(Verse)
Lacie,Lacie,Lacie
You keeping me in check
Keeping all my thoughts in line
And I surely pain your neck

(Verse)
Lacie,Lacie,Lacie
Sitting on my desk
I'm sorry you must work all day
So that my brain can rest

(Chorus)
Something about this kind of love
Can't be unplugged
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep

(Verse)
Lacie,Lacie,Lacie
I burden you with dreams
I can't hold 'em all
So you split 'em at the seems

(Verse)
Lacie,Lacie,Lacie
Nothing I can do
Pay you back these favours
That I always ask of you

(Chorus)
Something about this kind of love
Can't be unplugged
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep

(Verse)
Lacie,Lacie,Lacie
I'm filling up with guilt
You keep my head leveled
And the world begins to tip

(Verse)
Lacie,Lacie,Lacie
I'd thank you if I could
There's nothing I can say to you
That can be understood

(Chorus)
Something about this kind of love
Can't be unplugged
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep
I gotta wake you up
To put you back to sleep

Cosmo Jarvis

Critic, journalist, sometime musician, onetime actor, and full-time Midwesterner Mark Deming provides a discographic-based biography for Cosmo Jarvis:

“Singer, songwriter, and filmmaker Cosmo Jarvis has earned a devoted following for his witty, often satiric tunes about the foibles of relationships and contemporary life, often rooted in personal experience, as well as his own self-produced videos and short subjects that have given his work a global online audience. Harrison Cosmo Krikoryan Jarvis was born on September 1, 1989 in Ridgewood, New Jersey. Jarvis' family relocated to the United Kingdom when he was young, and he grew up in Devon in Southwest England. Jarvis began writing songs when he was only 12 years old, around the same time he began making short films using a VHS video camera. While Jarvis' early videos were little more than documentation of pranks played with his friends, with time he began constructing more complex narratives, and similarly his songs began to evolve, ranging from folk-inspired acoustic guitar pieces and elaborate pop tunes to tongue-in-cheek hip-hop tracks.

At the age of 16, Jarvis quit school to focus on his creative work, and in 2009 he wrote and produced his debut album, an 18-song set called Humasyouhitch/Sonofabitch, which was released by the British indie label Wall of Sound. The album combined Jarvis' observational tunes with a cycle of songs reflecting the emotional turmoil of his parents' stormy relationship. Humasyouhitch/Sonofabitch received enthusiastic notices from the British music press, but it didn’t sell especially well, and Jarvis teamed with 25th Frame for his second release, Is the World Strange or Am I Strange? A track from the album, “Gay Pirates,” became an Internet sensation after Jarvis' low-budget video for the song was endorsed in a Twitter post by actor and author Stephen Fry, and subsequent airplay helped make the second album a commercial success. While continuing to tour, write songs, and record music, Jarvis has also been writing and directing a feature film, provisionally titled The Naughty Room. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi"