One bad night I'll hold the glass until the glass can hold me down
And one bad night I'll spill and spilling 'till my feet begin to drown
And one bad night I'll hear you calling me to help you not pass out

You and I divide but not devout
Every night my teeth are falling out

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Again control of the floor

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Again control of the floor

One dumb night I'll make a point to take an ?
One dumb night I'll take you out to the bar we both blacked out
One dumb night two bad decisions don't divide to cancel out

You and I divorce but not devout
Every night my teeth are falling out
Every night my teeth are falling out

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Again control of the floor

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Again control of the floor

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Again control of the floor

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try again control of the floor

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Again control of the floor

Try
Try
Try
Try
Try
Every night my teeth are falling out


Lyrics submitted by Vanusk, edited by boomslang20117, jeroenvg

Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out Lyrics as written by Michael Jay Lerner Darby Austin Cicci

Lyrics © Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.

Lyrics powered by LyricFind

Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out song meanings
Add Your Thoughts

16 Comments

sort form View by:
  • -1
    General Comment

    Anyone else think this sounds like "Jigsaw Falling into Place" by Radiohead?

    arrstaron May 27, 2011   Link

Add your thoughts

Log in now to tell us what you think this song means.

Don’t have an account? Create an account with SongMeanings to post comments, submit lyrics, and more. It’s super easy, we promise!

More Featured Meanings

Album art
Corpse I Fell In Love With
Gadjits, The
He reuses the verse melody from the previous album's "Dirty Little Religion", the topics of the verses are all over the place, and he packs too many words into one line (goes to show...) and too few in another (it's pretty hard to find), and rhymes "Henley Regatta" with "Persona non grata", but gets away with it all as only he could.
Album art
when rules change
Life in Your Way
High life
Album art
Fast Car
Tracy Chapman
"Fast car" is kind of a continuation of Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run." It has all the clawing your way to a better life, but in this case the protagonist never makes it with her love; in fact she is dragged back down by him. There is still an amazing amount of hope and will in the lyrics; and the lyrics themselve rank and easy five. If only music was stronger it would be one of those great radio songs that you hear once a week 20 years after it was released. The imagery is almost tear-jerking ("City lights lay out before us", "Speeds so fast felt like I was drunk"), and the idea of starting from nothing and just driving and working and denigrating yourself for a chance at being just above poverty, then losing in the end is just painful and inspiring at the same time.
Album art
The Night We Met
Lord Huron
This is a hauntingly beautiful song about introspection, specifically about looking back at a relationship that started bad and ended so poorly, that the narrator wants to go back to the very beginning and tell himself to not even travel down that road. I believe that the relationship started poorly because of the lines: "Take me back to the night we met:When the night was full of terrors: And your eyes were filled with tears: When you had not touched me yet" So, the first night was not a great start, but the narrator pursued the relationship and eventually both overcame the rough start to fall in love with each other: "I had all and then most of you" Like many relationships that turn sour, it was not a quick decline, but a gradual one where the narrator and their partner fall out of love and gradually grow apart "Some and now none of you" Losing someone who was once everything in your world, who you could confide in, tell your secrets to, share all the most intimate parts of your life, to being strangers with that person is probably one of the most painful experiences a person can go through. So Painful, the narrator wants to go back in time and tell himself to not even pursue the relationship. This was the perfect song for "13 Reasons Why"
Album art
Mountain Song
Jane's Addiction
Jane's Addiction vocalist Perry Farrell gives Adam Reader some heartfelt insight into Jane’s Addiction's hard rock manifesto "Mountain Song", which was the second single from their revolutionary album Nothing's Shocking. Mountain song was first recorded in 1986 and appeared on the soundtrack to the film Dudes starring Jon Cryer. The version on Nothing's Shocking was re-recorded in 1988. "'Mountain Song' was actually about... I hate to say it but... drugs. Climbing this mountain and getting as high as you can, and then coming down that mountain," reveals Farrell. "What it feels to descend from the mountain top... not easy at all. The ascension is tough but exhilarating. Getting down is... it's a real bummer. Drugs is not for everybody obviously. For me, I wanted to experience the heights, and the lows come along with it." "There's a part - 'Cash in now honey, cash in Miss Smith.' Miss Smith is my Mother; our last name was Smith. Cashing in when she cashed in her life. So... she decided that, to her... at that time, she was desperate. Life wasn't worth it for her, that was her opinion. Some people think, never take your life, and some people find that their life isn't worth living. She was in love with my Dad, and my Dad was not faithful to her, and it broke her heart. She was very desperate and she did something that I know she regrets."