Ladies and gentleman, for your horrific listening pleasure I present to you now the tragic tale of young Vincent Vaude.
Lyrics, vocals, and arrangement by Ian Michalski.
Lyrics
There once was a boy named Vincent Vaude
Who by most accounts was very odd
While other boys would Idolize their fathers at his age
Vincent dreamed to one day join Houdini on the stage
Alone within his room he’d stand
Practicing his sleight of hand
It’s said that he was skilled at pulling rabbits from a hat
But always failed miserably to levitate the cat
These parlor tricks with pets began to bore him through and through
And so he thought he’d try his hand at feats of dering-do
Escaping from locked closets proved more simple than he’d planned
And so he thought he’d try for something grand
Inside his head he milled around
Some way to baffle and astound
Perhaps it could be done with things like floating spirit bells?
Or possibly with lock and key and water torture cells?
So he kept his young eyes peeled
And soon the answer was revealed
While scouring his attic for some items he could use
He found an old and dusty trunk and knew he’d found his muse
Examining it well he thought how easy it would be
To lock himself inside and then triumphantly break free
And wasting not a secondary thought of what he did
He quickly leaped inside the trunk then closed and locked its lid
There in the dark Vincent started to shake
In fear that he’d made quite a deadly mistake
His confidence was unrelenting at least up until
He realized that he possessed the will but not the skill
He tried to scream and shout but soon his air was running out
He realized the end was near quite surely
What an awful story
When his parents found him neither one knew what to do
His face was froze in terror very dead and ghastly blue
And now he haunts that attic as a ghostly little boy
With frightening his folks his only joy