Puff Beaddy 3a9071f084 feat(sunday-lawn-mowers-symphony): Sunday Lawn Mowers Symphony — MoBead [3 production styles] (#6)
Co-authored-by: Puff Beaddy <puff@saltylab.local>
Co-committed-by: Puff Beaddy <puff@saltylab.local>
2026-06-08 16:19:28 -04:00

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# Sunday Lawn Mowers Symphony — Lyrics
**Artist:** MoBead
**Track:** Sunday Lawn Mowers Symphony
**Length target:** 3:304:00
---
```
TITLE OPTIONS: Sunday Lawn Mowers Symphony
ARTIST: MoBead
[INTRO — instrumental, ~12 bars]
[VERSE 1]
First Sunday in June, the dew still beaded on the grass,
sun coming up slow over the cul-de-sac.
I'm on the front step with a chipped blue mug,
coffee black, no sugar, watching the morning yawn.
Three doors down, a low rumble — pull-cord, pull-cord, catch.
The green one coughs once, settles into a hum.
Then the orange one across the street, four-stroke purr.
The dog at number twelve barks at every start.
A kid drags his bike out of the open garage door,
bell on the handlebars, ringing for no one in particular.
Sprinklers tick on the corner lot, a small applause.
The neighborhood is tuning up. The conductor is the sun.
[CHORUS]
Sunday lawn mowers symphony,
six engines breathing in different keys.
Suburb full of slow musicians,
nobody knows they're in the orchestra.
Sunday lawn mowers symphony,
my whole street playing the same long song.
Coffee gone cold, I don't mind,
I'm listening till the last note's gone.
[VERSE 2]
By eleven it's the full ensemble, every driveway in.
The riding mower two blocks over — that's the bassoon,
deep brass bellow rolling around the bend.
Little electric by the hedge, that's the oboe,
high thin whine threading through the low.
String section: the trimmers along the chain-link fence,
buzzing sixteenth notes nobody wrote down.
Percussion comes free — somebody catches a stone,
clatter-clatter-ping, the blade complains and forgives.
Ice cream truck two streets away playing its tinny loop.
Hockey nets pushed to the curb like cellos at rest.
The whole of Oakville humming its Sunday hymn.
[CHORUS]
Sunday lawn mowers symphony,
six engines breathing in different keys.
The loud red one across the street
keeps the tempo for the rest of us.
Sunday lawn mowers symphony,
no program, no encore, no ticket sold.
Just the block and the heat and the cut grass smell —
the only concert that mows itself.
[BRIDGE]
September Sunday, the air has turned.
Frost ghosting the windshields by six a.m.
Only three mowers running now, not seven.
The oboe quit last week. The bassoon yesterday.
A sweater pulled fresh from the cedar chest.
Kettle on the stove a little more often.
The orchestra is losing players, one by one —
they're not gone, they're just packing the instruments away.
[VERSE 3]
Last Sunday of October. I step out, mug in hand.
Half a block off, one mower running. Just one.
The green one, the same one that started us in June,
pushing a final slow lap around a stiffening lawn.
No bassoon under it. No strings on the fence line.
No oboe, no trimmer, no clatter, no bike bell.
Just that one push mower, a solo nobody asked for,
a soloist closing the season with grace.
SAUL-TEE sits patient in the driveway under a tarp,
workshop door shut — the saw respects the day.
[FINAL CHORUS]
Sunday lawn mowers symphony,
one engine breathing in the only key.
He finishes the row, he kills the motor.
The whole neighborhood goes quiet at once.
Sunday lawn mowers symphony —
sleep well. We'll tune up again in June.
[OUTRO — fade, ~8 bars]
One mower fading down the block...
garage door rolling slow to the ground...
kettle whistling somewhere inside a warm house...
and the long white quiet, coming on.
```