases exposed to the weather and souvenir hunters, before its 1961 disassembly and storage at a Smithsonian facility in Suitland, Maryland. In the 1980s, veterans groups engaged in a call for the Smithsonian to put the aircraft on display, leading to an acrimonious debate about exhibiting the aircraft without a proper historical context. The cockpit and nose section of the aircraft were exhibited at the National Air and Space Museum (NASM) on the National Mall, for the bombing's 50th anniversary in 1995, amid controversy. Since 2003, the entire restored B-29 has been on display at NASM's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. The last survivor of its crew, Theodore Van Kirk, died on 28 July 2014 at the age of 93.

You might not be a big fan of Enola Gay, maybe you're here for just one song by Enola Gay that you like, but take a look at the rest, they might surprise you.

The lyrics of Enola Gay's songs often follow certain patterns that you can discover if you pay close attention. Are you up for finding out what they are?

To discover the patterns in Enola Gay's songs, you just have to read their lyrics carefully, paying attention not just to what they say, but how they are constructed.

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