Why This Is Dangerous

[Silence]

[Instrumental, Guitar, Piano, Organ, Synth, Bass, Percussion, Drums]

[Intro]
[Instrumental Intro: Pulsing Bass, Organ Swell, Muted Guitar Chops, Rising Synth Filter]
[Minimal Beat, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
Why is this dangerous
(For all of us?)
Why?
(Give ‘er a try…)
[Instrumental]
[Guitar Licks]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]

[Chorus]
This is dangerous
(For all of us)
Toward disastrous
(Unanamous)

[Verse 1]
[Soft Synth Pad, Light Percussion]
Small events…
(Can’t circumvent)
It’s on all of us
(Multiply into chaos)
Humans flail
(Predictions fail…)
Opportunity: blown
(The known becomes unknown)
Instability spreads…
(Welcome the dreads)
Man, sucks… blows
(Everywhere it goes)

[Bridge 1]
[Build: Rising Synth Arpeggio, Layered Guitar Chords]
In a precarious position
(A verge of the edge situation)
Tipping points approach
(Sudden cascade)
Encroach
(End of the masquerade)

[Chorus]
This is dangerous
(For all of us)
Toward disastrous
(Unanimous)

[Verse 2]
[Percussion Intensifies, Bass Pulses Faster]
Dam → sudden collapse
(relapse, lapse-lapse)
Vortex → turbulence
(In our presence)
Climate → cascading failures
(Folks to folklores)
Economy → financial stress
(Quite a mess)
Every system…
(Amplifies where I am)

[Bridge 2 / Instrumental]
[Guitar Solo, Synth Swells, Drums Build]
Small causes, large effects
(Perplex)
Velocity increases
(Time decreases)
Uncertainty grows
(No one knows)
We cannot ignore it
(For a moment)

[Chorus / Outro]
This is dangerous
(For all of us)
Toward disastrous
(Unanimous)
[Instrumental Fade Out: Pulsing Bass, Distant Synths, Gentle Cymbals]

[About Section / Spoken Outro]
This track emphasizes the risks of nonlinear dynamics and third-derivative behavior in coupled systems. When physical and economic systems approach singularity-like behavior, small perturbations can trigger extreme, system-wide consequences. The song uses musical layering and gradual buildup to mirror the cascading instability in real-world systems.

From the album Third Derivative