Lyrics by Watchmen

We have compiled all the lyrics of Watchmen's songs we could find so that those who, like you, are looking for songs by Watchmen, find them all in one place.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Watchmen.

  1. 35 Dead St.
  2. Absolutely Anytime
  3. Admiral of the Sea
  4. Aint No Sunshine
  5. All Uncovered
  6. Any Day Now
  7. Anything But That
  8. Beach Music
  9. Bicycle
  10. Boneyard Tree
  11. Born Afire
  12. Brighter Hell
  13. Calm
  14. Come Around
  15. Cracked
  16. Crazy Days
  17. Dance Some More
  18. Do It
  19. Falling
  20. He's Gone
  21. Holiday (Slow It Down)
  22. I Like It
  23. I'm Still Gone
  24. I'm Waiting
  25. In My Mind
  26. Incarnate
  27. Kill The Day
  28. Laugher
  29. Living the heartache
  30. Lusitana
  31. Make You Go Down
  32. Man in the hole
  33. Middle East
  34. Mister
  35. Must To Be Free
  36. My Favorite One
  37. No Longer Mine
  38. Not enough
  39. On My Way
  40. On the road
  41. Phone Call
  42. Rooster
  43. Run And Hide
  44. Safe
  45. Say Something
  46. Shut Up
  47. Silent Radar
  48. Sleep
  49. Slomotion
  50. Soft Parade
  51. Soul Stealer
  52. Stereo.
  53. Take me Higher
  54. The Other Side
  55. The South
  56. Time is over
  57. Together
  58. Top Of The World
  59. Try It Sometime
  60. Tumbleweed
  61. Vovo Diva
  62. Waste Away
  63. What You Did
  64. Wiser
  65. Zoom

Watchmen is a comic book limited series by the British creative team of writer Alan Moore, artist Dave Gibbons and colorist John Higgins. It was published monthly by DC Comics in 1986 and 1987 before being collected in a single-volume edition in 1987. Watchmen originated from a story proposal Moore submitted to DC featuring superhero characters that the company had acquired from Charlton Comics. As Moore's proposed story would have left many of the characters unusable for future stories, managing editor Dick Giordano convinced Moore to create original characters instead. Moore used the story as a means of reflecting contemporary anxieties, of deconstructing and satirizing the superhero concept and of making political commentary. Watchmen depicts an alternate history in which superheroes emerged in the 1940s and 1960s and their presence changed history so that the United States won the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal was never exposed. In 1985 the country is edging toward World War III with the Soviet Union, freelance costumed vigilantes have been outlawed and most former superheroes are in retirement or working for the government. The story focuses on the protagonists' personal development and moral struggles as an investigation into the murder of a government-sponsored superhero pulls them out of retirement. Gibbons uses a nine-panel grid layout throughout the series and adds recurring symbols such as a blood-stained smiley face. All but the last issue feature supplemental fictional documents that add to the series' backstory and the narrative is intertwined with that of another story, an in-story pirate comic titled Tales of the Black Freighter, which one of the characters reads. Structured at times as a nonlinear narrative, the story skips through space, time and plot. In the same manner, entire scenes and dialogues have parallels with others through synchronicity, coincidence, and repeated imagery. A commercial success, Watchmen has received critical acclaim both in the comics and mainstream press. Watchmen was recognized in Time's List of the 100 Best Novels as one of the best English language novels published since 1923. In a retrospective review, the BBC's Nicholas Barber described it as "the moment comic books grew up". Moore opposed this idea, stating, "I tend to think that, no, comics hadn't grown up. There were a few titles that were more adult than people were used to. But the majority of comics titles were pretty much the same as they'd ever been. It wasn't comics growing up. I think it was more comics meeting the emotional age of the audience coming the other way." After a number of attempts to adapt the series into a feature film, director Zack Snyder's Watchmen was released in 2009. A video game series, Watchmen: The End Is Nigh, was released to coincide with the film's release. DC Comics published Before Watchmen, a series of nine prequel miniseries, in 2012, and Doomsday Clock, a 12-issue limited series and sequel to the original Watchmen series, from 2017 to 2019 – both without Moore's or Gibbons' involvement. The second series integrated the Watchmen characters within the DC Universe. A standalone sequel, Rorschach by Tom King, began publication in October 2020. A television continuation to the original comic, set 34 years after the comic's timeline, was broadcast on HBO from October to December 2019 with Gibbons' involvement. Moore has expressed his displeasure with adaptations and sequels of Watchmen and asked it not be used for future works.

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