bookmark_borderResist / Re-Resist

[Intro]
(Resist)
(Feel the current build)
Resist!

[Verse 1]
The drums in the distance
(They’re closer than you think)
A long steady insistence
(Standing at the brink)

The whisper is growing
(It’s under their skin)
The silence in knowing
(It’s wearing thin)

[Bridge]
(Resist)
(Feel the current build)
Resist!

[Chorus]
Are you aware
(Take the dare)
Hold your ground
(Stand unbound)
Voice to voice
(It’s our choice)
Resist their exist

[Verse 2]
The flags may be waving
(But who holds the pole?)
The crowd no longer raving
(So who owns your soul?)

The screen keeps on glowing
(Is it telling what’s true)
The headlines are flowing
(They’re written for you)

[Bridge]
Insist
(Feel the current build)
Resist!

[Chorus]
[Breakdown]
Not with fire
(Not with fear)
Not with rage
(But standing here)

A steady flame
(A steady hand)
A steady voice
(A steady stand)

[Bridge – Intensified]
Play our game
(Demand)
Make the choice
(Understand)
(Feel the current surge)
The urge to resist!
(Resist!)

[Final Chorus – Extended]
Are you still there
(We declare)
Meet in the light
(Not in spite)
Beat by beat
(Heart and feet)
Resist — persist!

[Outro]
Hold the line
(It’s our time)
No, there’s no retreat
(Plant your feet)
Raised fist!
(Feel the current build)
Resist!
(It’s time to insist)
Resist!

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderRevolt / Re-Revolt

[Intro]
(Like a lightning bolt)
Revolt!

[Verse 1]
The Redcoats are coming
(Oh, they’re already here)
The populous numbing
(Just to be clear)

[Bridge]
(Like a lightning bolt)
Revolt!

[Chorus]
Are you still there
(Get off your chair)
Meet me on the street
(Revolt to be beat)

[Verse 2]
The Orange coating is coming
(Oh, he’s already here)
The populous numbing
(Overcome with sheer fear)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]

[Outro]
Dance at the chance
(Like a lightning bolt)
Revolt!
(It’s time to ignite)
And, it just might…
(Be time to explode)
Test your probe
(Like a lightning bolt)
Revolt!

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderBreak the Crown

[Intro]
Jack fell down…
(And broke his crown)

[Verse 1]
You built your throne on borrowed fear
(Stacked it high with doubt and lies)
Preaching “truth” through a cracked veneer
(While the smoke rose to the skies)
Lies, lies, lies

[Pre-Chorus]
Try to tighten every chain
(Try, try, try to numb the pain)
But the more you push us down—
(The less you will restrain)

[Chorus]
We won’t bow (we won’t drown)
We are fire under your crown
Hear the sound (feel the ground)
Every heartbeat’s breaking out
(Shout!)
Shout!
(Every heartbeat’s breaking out)

You can rule from a tower tall,
But towers fall, they always fall.
When the voices shake this town,
We will rise and break the crown.

[Verse 2]
You drew your lines in shifting sand,
(Called it law, called it fate)
But every wall you raise by hand
(Just becomes a heavier weight)
A heavy wait….

[Pre-Chorus]
[Chorus]

[Verse 3]
You wrote your name across the sky,
(In letters carved from other men)
But history has a sharper eye—
(Recollects the sin you’ve been)
Fed on silence, fed on shame,
(Turning neighbor against friend)
But truth is not a candle flame
(Can’t be smothered in The End)

[Pre-Chorus]
[Chorus]
[Bridge, half-time feel]
No more whispering in the dark
No more waiting for a sign,
We are many, rise, embark
In this moment… it’s our time.
Every voice has made the choice

[Final Chorus, big finish]
We rise…
We rise…
And break the crown.

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderAfternoon Tea

[Intro]
An invite…
We thought you might
Come to our tea party
(It’ll be simply lovely)

[Verse]
(All of us)
We’ll play charades
Masquerade
(Indigenous)

[Bridge]
Whole hearted
(Let’s get this party started)

[Chorus]
An invitation
(To a new nation)
Join our tea party
(It’s simply lovely)

[Verse]
Throwing tea
(Into the sea)
In the name of thee
(… a mutiny)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
Dump a chest?
(Dump the rest)
Dump the trump
(Roasted rump)

ABOUT THE SONG
The Boston Tea Party was a pivotal act of political protest by American colonists against British rule on the night of December 16, 1773. A group of approximately 60 to 150 men, many from the Sons of Liberty, boarded three merchant ships—the Dartmouth, Eleanor, and Beaver—at Griffin’s Wharf. To hide their identities and symbolize their burgeoning “American” identity, they dressed in Native American (Mohawk) attire, using blankets and soot.

Destruction: Over the course of three hours, they smashed open and dumped 342 chests (roughly 92,000 pounds) of British East India Company tea into Boston Harbor. The destroyed cargo was worth about £9,659 at the time, which equates to over $1.7 million in today’s currency.

An outraged British Parliament responded in 1774 with punitive laws (the Coercive Acts), which included closing Boston Harbor and suspending local self-government.

Revolutionary Spark: These harsh measures backfired, unifying the thirteen colonies and leading to the convening of the First Continental Congress and, eventually, the American Revolutionary War.

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderAfter the Rant

[Intro]
Ashes from the tyrant’s chant
(Static echoes from the pulpit)
Pure bull (shhhhh)… it

[Verse 1]
Every lie leaves a stain
(On the ledger of the slain)
Hear their shout, hear their plea
(Chains forged quietly)
Promises written in sand
(Bloodied sleight of hand)
Power draped in flags
(Hollow humblebrags)

[Pre-Chorus]
You can bend the truth till it screams
(Build empires out of memes)
But gravity pulls on kings
(On all fragile things)

[Chorus]
After the rant comes the fall
(Every tower, every wall)
After the fire and smoke
(The spell is broke)
No crown survives the light
(No endless night)

[Verse 2]
Courts of mirrors crack
(History answers back)
Fear can flood the square
(But truth is still there)
You can silence a choir
(Build higher barbed wire)
But whispers multiply
(You can’t jail the sky)

[Bridge – Breakdown]
He fed on division
(Precision incision)
But hunger grows thin
(When the crowd won’t give in)

Listen — the people chant
(Not the tyrant’s rant)

[Chorus – Bigger, Harmonized]
After the rant comes the rise
(Open eyes)
After deceit and spin
(We begin again)
No throne stands alone
(Seeds are sown)

[Final Bridge]
But we just can’t…
(We won’t recant)
Listen to the tyrant rant
(The bully puppet in the pulpit)
We turn the page
(Exit the cage)

[Outro]
When he rants
(His chants…)
Fade to air
(Truth laid bare)
No more fears
(New frontiers)
So we can’t
(Listen to the tyrant rant)

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderTyrant

[Intro]
Listen to the tyrant rant
(The bully puppet in the bully pulpit)

[Verse 1]
Absolute, self-serving rule
(By the nation’s ranking fool)
Using pain, fear, and cruelty
(To spew false reality)

[Bridge]
Listen to the tyrant rant
(The bully puppet in the bully pulpit)

[Chorus]
Unjust and absolute
(A typical brute)
And most certainly
(Lack of empathy)

[Verse 2]
The manipulation of man
(Destroying all that he can)
With utter certainty
(The grandest grandiosity)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
As he rants
(His pants…)
Are on fire!
(Liar, liar, liar)
No more fears…
(Turn deaf ears)
So we can’t
(Listen to the tyrant rant)

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderIn the Company

[Intro]
Hey, country!
(We’re in the company)

[Verse 1]
Surrounded
(By yes men)
Dumbfounded
(Say amen)

[Chorus]
To begin
(Joseph Stalin)
Begun
(Mao Zedong)
A little Hitler
(Rome’s new fiddler)
In the pulpit
With Pol Pot

[Bridge]
And, so he’ll boast
(He’s with the most)
Hey, country!
(He’s in the company)

[Verse 2]
Fools to the right
(Fools to the left)
No sane in sight
(Full of the daft)

[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
And, so he’ll brag
(Old hot wind bag)
Nation’s got a notion
(He’s in the company)
Of our destiny
(Re-writes history)
The worst of the worst

ABOUT THE SONG
Determining the absolute “worst” tyrant is subjective, but historical analysis often points to dictators responsible for the highest death tolls or extreme brutality. Mao Zedong, Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, and Pol Pot are among the deadliest. Trump has also been associated with policies that contributed to significant loss of life and misery. COVID-era health decisions during his first term, along with RFK Jr.’s policies in his second term, as well as the dismantling of the NIH and withdrawal from the WHO, have all been linked to avoidable deaths and illness. Eliminating or reducing global aid and health programs has likewise been associated with millions of preventable deaths worldwide. “Drill, Baby, Drill” policies result in an additional 7 million deaths a year from fossil fuel air pollution.

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderInsurrection

[Intro]
Ensure selection
(Insurrection)

[Verse 1]
You know
(This clown’s gotta go)
Came to a battle of wits
(With a couple twits)

[Chorus]
Ensure selection
(Insurrection)
Civil protection
(Insurrection)

[Bridge]
Democratization
(Of civilization)
Overrule
(The tyrant fool)
Put up a fight
(For the human right)

[Verse 2]
You know it’s so
(This is a real shhh… it show)
Blatant corruption
(Institution)

[Chorus]
[Bridge]

[Outro]
Realization
(Of civilization)
Overrule
(The tyrant fool)
Put up a fight
(For the human right)
Come! Stand in the light
(Do what’s right)
Come! Shine your light
(Incite insight)

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderUprising

[Intro]
Is it surprising
(It’s an uprising)

[Verse 1]
The people say
(“Out of my way”)
The reign of pain
(Can’t remain)

[Chorus]
Is it surprising
(It’s an uprising)
Done mesmerizing
(It’s an uprising)

[Verse 2]
The people say
(“Out of my way”)
Your authority
(Causing poverty)

[Chorus]

[Verse 3]
The people say
(“Out of our way”)
You won’t rule the day
(Or dock our pay)

[Chorus]

[Bridge]
Uprising
(Of humanity)
Uprising
(Against insanity)
Uprising
(Curb your vanity)

[Chorus]

[Outro]
Uprising
(Of humanity)
Uprising
(Against insanity)
Uprising
(Curb your vanity)

From the album “Rebellion

Also found on the album “Reggae Getaway

bookmark_borderTrouble

[Intro]
(Here’s the thing:)
You bring
(Trouble)

[Verse 1]
Skin so white
(Heart so black)
Live for spite
(Lie. Attack.)

[Bridge]
Gonna bust your bubble

[Chorus]
You bring
(Trouble)
We sing
(Rebel)

[Verse 2]
White nationalism
(Heart so black)
Raise my skepticism
(Brains you lack)

[Bridge]
Gonna burst your bubble

[Chorus]

[Outro]
Bring you double
(Rebel)
What we sing
(We’re sure to bring)
Rebel

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderMovement

[Intro]
Movement
(Meant move)

[Verse 1]
WHAT IS MEANT
BY YOUR MOVEMENT
WHAT EVER IS MEANT
IT’S RADICAL DERANGEMENT
YOUR PRESIDENT

[Refrain]
Movement
(Meant move)
Movement
(Move meant)

[Bridge]
What do we have to prove?

[Chorus]
It’s the hour
(Of our power)
In fact the populous
(Is all of us)

[Verse 2]
YOUR RADICAL LEFT DERANGEMENT
IS BEYOND MY MENTAL ENGAGEMENT
IN ENGAGEMENT! WHAT IS MEANT
BY YOUR MOVEMENT???!?!@?!
YOUR PRESIDENT IN FREEDUMB
(Dum, dee, dum, dum)

[Refrain]
Movement
(Meant move)
Movement
(Move meant)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]

We meant (MOVEMENT!)

[Refrain]

[Outro]
(A move of love)
Movement
(Meant move)
Movement
(Move meant)
… of love….
(A move of love)
Come on over
(Move on over)
Be a lover

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderIt’s a Revolution

[Intro]
Are things turning ’round
(It’s a revolution)

[Verse 1]
What’s your position
(Do you take a stand)
Of the situation
(Do you understand)

[Bridge]
Have you found…
(Revelation)

[Chorus]
Are things turning ’round
(It’s a revolution)
Tied-up and now bound
(For a revolution)

[Verse 2]
What’s your notion of our nation
(Do you take a stand)
About the ramifications
(Do you understand)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
Have you found…
(Revelation)
It’s a revolution
(MAGA institution)
It’s a revolution
(Need a solution)
It’s a revolution

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderRebellion

[Verse 1]
There is no debate
(Stoking rage and hate)
Telling lie after lie
(As citizens die)

[Bridge]
The hellion
(Screams for rebellion)

[Chorus]
Storm the Capital
(Set them free)
Call us radical
(Can you see?)

[Verse 2]
White nationalism
(Race and sexism)
Pushing pedophilia
(And xenophobia)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
No solution
(For a broken Constitution)
Watch in awe
(The demise of the rule of law)

ABOUT THE SONG

From January 6 to Today: How Federal Violence and Political Rhetoric Threaten Democratic Stability

On January 6, 2021, thousands of supporters of then-President Donald Trump gathered in Washington, D.C., responding to his calls to “stop the steal” and to pressure then–Vice President Mike Pence and Congress to reject the 2020 election results. Many of these supporters believed the election had been “stolen by emboldened radical-left Democrats.” Following the rally, hundreds of Trump’s followers stormed the U.S. Capitol in an armed attempt to halt the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory — an event widely condemned as a violent rebellion against American democratic institutions.

Today, in his second term, President Trump is pursuing policies and actions that many critics argue are fueling a new wave of political and social confrontation — a tinderbox of grievances that could precipitate further unrest.

One flashpoint has been the deployment of thousands of federal immigration enforcement agents to Minneapolis and other cities and the shootings of U.S. citizens and residents during aggressive operations. These incidents have sparked widespread protests and raised profound questions about the use of force, constitutional rights, and government accountability.

Minneapolis: Federal Enforcement and Fatal Shootings

Since early January 2026, Minneapolis has been a focal point of federal immigration enforcement under the Trump administration’s so-called “Operation Metro Surge.”

Deaths of U.S. Citizens

  • Renée Nicole Good: On January 7, 2026, an ICE agent shot and killed 37-year-old Minneapolis resident Renée Good, a mother of three, during a federal enforcement operation. Authorities have disagreed on the circumstances, with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claiming Good “weaponized her vehicle” and attempted to harm agents. Local officials and witnesses dispute this narrative, and the Hennepin County medical examiner ruled her death a homicide.
  • Alex Pretti: On January 24, federal agents shot and killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive-care nurse and U.S. citizen, during a separate encounter. Human Rights Watch and independent video analysis challenge official accounts that Pretti posed a deadly threat, suggesting he was unarmed and assisting others when shot.

Both killings occurred amid a large federal presence and have become symbols of deep tension between federal authority and local communities.

Escalation of Force and Backlash

  • Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has publicly called for the removal of federal agents and demanded state involvement in the investigations.
  • Protests against federal enforcement have been robust, with demonstrators condemning the use of lethal force against civilians and the aggressive tactics used in raids.
  • National political figures across the spectrum — including former presidents and members of Trump’s own party — have criticized the federal response and demanded transparency.

These developments have intensified debates about constitutional rights, the proper role of federal agencies, and the limits of executive power.

A Broader Pattern of Federal Overreach

Critics argue that these incidents are not isolated but part of a broader pattern:

  • Disregard for Constitutional Norms: The escalation of federal force in civilian cities, especially when local authorities oppose those deployments, raises serious questions about federalism and civil liberties.
  • Erosion of Trust in Accountability: Federal control over investigations — including limiting state access to evidence — has fueled suspicions of bias and obstruction.
  • Political Polarization and Rhetoric: Rhetoric blaming “domestic terrorists,” “far-left radicals,” or “violent lawbreakers” is often invoked to justify aggressive policing tactics, but also inflames tensions and undermine democratic norms.

These patterns contribute to alienation, distrust, and polarization — social conditions that do create fertile ground for rebellion, not just from fringe actors but from broader segments of the population who feel disenfranchised or threatened.

From January 6 to Civil Conflict Today?

The Capitol riot began with false claims about the legitimacy of an election and culminated in a direct assault on democratic processes. It was a singular moment that shocked the nation and underscored deep partisan divisions.

Today’s clashes — whether in the streets of Minneapolis or in public discourse — are shaped by ongoing grievances over governance, justice, and the limits of state power.

Whether these tensions will lead to widespread rebellion is uncertain. But the persistent use of force against U.S. citizens, the rhetorical escalation from political leaders, and the deterioration of institutional trust are symptoms of deeper fractures in American society.

Trumpenomics

From the album “Rebellion

bookmark_borderSisyphus (Album)

The Times
Downloads / Streams

Lyrics and Liner Notes

Sisyphus

[Verse 1]
Do you wanna rock
(And roll)
Or rather your rock
(Hold still)

[Bridge]
Freewill?
All the while
(Laborious and futile)

[Refrain]
Sisyphus
(Push, push)
Sisyphus
(Push bein’)
Bein’
(Sisyphean)

[Verse 2]
Come on let’s roll
(Down the hill)
Just let ‘er roll
(Until until)

[Bridge]
Freewill
All the while
(Laborious and futile)

[Refrain]
Sisyphus
(Push, push)
Sisyphus
(Push bein’)
Bein’
(Sisyphean)

[Bridge]
Freewill
All the while
(Laborious and futile)

[Outro]
We will instill
(Freewill)
But will until
(Roll up hill)

ABOUT THE SONG
In Greek mythology, Sisyphus was the cunning founder and first king of Ephyra (now Corinth). He is famously remembered for his eternal punishment in Tartarus: he must push a massive boulder up a steep hill, only for it to roll back down just as it nears the summit, forcing him to repeat the task forever.

The founder and king of Ephyra (now known as Corinth). He reveals Zeus’s abduction of Aegina to the river god Asopus, thereby incurring Zeus’s wrath. His subsequent cheating of death earns him eternal punishment in the underworld, once he dies of old age. The gods forced him to roll an immense boulder up a hill only for it to roll back down every time it neared the top, repeating this action for eternity. Through the classical influence on contemporary culture, tasks that are both laborious and futile are therefore described as Sisyphean

Zeus’s Wrath

[Verse 1]
About the god’s daughter
(The nymph Aegina)
Perhaps you’d have not, a…
(Done what you aught, a…)

[Bridge]
God Zeus!
(Set your wrath loose)

[Chorus]
The wrath
(For chained death)
Do the math
(Mortal’s total)

[Verse 2]
The reign of divine rules
(Rain on all the fools)
The death wish…
(Of your hubris)

[Bridge]
Such is this
God Zeus!
(Set your wrath loose)

[Chorus]
The wrath
(For chained death)
Do the math
(Mortal’s total)

[Outro]
Such is this
(A bath) in wrath
To infinity
(For all eternity)
God Zeus!
(Ties your own noose)
Zeus’s wrath
(I wouldn’t laugh)

ABOUT THE SONG
Sisyphus reveals Zeus’s abduction of Aegina to the river god Asopus, thereby incurring Zeus’s wrath.

Sisyphus betrayed Zeus by revealing that the king of gods had abducted the nymph Aegina, daughter of the river god Asopus. In exchange for this information, which Sisyphus witnessed, he secured an eternal spring for his city, Corinth. This act of betrayal against Zeus contributed to Sisyphus’, ultimate, eternal punishment.

Sisyphus incurred Zeus’s wrath by violating “divine rules.” Sisyphus acted with extreme hubris, thinking himself smarter than the gods. He not only betrayed Zeus’s secrets but also chained Thanatos (Death), causing a period where no mortals could die.

The Eternal Punishment: Zeus sentenced him to a “Sisyphean task” in Tartarus—a repetitive, pointless, and exhausting labor of rolling a rock up a hill for eternity.

Nymph Aegina

[Verse 1]
Zeus and Epstein on an island
(While in command)
Doing deeds with evil seeds
(Soon to be damned)

[Bridge]
Nymph Aegina
(Enough agita)

[Chorus]
Morals are steadfast
(Throughout time)
Ethic rules forever last
(No doubt… still a crime)

[Verse 2]
Taking underage girls
(For your thrills)
Racking up dues and bills
(Gives the spine chills)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
Leave those kids alone
(All of us moan)
Leave those kids alone
(In the pedo zone)

ABOUT THE SONG
Zeus abducted the nymph Aegina, daughter of the river god Asopus, by transforming into an eagle (or flame) and carrying her to the island of Oenone. Desiring her, Zeus took her to this secluded location to escape Hera’s jealousy. Aegina gave birth to their son, Aeacus, who later renamed the island Aegina.

Avarice

[Intro]
Some advice
(… on avarice)

[Verse 1]
The need to exceed
(Desire on fire)
To feed to bleed
(Greed, greed, greed)

[Bridge]
Some advice
(… on avarice)
Cheating immortals and men
(Doing it over and over again)

[Chorus]
Self-aggrandizing
(Wealth vandalizing)
Daft grandstanding
(Stealth corruption)

[Verse 2]
In a mess of excess
(Desire for dire)
To bleed to feed
(Greed, greed, greed)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
Cheating mortals and gods
(Doing it over and over again)
… come on… what are your odds
(Of a divine sin?)

ABOUT THE SONG
Sisyphus founded Ephyra (later Corinth) and was known for his extreme cleverness and avarice. As a ruler, he used ruthless, self-aggrandizing methods to boost his wealth, while frequently cheating both mortals and gods. His actions were motivated by a desire to maintain power and wealth, which directly opposed the, often hubristic, authority of the gods. His greed-driven, treacherous nature led to his eternal punishment.

Thanatos

[Intro]
After all (we’ll fall)
… into a deep sleep
(A deep, deep, deep)
… sleep….

[Verse 1]
Thanatos
(… than he knows)
How man comes and goes
(Will your scene be serene)
Thanatos
(… than he knows)

[Bridge]
Do you know what I mean
At the very least
… if I’m gonna cease…
(Bring on the peace)

[Chorus]
After all (we’ll fall)
… into a deep sleep
(A deep, deep, deep)
… sleep….

[Verse 2]
Thanatos
(… the rest he knows)
As man’s to n’ fro’s
(Are deemed seen)
Thanatos
(… head to toes)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
It’s not a lie
(Everybody’s gonna die)
Sooner or later
A deeper layer
(A deep, deep, deep)
… sleep….

ABOUT THE SONG
In Greek mythology, Thanatos (Ancient Greek: Θάνατος, “Death”) is the personification of death. He is typically distinguished from Hades, who is the ruler of the Underworld, and instead represents the actual transition from life to death.

Key Characteristics and Mythology
Family: He is the son of Nyx (Night) and sometimes Erebus (Darkness). He is the twin brother of Hypnos (Sleep), which reflects the ancient Greek view of death as a permanent sleep.

Role: While his sisters, the Keres, personify violent or painful deaths, Thanatos is often characterized as the bringer of peaceful, non-violent death.

Depiction: In ancient art, he was originally shown as a bearded, winged man or a winged youth carrying a sword. Later Roman depictions often showed him as a beautiful boy (much like Eros) holding an inverted torch, representing a life extinguished.

Myths
Sisyphus: King Sisyphus famously outwitted Thanatos by tricking him into his own shackles. This caused death to cease across the world until the god of war, Ares, intervened to free him.

Heracles: In the play Alcestis by Euripides, the hero Heracles wrestles Thanatos and defeats him to save the life of Alcestis.

Demonstrate?

[Intro]
Can you demonstrate
(How to participate)

[Verse 1]
Locked in a closet
(Dying to get out)
Death is no closer
(To winning this bout)

[Bridge]
Shout!
(But you can’t get out)

[Chorus]
A demonstration
(Of incarceration)
There’s no fun in winning war
(Any more)

[Bridge]
Can you demonstrate
(How to participate)

[Verse 2]
When wars can’t be won
(It’s no longer fun)
What is the use
(Of being obtuse)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
Can you demonstrate
(How to participate)
Tackled and shackled
(Can’t figure it out)
’till the god of war
(Said no more)

ABOUT THE SONG
In Greek mythology, King Sisyphus outwitted Thanatos (Death) by asking him to demonstrate how his own shackles worked, subsequently trapping him. This trick, performed to avoid being taken to the underworld, caused a period where no mortals died, forcing Ares to intervene.

The Trick: When Thanatos arrived to take Sisyphus to the Underworld, Sisyphus pretended to be honored but asked to see how the chains functioned first.

The Imprisonment: Thanatos willingly demonstrated, and Sisyphus quickly snapped the shackles shut, trapping him.

Consequences: As a result of Death being locked in a closet/cell, nobody on Earth could die, causing chaos.

Release: The god of war, Ares, angry that his battles were meaningless because people wouldn’t die, intervened and released Thanatos.

Final Fate: Sisyphus was eventually taken to the underworld and punished with the endless, futile task of rolling a boulder up a hill.

Cheating Death

[Verse 1]
Cheating death
(May have consequences)
Your health and wealth
(May lose your senses)

[Chorus]
Seven, Eleven
(You can go to heaven)
Snake eyes…
(Everybody dies)

[Bridge]
Heads (I win)
Tails (You lose)
Will you choose
(To play again?)

[Verse 2]
Cheating death
(Is your dream come true?)
Remember Macbeth
(It could happen to you)

[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
Go back to “begin”
Heads (I win)
Tails (You lose)
Will you choose
(To play again?)
Now you discover
(Should’ve been a lover)
Eternal hangover
(Game over)

ABOUT THE SONG
Sisyphus cheated death twice in Greek myth: first by tricking Thanatos (Death) into chaining himself, stopping all deaths on Earth, and second by persuading Persephone to let him return from the underworld to scold his wife for improper burial rites, only to refuse to go back. His eternal punishment for these acts of hubris, ordered by Zeus, was to eternally roll a boulder up a hill, only for it to roll back down each time he neared the top.

Macbeth portrays death as the ultimate, inevitable consequence of unchecked ambition and moral corruption, illustrating that violating natural and divine laws leads to madness, guilt, and destruction. Macbeth’s journey from a noble warrior to a tyrannical, isolated murderer culminates in his, and Lady Macbeth’s, deserved downfall, serving as a cautionary tale against greed.

Immortality

[Verse 1]
Futile labor
(The absurd)
Disregard thy neighbor
(Break your word)

[Bridge]
Humanity’s demanding for understanding
(The reverence of nature’s silence)

[Chorus]
So, you really want to live forever
(Well, we shall see)
… your endeavor
(In immortality)

[Verse 2]
Spending all your years
(In futile tears)
Pushing up your throne
(Sad… and all alone)

[Bridge]
Nothing but skin and bone
Humanity’s demanding for understanding
(The reverence of nature’s silence)

[Chorus]
[Outro]
Until the day you pay
(And cry to die)
Nothing but skin and bone
(Left all alone)
Humanity’s demanding for understanding
(The reverence of nature’s silence)

ABOUT THE SONG
Sisyphus, a cunning Greek king, defied the gods and cheated death twice in his pursuit of escaping mortality. His ultimate, ironic punishment was an eternal, futile task: rolling a boulder up a hill, only for it to roll back down, symbolizing the absurdity of life and the pitfalls of endless, meaningless struggle.

The Pursuit of Immortality and Defiance
* Trickery: Sisyphus was known for his extreme cunning, murdering guests and betraying secrets to defy the gods.
* Cheating Death: He tricked Thanatos (death) into shackles and later deceived Hades to return from the underworld, living for many years before finally dying.
* Hubris: His actions were driven by a desire to master his fate and avoid the natural conclusion of human life.

The Pitfalls: Eternal Struggle and Absurdity
* Futile Labor: As punishment, he was condemned to roll a boulder up a hill for eternity, an act that represents the meaningless, repetitive, and unrewarding nature of life’s struggles.
* The Absurd: Albert Camus described this as the “absurd”—the conflict between humanity’s desire for meaning and the universe’s silent, indifferent nature.
* No Finality: The boulder always falls back, meaning no permanent progress is ever made, mirroring the ultimate futility of human ambition.

Realization and Acceptance
* Consciousness of Fate: During his descent, Sisyphus realizes the hopelessness of his situation, which allows him to become superior to his fate.
* Rebellion: By accepting the futility and continuing to push, Sisyphus rebels against the gods, finding meaning in the struggle itself.
* Camus’ Conclusion: “One must imagine Sisyphus happy,” as the struggle toward the heights is enough to fill a man’s heart.

The myth serves as an allegory for human existence, where the struggle for meaning in a meaningless world is, in itself, the source of freedom and happiness.

Merope

[Verse 1]
After all
(She married a mortal)
Grace will fall
(Tartarus outrageous)

[Bridge]
Merope
(Give me enough rope)
To hang myself
(Void my health and wealth)

[Chorus]
The “Lost Pleiad”
(The dimmest star by far)
A hopeless plead
(A myth bizarre)

[Verse 2]
Illumination
(Of your constellation)
Can’t shine that bright
(After gaining insight)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Outro]
Will you concede
Merope
(At the end of my rope)

ABOUT THE SONG
Sisyphus primary wife, Merope, was one of the seven Pleiades, the daughters of the Titan Atlas. She is often said to be the “faint” star in the constellation because she was ashamed of being married to a mortal.

The “Lost Pleiad”
Merope is famously called the “Lost Pleiad” because she is the faintest star in the Pleiades cluster. Two main legends explain her dimness:

Marriage to a Mortal: Unlike her sisters, who all consorted with gods (like Zeus or Poseidon), Merope was the only one to marry a mortal—Sisyphus. She is said to hide her face in heaven out of shame for this “lesser” union.
Shame for Her Husband: Some sources suggest she hid her face because she was mortified by Sisyphus’s legendary crimes and his subsequent eternal punishment in Tartarus.

Bellerophon

[Intro]
(This is hubris)
At odds…
(Of living with the gods)

[Verse 1]
To tame Pegasus
(Fly through the sky)
Above all of us
(Gonna give ‘er a try)

[Chorus]
Without a doubt
(Bellerophon will win)
Or he’ll find out
(How mortal’s sin)

[Bridge]
(This is hubris)
At odds…
(Of living with the gods)

[Verse 2]
A false idle
(The golden bridle)
The horse’s tale
(An ultimate fail)

[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
Pegasus flew
(Pride grew)
This is hubris’s
(Nemesis)
At odds…
(Of living with the gods)

ABOUT THE SONG
Bellerophon was considered one of the greatest heroes of the generation before Heracles. Like his grandfather Sisyphus, his story is a famous “cautionary tale” about the dangers of hubris (extreme pride).

Origin and the Taming of Pegasus
Double Parentage: He was the son of Eurynome and either King Glaucus of Corinth or the sea god Poseidon.
The Golden Bridle: After failing to catch the winged horse Pegasus, Bellerophon slept in the temple of Athena. He dreamt the goddess gave him a golden bridle, and upon waking, he found the physical object beside him.
The Capture: He used the magical bridle to tame Pegasus while the horse drank from the Fountain of Peirene in Corinth.

Slaying the Chimera

[Verse 1]
Lion, goat, serpent
(Snake for a tail)
How to circumvent
(Without a wail)

[Chorus]
Ah, ya (Slaying the chimera)
A fire-breathing monster
(Are you sure you wanna go that far)
Led to dead with lead

[Bridge]
(Fire-breathing monster)
Let it register

[Verse 2]
To avoid searing breath
(Fed with lead)
Mythical depth and breadth
(The moral said)

[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
Monster enforcer
[Instrumental, Synth Solo]
Take to the sky
(… and fly)
[Instrumental, Organ Solo, Bass Solo]

ABOUT THE SONG
Slaying the Chimera
Bellerophon was exiled to the court of King Iobates of Lycia, who gave him the “impossible” task of killing the Chimera—a fire-breathing monster with the body of a goat, the head of a lion, and a snake for a tail.

The Chimera (or Khimaira) was one of the most terrifying female monsters in Greek mythology, described by the poet Homer as being of “divine stock, not of men”.

Anatomy and Abilities
While later interpretations sometimes add wings or multiple heads, the classical Greek description of the Chimera is highly specific:
* Physical Hybrid: She possessed the front of a lion, the middle of a she-goat, and the tail of a serpent (or dragon).
* Three Sources of Danger: Most myths describe a goat’s head sprouting from the middle of her back, which was the source of her devastating fire-breathing ability.
* Powers: Along with her searing breath, she had the strength and claws of a lion and a venomous snake tail.

* The Strategy: Because he could fly on Pegasus, Bellerophon avoided the monster’s flames from the air.
* The Kill: He attached a block of lead to his spear and jammed it into the Chimera’s mouth. The creature’s fiery breath melted the lead, which ran down its throat and suffocated it from the inside.

Styx

[Intro]
Flow to know
(Betwixt)
… on the River Styx

[Verse]
First time ’round
(Found the middle ground)
Namely…
(Mindlessness aimlessly)

[Bridge]
Passing through
(Asphodel Meadows)
How ’bout you
(Another shadow)

[Verse]
Found I was goin’ ’round
(Round and round and never found)
It was plain I was wondering
(Wandering the Plain of Wandering

[Bridge]
[Verse]
’til I got betwixt
(By the River Styx)
In that space….
(Between a rock n’ a hard place)

[Bridge]
[Outro]
Can’t cross the river
(Can’t seem to deliver)
Stuck in the muck
(Oh, what the funk)

ABOUT THE SONG
Asphodel Meadows: This is the neutral “middle ground” for ordinary souls who were neither exceptionally good nor evil. It is often described as a bleak, grey plain of mindlessness where souls wander aimlessly.

The Plain of Aleion (Plain of Wandering): Specifically for Bellerophon, this was the place on Earth where he fell after his failed flight to Olympus. He spent the rest of his life there blind and alone, essentially caught in a “living death” before he finally passed away.

The River Styx: This is the boundary between the world of the living and the dead. Sisyphus once tricked Persephone on the shores of the Styx into letting him return to life, temporarily existing in that “between” space.

The Road to Tartarus

[Intro]
Both of us
(With Tantalus)
Titillating Titans
(On the road to Tartarus)

[Bridge]
The deepest abyss of the Underworld
(Unfurled)

[Refrain]
Come join us…
(With Tantalus)
Titillating Titans
(On the road to Tartarus)

[Bridge]
The deepest abyss of the Underworld
(Unfurled)
Eternally teased
(Never pleased)

[Refrain]
No mess (no fuss)
… join us…
(With Tantalus)
Titillating Titans
(On the road to Tartarus)
In eternity, in well…
(Not quite hell)

[Outro]
Preached
(Never reached)
Every moment
(Every movement)
Torment
(Torment)
Meant

ABOUT THE SONG
Tartarus: This is the deepest abyss of the Underworld, used as a dungeon of torment for the wicked and a prison for the Titans. It is where Sisyphus serves his sentence of rolling the boulder and where Tantalus is eternally teased with food and water he can never reach.

Flight to Olympus

[Intro]
At odds with the gods
(Might take the next flight)
Pegasus to Olympus

[Bridge]
You know
Here we go

[Refrain]
At odds with the gods
(That’s right)
Take the next flight…
(Pegasus to Olympus)

[Bridge]
You know
(Here we go)
If we fly too high….

[Refrain]
At odds with the gods
(That’s right)
Took the last flight…
(Pegasus to Olympus)

[Bridge]
You know
(It was quite a show)
The flight that night….

[Outro]
The overly brash
(Had to crash)
The flight that night….
(Shone the light)
Insight into incite

ABOUT THE SONG
Flight to Olympus: He attempted to ride Pegasus to the peak of Mount Olympus.

The attempted flight to Mount Olympus was the climax of Bellerophon’s life, fueled by a series of impossible victories that transformed his initial desperation into delusions of divinity.

The Path to Hubris
The Deadly Setup: Bellerophon was sent to King Iobates with a sealed letter ordering his execution. Unwilling to kill a guest directly, Iobates instead sent him on “suicide missions” against the fire-breathing Chimera, the warlike Solymoi, and the Amazons.

Unrivaled Success: With the help of a golden bridle from Athena to tame Pegasus, Bellerophon succeeded in every task. Impressed and fearing divine favor, Iobates eventually gave Bellerophon his daughter in marriage and half his kingdom.

The Cognitive Shift: Now a wealthy king and world-renowned hero, Bellerophon’s perspective shifted. He began to believe his feats weren’t just the result of divine aid, but proof that he belonged among the gods themselves.

The Flight of No Return
Bellerophon’s motivation for the flight is often debated in classical texts:
The Quest for Honor: Some versions suggest he simply wanted the gods to personally honor him for his exploits.

Challenging the Gods: In darker interpretations, like the fragments of Euripides’ lost play Bellerophontes, he may have been flying to Olympus to prove the gods didn’t exist because of the injustices he witnessed on Earth.

The Downfall

[Verse 1]
Slaya’ of the Chimera
(On to defeat the Amazon)
Bigger than the cinema
(You go on and on and on)

[Bridge]
After it all
(The downfall)

[Chorus]
Just like grandfather
(Pushed it further and further)
Oh my, grounded by a gadfly
(The horse bucked… you’re….)
Fa, fa, fa

[Verse 2]
They jumped for joy
(When you defeated the Solymoi)
But when hubris got outta check
(You hadda hit the deck)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
(Fa, fa, fa)
[Instrumental, Synth Solo]
After it all
(The downfall)

[Outro]
La, la, la
(Fa, fa, fa)
After it all
(The downfall)

ABOUT THE SONG
The Downfall
After succeeding in several other legendary labors (defeating the Amazons and the Solymoi), Bellerophon’s pride grew until he believed he deserved to live among the gods.

Flight to Olympus: He attempted to ride Pegasus to the peak of Mount Olympus.
Zeus’s Retribution: Angered by this arrogance, Zeus sent a gadfly to sting Pegasus. The horse bucked, throwing Bellerophon back to earth.
Tragic End: Bellerophon survived the fall but was blinded or crippled. He spent his remaining days wandering the Aleian Plain alone, avoided by both gods and men until his death.

All Uphill

[Verse 1]
Does your rock roll
(Is it all downhill)
Unfortunate goal
(Not to stop ’till the top)

[Bridge]
An eternity
Spent mistaking motion
… for momentum

[Chorus]
Freewill?
It was all uphill
(The downhill part came faster every time)
Faster and faster
(Toward disaster)
Humanity’s crime (I’mmm….)

[Verse 2]
Does your rock roll
(Despite negativity for gravity)
This is no rock n’ roll stroll
(Repet, repet, repetitivity)

[Bridge]
… stupidity
An eternity
Spent mistaking motion
… for momentum

[Chorus]

[Outro]
Is it still
(All up hill)
Why I ask
(The futile task)
Lost your freewill?

ABOUT THE SONG / MORAL OF THE STORY
Because of his chronic deceit and bottomless greed, Sisyphus was condemned for all eternity to roll a massive boulder up a hill—only to watch it thunder back down again. Over and over. It was all uphill.

The tragedy wasn’t just the rock. It was the promise. Each ascent began with a speech about how this time would be different, how the incline was actually leveling off, how the summit had never looked more attainable. The boulder was rebranded as “tremendous.” The slope was declared “the greatest hill in history.” And gravity, of course, was dismissed as a hoax.

But physics is stubborn. So is truth. The rock kept rolling back.

In The End, the punishment wasn’t the labor. It was the repetition—the endless cycle of hype, strain, collapse, and denial. A masterclass in exertion without progress. An eternity spent mistaking motion for momentum.

It was all uphill. And the downhill part came faster every time.

Endless Loop

[Verse 1]
Our situation…
Where to begin?
Human ambition
(Is at it again)

[Chorus]
Is that the goal
Spending the rest of eternity
Wandering in misery
(“Devouring your own soul.”)

[Bridge]
The scoop: (an endless loop)
Loop (loop) loop
Walk the walk
(Push that rock)

[Verse 2]
Make the same mistake
(Twice n’ thrice)
Our final hour
(Seeking power)

[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
Jumping through hoops
(and endless loops)
Loop (loop) loop
(Endless loop)
Loop (loop) loop

ABOUT THE SONG
Because of his chronic deceit and greed, Zeus eventually condemned Sisyphus to Tartarus. His punishment—rolling a massive boulder up a hill only for it to roll back down again for all eternity. This is often interpreted as a metaphor for the futility of human ambition and the hollow nature of seeking power for its own sake.

Sisyphus grandson, Bellerophon, fell from grace due to excessive pride and spent the rest of his life wandering in misery and “devouring his own soul.”

bookmark_borderEndless Loop

[Verse 1]
Our situation…
Where to begin?
Human ambition
(Is at it again)

[Chorus]
Is that the goal
Spending the rest of eternity
Wandering in misery
(“Devouring your own soul.”)

[Bridge]
The scoop: (an endless loop)
Loop (loop) loop
Walk the walk
(Push that rock)

[Verse 2]
Make the same mistake
(Twice n’ thrice)
Our final hour
(Seeking power)

[Chorus]
[Bridge]
[Outro]
Jumping through hoops
(and endless loops)
Loop (loop) loop
(Endless loop)
Loop (loop) loop

ABOUT THE SONG
Because of his chronic deceit and greed, Zeus eventually condemned Sisyphus to Tartarus. His punishment—rolling a massive boulder up a hill only for it to roll back down again for all eternity. This is often interpreted as a metaphor for the futility of human ambition and the hollow nature of seeking power for its own sake.

Sisyphus grandson, Bellerophon, fell from grace due to excessive pride and spent the rest of his life wandering in misery and “devouring his own soul.”

From the album “Sisyphus