bookmark_borderAfterbirth

LYRICS
The most I’ve ever seen Spring
Look like fall
When birth is death
It can’t be good at all

The perplexing thing
We can’t crawl
Let alone baby steps

As we clone and postpone
Rippin’ our lungs out
With ozone

While we raged
God wept
Our conscious slept
We’re the ones… that should have been caged

About the Song *Afterbirth* (.MP4 Video)
How to Play Guitar to *Afterbirth* (.MP4 Video)

Pictures

ABOUT THIS SONG
Capo 6
Play chords as if:
C / Em
C add Db
C / Em / Am

Written on April 29, 2012 at Marsh Creek State Park, Chester County, Pennsylvania.

The song was motivated by the color of the landscape. Instead of the trees looking like they were coming to life in the springtime, they appeared to be dying as if it were fall.

More Information on the Dying Trees and Forest Death

More From the Album *Platinum Dreamin’*

by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderGummi Bears Change Position On Global Warming

LYRICS
(Special guest appearance by Toucan the Dog: guard dog growl)

The Gummi Bears are at a loss for words
But, they’d like to convey a message if they may?
They’re picking up swords

As we melt them, a lass,
They’re forming a mass (a giant mass)
Giant Gummi Bear goo
They’ll be rolling over you

Goo from every orifice
Goo from every pore
Gummi Bear all over you face
Gummi Bear, ’till you’re chokin’, “No more!”

 

Gummi Bears Change Position on Global Warming (Free .MP3 Download)

 

 

by Daniel Brouse

More of the Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderWoozy

From The Beatless Sense Monger Album *Twenty-twelve*

Woozy Remix 1.mp3

la, la, la, cray, cray, cray,
woo, woo, woo, woozy….

la, la, la, cray, cray, cray,
woo, woo, woo, woozy….

diz, diz, diz, dizzy….
woo, woo, woo, woozy….
loosing equilibrium….
gonna fall on our rectum….
more then wreck ’em….
we’re gonna kill ’em….

going….
cray, cray, cray, crazy…..
a wasted life….
being….
la, la, la, lazy….

now….
the state we’re in….
gotta begin….
all over again….

R, T, Z,
Yo,
Fellow,
R, T, Z,
Return,
To,
Zero!

yow!
our inner ear….
must not be clear….
have you discovered….
we’re falling over….

la, la, la, lazy….
cray, cray, cray, crazy…..
diz, diz, diz, dizzy….
woo, woo, woo, woozy….

la, la, la, cray, cray, cray,
woo, woo, woo, woozy….

la, la, la, cray, cray, cray,
woo, woo, woo, woozy….

by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderFlash Flood

Am add G slide to F#

The storm water system failed
Manhole covers sailed
Surge
Urge
The forces that be
Caused by we
Reckless endangerment meant
We forced the hand
That feeds us
What happens next?
Bite with spite
We did
We Id
Let our ego go
Out-of-control

Written after a weekend of intense thunderstorms caused flash flooding across the state of Pennsylvania.

by Daniel Brouse

bookmark_borderSnooze Alarm

G walkdown to C

If we want to stop this from happening
We better wake up

Better wake-up

It would appear the edge is near
At the precipice is us

[secret message here]

Stop the slumber
Start to wonder
Gotta wake-up

Does anybody know what time it is?
I’d really like to go to school today

Please do NOT hit the snooze switch!

Daniel

bookmark_borderThe Last Resort

by Daniel Brouse
written in Atlantic City, NJ and Ocean City, NJ
at one point there was this sign in Mack and Manko Pizza about “Don’t Change Ocean City” that made me smile in a sad way
Reference Notes

C Am D G

The Last Resort

C / Am
Have you heard the news report
We’re down to the last resort
(the last great resort, great resort)

Welcome to the great last resort
It’s not as great
As it use to be

You see
The seaside spot
Is not (is not)
Beside
The sea

D
…. going down, down, down
G
with no urge to submerge

Second verse:
Paradise island… now Paradise was land

Free Multimedia of The Last Resort

Daniel

bookmark_borderWinter 11 (Closer to Heaven)

by Daniel Brouse on Wednesday, January 26, 2011 at 7:09pm

Em / E sus4 / Em7 / Em 7 (11)

The warmer it gets
The colder the wind blows
No one seems to know
No, no one knows

But, when they take a peek
They start to freak
’cause the lightning
Is frightening

Why, no one seems to care
That the weather out there
Is human induced
As we reduce
Ourselves
To little more
Than a glass snow globe

Turning upside down
Shakin’ it around

From the outside
Looking in…

From outside the glass
Do we wanna be
The universal ass
Reduced to an obscene
Earthling scene

Though the snow looks pretty
Do we need the alien pity
For our lack of responsibility?

When they take a peek
They start to freak
’cause the lightning
Is frightening
[Repeat / Fade]

NOTES:
January 26, 2011

” Did anyone see lightning and hear thunder within the last hour or so? Gaia is really showing her stuff” — Edie Weinstein

“I was looking out the window and saw lightening and heard the familiar thunder report…..First time I ever experienced that in the winter…..Truelly rare….end of the world ?” — Jeffro Richards

“This shit is no joke – unless I was just having a flashback – I saw lightning.” — David Hawkins

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Edie Weinstein Did you just write this? Would love to hear it set to music. ?
2 hours ago · LikeUnlike · 1 personLoading…
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Daniel Brouse yes… fresh off the press… added the lightening bit after i saw your’all comments. thanks!
2 hours ago · LikeUnlike · 1 personLoading…
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Michael Munin Is this your film? Do you have the post-op views? Stay off the leg for 6 weeks then talk to me about the rehab. Sorry, I’m not one to contribute lyrics….
about an hour ago · UnlikeLike · 1 personLoading…
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Daniel Brouse thanks! no post op pics yet… surgery is tomorrow. i’ll keep ya ya posted.
about an hour ago · LikeUnlike
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Kevin Hughes we should record that
about an hour ago · LikeUnlike
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Daniel Brouse sounds good to me!
about an hour ago · LikeUnlike
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Daniel Brouse rod into my leg (see profile pic)… i gotta learn how to say NO, ya know? before i went on… they said, *break a leg* 🙂
2 seconds ago · LikeUnlike
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Edie Weinstein Owie! Sending reiki for complete and total healing ?
2 seconds ago · Like

bookmark_borderthe eclectic could lose electric

the weather here is unusual
i’m watching trees bend into yoga shapes
and wooden ya know
…some are not taking kindly to the discipline — Crack and Bang

should my communication breakdown, please don’t take it personally… because, the eclectic could lose electric. not to worry, i’ll be back right after the brief public service announcement from Mother Nature.

bookmark_borderEnd Of The Line

Can anyone tell me
How did we wind up here?
How did we wind up
Wind up here
Why didn’t anyone steer?
Well, how did we wind up
Wind up
That’s not exactly clear
It’s what we did fear
Now, oh dear
We can’t see clear
We can’t see the light
It’s dark
The darkest night
Is there something bright
How did we wind up here
Exactly what we did fear

With these junkyard dogs
All fat hogs

End Of The Line (Introduction) MP3
End Of The Line MP3

About The Song
The song is a live acoustic recording. A stereo track of an old upright piano and a stereo vocal track.

On a macro scale it is about how the human race has treated the world. On a micro scale it is about a mother who abandoned her husband.

Climate Change Experiment

Help Prevent Domestic Violence

bookmark_borderCracked Bell

Take pity,
On every city,
’cause when the Earth quakes,
Our foundation shakes.

It’s more than rumor,
That we felt a tremor,
’cause it’s true we’re ringing,
Like a cracked bell,
Nature’s singing,
“Say farewell.”

Ding dong the witch ain’t dead,
Bringing on what we dread,

“It’s a small world after all,”

“For whom does the bell toll?”

Is nature’s fall,
Due to man’s role?
As we vibrate the gate,
And, open hell.

Now, we’re ringing,
Like a cracked bell,
Feel it stinging?
Doesn’t feel so swell,
Now, we’re ringing,
Like a cracked bell.

Ding. Dong. Ding. Dumb.

NOTES
I’d said: By the way…
The earthquake that rocked Indonesia…
was felt by seismic meters in Pennsylvania
I guess, it’s a small world after all?

sidd replied:
the whole earth rings like a bell for weeks after such an event …

I wonder:
like a cracked bell?

rick asks:
don’t get much higher than a 9 does it?
what would happen in a 10?
does the scale go higher than 10?

sidd replied:
http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/general/magnitude_intensity.html

sez …

However, rock mechanics seems to preclude earthquakes smaller than about -1
or larger than about 9.5

i wonder:
hmmm… “seems”?

leroy replied:
years ago, the 60s, an indian master told people i know
that the earth could shift axis in two and a half days
you read the science reports that the earth’s wobble changed
from this “event”
water rising
ice age
ask
what is the cause of all this

i’d said:
whole earth ringing — like a cracked bell?

rick replied:
it wasn’t ringin’ for freedom

i go on:
that’s what i’m wondering… if it perhaps is was ringing for freedom?

what i mean is… there have long been natural disasters
BUT i’m questioning whether man is increasing the volatility AND
perhaps the intensity

does it “seem” that we could push over 9.5 because of the crack
we made in “our bell”

the alaska earthquake / global warming study seems to say
“seems” is so? the higher sea level and 10,000 of thousands
of people on the coast line dyin’ also seems to suggest
Man is making a bad situation worse

so, will mother nature ring Her earth free again…
even if it means free from us?

yes… perhaps the answer to leroy’s question
“what is the cause of all this”
is
“well i don’t know if one thing is the cause…
so i won’t say — human is the cause…
but it sure ‘seems’ like humen would be a good
answer?”

humen built to close to the sea
humen made the sea rise
humen helped intensify natural disasters

without these mistakes made by individual humans…
no one would have died?

bookmark_borderBuy Some Time

Can I buy some time,
’cause I’m diggin’ this scene,
And, just reaching my prime,
So, can I buy some time?
What do you mean,
Mine is all spent?
I dunno where it went.

What can be found in McMurdo Sound?

I thought we’d go on forever,
Then, again…
Am I that different than a penguin?
Do they find it strange…
This climate change?
Wonder if they’ve read “State Of Fear”
And, understand the truth ain’t near?

Can I buy some time,
Don’t wanna resign,
To flailing n’ floundering,
What do you mean,
… none left to call mine?
Well…
don’t be so mean,
Can’t I have a little spell?

How are ya, Hawaii?

An ocean swell,
Like a belch from hell,
Causes a rippling effect,
Mother Nature begs respect,
But, what the heck,
Giant waves crashed,
Smashed,
Dashed upon the land,
Makes ya understand,
It’s what it’s about —
“that sort of cancels everything out”

If it sounds like I’m begging… I am.
Advisories warning,
Of a dangerous condition,
Start blurring,
Our grasp of the situation,
So, until I can get a handle,
Please treat me gentle…
And, let me buy some time?
How could it all be spent,
I dunno where it went,
So, please… a little time would be fine.
Oooooh… just a little bit more time?!?!
If it sounds like I’m begging… I am.

NOTES
Iceberg causing penguins to starve
12/14/2004 4:24 PM
By: Associated Press
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A giant iceberg blocking McMurdo Sound in Antarctica is fascinating scientists, but it’s also threatening tens of thousands of baby penguins.

The iceberg is about 1,200 square miles and one researcher called it “the largest floating thing on the planet right now.”

Scientists said the penguin chicks could starve in coming weeks because the ice build-up in the sound has cut off their parents’ access to waters where they catch their fish.

The penguins are important to scientists who’ve been studying the birds for 25 years to look for signs of environmental change, like global warming.

The iceberg is also blocking the route for supply ships that are due to bring food and fuel to the researchers.

December 16, 2004
Surfers daring huge waves:
Giant swell sparks Hawaiian contest, expected to hit here Sentinel staff and wire reports
HALEIWA, Hawaii – Giant waves crashed along the North Shore of Oahu Wednesday, leaving sand and debris on roadways and prompting officials to close beaches as waves reached 40 feet and higher.

Huge waves are expected in Santa Cruz the next several days, the result of a powerful series of storm systems located over the Pacific Northwest.

Advisories warning of dangerous conditions on Central Coast beaches and rock areas have been issued by State Parks officials.

Amid the debris in Oahu, world-class surfers – including two from Santa Cruz – gathered for a rare big-wave surfing competition that occurs only when such enormous waves sweep the island’s coast.

Kelly Slater, a former world champion and one of the 24 elite surfers invited to surf the Quiksilver In Memory of Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational, described the waves at Waimea Bay as “giant.”

“I don’t think I’ve seen it like this,” Slater said.

The competition is held only when the waves reach giant proportions – only six times in the last 19 years.

Two Santa Cruz big-wave surfers, Peter Mel and Darryl “Flea” Virostko, were invited to the contest featuring 24 contestants. The late Jay Moriarity, who died in a diving accident in 2001, was an honorary invitee.

Neither Mel nor Virostko was available by phone. Mel’s wife, Tara, said her husband had come in first in his initial heat Wednesday morning. Mel was in second place overall at the end of round one, following Bruce Irons of Kauai.

“Pete said it’s perfect, no wind,” said Mel, speaking from Santa Cruz.

The water began coming ashore before dawn, crossing roads and leaving sand and debris in its wake, prompting officials to close a portion of Kamehameha Highway in the North Shore town of Haleiwa until 11 a.m.

“Big surf is supposed to be big business,” said Rebekah Horner, manager of the Haleiwa Chevron. “I thought I’d be super busy this morning but with the road closed that sort of cancels everything out.

“Tourists, surfers, a lot of people from all over come to see the surf when it’s this big.”

The seaside Surf N Sea surf and dive shop suffered minor flooding, but opened at its normal time of 9 a.m.

“There’s a lot of sand on the road,” sales clerk Jake Gomez said as he helped clean the water off the floor. “Business is going to be kind of slow today until they open the road.”

The National Weather Service warned of high surf on north-facing shores of all islands except Lanai until Wednesday night. But the exact height of the waves coming on shore was difficult to gauge.

“When it’s this big, its hard to tell for sure exactly how big the waves are because they tend to break out offshore on outer reefs,” said Tom Birchard, a meteorologist with the federal agency.

In Santa Cruz, high surf and dangerous conditions are expected along the coast. The most significant of the high surf periods should peak Friday before gradually tapering off over the weekend, said Alex Peabody of the State Parks Department.

He urged people to avoid swimming, wading and other water activities due to the high surf.

“This will be a very large swell, with long wave periods,” said Peabody. “Park visitors may be fooled into thinking that the waterline is safer than it is due to long lulls between sets of waves.”

Back in Hawaii, a buoy 200 miles northwest of Kauai recorded an open ocean swell of 26 feet Wednesday, he said. By the time that swell gets closer to the islands, waves can top 35 to 50 feet, he said.

In the past, such high surf has damaged beachfront homes and left beachside roads and highways littered with debris.

Capt. George Ku of the Sunset Beach fire station said his crew had not been called out on a single surf-related emergency as of 8 a.m., two hours after the peak.

“I guess everyone was prepared and took the high-surf warnings seriously, thank goodness,” Ku said.

Oahu Civil Defense advised residents to avoid the beaches and stay out of the water, but crowds began gathering before dawn at Waimea Bay Beach Park for big wave surf contest.

The surf competition is named for Eddie Aikau, a big-wave surfing legend who died in 1978 when an ocean-going canoe he was on capsized. Aikau attempted to swim for help and was never seen again.

Michael Crichton Takes on Global Warming in Latest Work
Author Says Environmentalists Are ‘Fomenting False Fears’
By JOHN STOSSEL
Dec. 10, 2004
So often what you think you know may not be so. And it’s a reason I love the book just out from America’s top-selling thriller writer, Michael Crichton. He’s the man who created the popular TV medical drama “ER,” wrote “Jurassic Park,” which ranks among the top 10 grossing films of all time, and much more.

Crichton’s books and movies have grossed more than $4 billion. Now, he’s tackling global warming in his latest techno-thriller, “State of Fear.”

Crichton is an extraordinarily bright man. He paid his way through Harvard Medical School writing his thrillers. He told “20/20” he based “E.R.” on what he witnessed as a med student at Harvard. “It was just experiences that I had had in the emergency room,” Crichton said.

He says Anthony Edwards’ and Noah Wiley’s characters on “E.R.” are based on him, describing them as “a little fumbling, not sure of themselves — nice people.”

When he wrote “The Andromeda Strain,” the story of an organism from outer space that threatens to wipe out mankind, Hollywood came calling, and his medical career was over.

Ideas Ahead of Their Time

Thirty-five years later he is still meticulously melding fiction with cutting-edge science, which continues to open him up to criticism.

He was called anti-science when he wrote about the perils of manipulating DNA for cloning in “Jurassic Park.” After writing “Disclosure,” the story of a man who is sexually harassed by his female boss, he was labeled a sexist. But he was also prescient. At the time of “Jurassic Park,” few people talked about cloning. Now it’s often in the headlines. And sexual harassment of both women and men has been featured in newsmagazines.

Will he be similarly ahead of his time with his new book? “State of Fear” expresses skepticism of the claim that global warming is real and imminent.

The controversy the book is bound to stir up almost kept Crichton from writing the book. “I’m 62 years old. I’ve had a good life. I’m happy and I’m enjoying myself,” he said. “I don’t need any of the flak that would come from doing a book like this.”

bookmark_borderSure Sore

Chorus
I’m not quite sure,
Why I’m so sore,
So, to myself I say,
“Hey! Didn’t think you could take any more?”
To which, I reply,
“Ahhh… so what,
I’ll endure.”

Though my heart does ache,
In fact, we make it break,
When we’re so careless,
With all at steak,
My stomach does turn,
The more I learn,
About what we’ve done,
But, that’s just half the mess,
’cause we continue,
We do.

Chorus

Though my head is numb,
Knowing we’re dumb,
We’re dumb?
We’re done…
Getting second a chance,
We’ve missed,
The last dance,
And, it’ll make ya sick,
If’n ya think on it,
Once it’s clicked,
It’ll make you irritated,
It’ll fester and boil…
Until it’s over?

Please… let us discover,
A cure.

Chorus

bookmark_borderOutta Hand

I thought I could depend,
On Greenland,
I don’t understand,
How’d things get so outta hand?

Mountain glacier,
Washes ashore,
West Antarctica,
Coming right at ya,
Willing to sacrifice,
Greenland’s ice,
East Antarctica?!?!?!?!
Daaaaa…
Heart attack —
Ahhhhh!

With the rising tide,
There’s no place to hide,
A brackish backlash,
Can’t take it in stride,
The divide… toooo wide.

As Tasmanian’s cancer,
Is Nightmare’s romancer,
A Frankenfish,
Scales the wall,
Escaping from,
Man’s great fall,
Yeah, we’re hot,
As our heatwave,
Sends em to their grave,
Yeah, we forgot,
What we’re not:

We’re not so good,
To know what we should,
We’re not too good,
To do what we could.

If we think of the good…
We would.

With the rising tides,
Our ride collides,
A brackish backlash,
Gotta blame it on pride,
And, my selfish inside.

Kingdom come,
Has come undone,
How dumb?
How dumb.

NOTES
John (of Bakersfield, CA) asked:
Is there a consensus on the maximum sea level rise if all the ice upon land melts ? I have heard from 175ft. to 415 ft. Anybody done an accurate study on this ? Thanks

Sidd replied:
various contributions from ice
a)mountain glaciers: 10 cm — 7 in
b)West Antarctica:500 cm — 15 ft
c)Greenland:500 cm – 15 ft
d)East Antarctica: 7000 cm — 210 ft

also other contributions from thermal expansion of the warming oceans (20 cm/degree/Km) etc…. looks like greenland is goin fast

bookmark_borderDon’t Fade Away

Will it take decades to fade,
Is there enough time in a century,
To rewrite all of history?

Will it even take a decade to fade?
Please forgive my curiosity,
Sometimes it gets the best of me.

The intuition of the Inuit,
Well… they seem to have it,
Global warming gasers,
Are worse than terrorists,
Slowly killing the masses,
Because self-fulfillment,
We can’t resist,
Bringing on pain through disasters,
Bringing it on faster and faster,
All hopes being dashed,
As time passes,
All hopes… smashed,
Do you think it’s meant?

No! Don’t fade away,
Hey, hey, hey,
Don’t fade away,
Hey!
Let’s move away,
Hey, hey, hey,
From trouble stray,
Hey!
Live another day,
Hey, hey, hey,
Don’t fade away.
(repeat and fade)