Pavement Lyrics — by Popularity
299 songs · Page 2 of 6
| 51 | Pueblo |
| 52 | Ann Don’t Cry |
| 53 | The Hexx |
| 54 | Best Friend’s Arm |
| 55 | Flux = Rad |
| 56 | Half a Canyon |
| 57 | Trigger Cut / Wounded‐Kite at :17 |
| 58 | Platform Blues |
| 59 | Billie |
| 60 | Speak, See, Remember |
| 61 | Western Homes |
| 62 | Texas Never Whispers |
| 63 | Shady Lane / J vs. S |
| 64 | Baptist Blacktick |
| 65 | Mellow Jazz Docent |
| 66 | The Killing Moon |
| 67 | My First Mine |
| 68 | Motion Suggests Itself |
| 69 | Camera |
| 70 | Strings of Nashville |
| 71 | Stare |
| 72 | All My Friends |
| 73 | Greenlander |
| 74 | And Then (The Hexx) |
| 75 | Winner of the |
| 76 | Jam Kids |
| 77 | Kris Kraft |
| 78 | Ell Ess Two |
| 79 | Nothing Ever Happens |
| 80 | Stop Breathing |
| 81 | You're Killing Me |
| 82 | Westie Can Drum |
| 83 | Harness Your Hopes |
| 84 | Soiled Little Filly |
| 85 | The Sutcliffe Catering Song (Peel Session) |
| 86 | False Skorpion |
| 87 | Cherry Area |
| 88 | Same Way of Saying |
| 89 | Price Yeah! |
| 90 | Hands Off the Bayou |
| 91 | No More Kings |
| 92 | Mercy: The Laundromat |
| 93 | Slowly Typed |
| 94 | The Sutcliffe Catering Song |
| 95 | 5 − 4 Vocal |
| 96 | Silent Kid |
| 97 | Heaven Is a Truck (Egg Shell) |
| 98 | Pueblo (Beach Boys) |
| 99 | Spizzle Trunk |
| 100 | From Now On |
Pavement Albums
EPs
Singles
About Pavement
Pavement is an American indie rock band from Stockton, California, formed in 1989, who became the defining voice of 1990s lo-fi indie rock with their deliberately sloppy, witty, and melodically brilliant sound. Led by Stephen Malkmus's cryptic lyrics and jangly guitar work, they crafted classics like "Cut Your Hair," "Range Life," and "Summer Babe (Winter Version)" that influenced countless indie bands with their anti-perfectionist aesthetic. Albums like "Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain" and "Brighten the Corners" showcased their ability to balance experimental noise with infectious pop hooks, while their sardonic take on alternative rock stardom ("Range Life" famously mocked Smashing Pumpkins and Stone Temple Pilots) established them as indie rock's most important contrarians. Though they disbanded in 1999, Pavement's slacker genius and rejection of mainstream polish helped define the entire indie rock movement that followed.