bookmark_borderFry an Egg

Fry-an-Egg-0.mp3
Fry-an-Egg-0.mp4
Fry-an-Egg-I.mp3
Fry-an-Egg-I.mp4
Fry-an-Egg-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Is it clear…
Can you hear here
The man said:
(You could fry an egg on my head)

[Bridge]
The atmosphere — (severe!)
Don’t come near

[Verse 2]
In case is isn’t clear…
Steer so you veer
Far from here
Don’t let your feet meet the street
’cause at this rate
(It’s so hot, asphalt has a liquid state)

[Bridge]
Man can’t stand the land
(Why not? It’s too hot)

[Chorus]
Fry an egg on the sidewalk
(Talk, talk, talk)
Take off your flesh
And sit on your bones
(What a mess… carry me home)

[Bridge]
Man can’t see the sea
(Is his destiny)

[Chorus]
Fry an egg on the sidewalk
(Talk, talk, talk)
Take off your flesh
And sit on your bones
(What a mess… carry me home)

[Outro]
Damn it!
(Nowhere left on the planet)

A SCIENCE NOTE

The song “Fry an Egg” is a scathing, surreal portrayal of climate breakdown, using dark humor and physical imagery to express the unlivable heat overtaking the planet. It’s a sonic warning about how absurdly extreme temperatures are becoming—and how humanity’s inaction and “talk, talk, talk” have brought us to the brink.

Literal Interpretation:

This song captures the real-world consequences of extreme heat—from the infamous metaphor of “frying an egg on the sidewalk” to literal conditions now seen globally in cities like Phoenix, Las Vegas, and parts of the Middle East and India. Asphalt softens, surfaces burn skin, and outdoor survival becomes dangerous.

  • “Fry an egg on my head” – A comically exaggerated line that’s now disturbingly plausible, pointing to how body temperatures and ambient heat have reached lethal levels.

  • “The atmosphere — (severe!)” – A blunt acknowledgment of climate extremes fueled by greenhouse gases. The “severe” atmosphere isn’t metaphorical anymore; it’s hostile.

  • “Man can’t stand the land” – Humans, once dominant over their environment, are now being outmatched by their own warming planet.

Figurative Interpretation:

Beneath the absurdity is a harsh critique of denial, paralysis, and failure.

  • “Talk, talk, talk” – This chorus mocks political lip service and empty climate pledges, emphasizing how discourse hasn’t translated into meaningful action.

  • “Take off your flesh and sit on your bones” – A grotesque metaphor for exposure and vulnerability to heat, symbolizing the peeling away of illusions and protections.

  • “Carry me home” – A desperate, possibly fatalistic cry for help or escape when no part of the Earth is safe anymore.

Deeper Themes:

  • “Man can’t see the sea / (Is his destiny)” – A subtle reference to sea-level rise and climate blindness. Humans, especially in leadership, refuse to “see” the consequences that are already flooding in.

  • “Damn it! / (Nowhere left on the planet)” – A final, anguished outburst. The Earth has become inhospitable, perhaps even symbolic of planetary exile—we’ve so altered the climate that there’s nowhere left to run.

Summary:

“Fry an Egg” uses grotesque humor and blunt metaphors to convey the brutal reality of runaway climate heating. It blends absurdity with despair, satirizing society’s indifference and the senselessness of continuing “business as usual” in a world that’s literally melting beneath us.

It’s a dystopian nursery rhyme for adults, echoing with the message:
We joked about frying eggs on sidewalks… and now, we’re the ones cooking.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSteam

Steam-I.mp3
Steam-I.mp4
Steam-II.mp3
Steam-II.mp4
Steam-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
If I’m seeming sad…
(No!) I’m steaming mad
You say sensible heat
(No!) This heat is beat

[Chorus]
I mean the steam
Is a gas
Shattered the dream
Pass to past

[Verse 2]
Vaporization
Causes hesitation
In my thought process

[Verse 3]
Current situation
Clausius-Clapeyron relation
Saturation… more or less

[Chorus]
I mean the steam
Is a gas
Shattered the dream
Pass to past

[Bridge]
Be forewarned (of the storm)
Positive feedback (attack)
Exponentially (inevitability)
Delivers (atmospheric rivers)
Hurricane (going insane)
Heatwaves (nothing saves)

[Chorus]
I mean the steam
Is a gas
Shattered the dream
Pass to past

[Outro]
Be forewarned (of the storm)
Positive feedback (attack)

A SCIENCE NOTE

A burn from steam is generally more severe than a burn from boiling water because of the additional energy stored in steam as latent heat—a concept rooted in thermodynamics and phase changes.

Here’s a breakdown of the physics:

1. Boiling Water: Sensible Heat

  • Boiling water at 100 °C (212 °F) contains sensible heat—the energy required to raise its temperature from room temperature to 100 °C.

  • When this hot water contacts skin, it transfers that thermal energy directly to the tissue, causing a burn.

2. Steam: Latent Heat of Vaporization

  • Steam is water in its gas phase, also at 100 °C, but it contains extra energy beyond just being hot.

  • This extra energy is called the latent heat of vaporization: the energy required to convert liquid water to steam at the same temperature.

    • For water, this is about 2260 kJ/kg, which is over five times the energy required to heat water from 0 °C to 100 °C.

  • When steam contacts your skin, it condenses back into liquid water—and in doing so, it releases all that latent heat into your skin.

3. Why It Hurts More

  • So steam at 100 °C can deliver both:

    • The thermal energy from its temperature (same as boiling water), plus

    • The latent heat from condensing back to water.

  • This double dose of heat energy causes deeper tissue damage in a shorter time.

This concept of latent heat—the same reason steam burns are worse—has direct parallels in climate change, especially regarding extreme weather and the water cycle.

How It Relates to Climate Change:

1. Warmer Atmosphere = More Water Vapor

  • A warmer atmosphere holds exponentially more water vapor (about 7% more per 1°C of warming) due to the Clausius-Clapeyron relation.

  • Water vapor is itself a greenhouse gas, reinforcing warming (positive feedback).

2. More Latent Heat in the System

  • As water evaporates from oceans, lakes, and soil, it stores latent heat—just like steam.

  • When this vapor condenses (in clouds, storms, hurricanes), it releases latent heat, supercharging storms by:

    • Intensifying updrafts in thunderstorms.

    • Powering hurricanes and cyclones.

    • Driving heavier rainfall and flash floods.

3. Steam Burn Analogy

  • Just like condensing steam transfers a massive amount of energy to your skin, condensing atmospheric moisture transfers massive energy to the atmosphere.

  • This leads to more violent weather, akin to the difference between being splashed by boiling water and burned by steam.

Real-World Impacts:

  • Hurricanes: Stronger and wetter due to latent heat release and increased water vapor.

  • Atmospheric Rivers: Carry more moisture, dumping extreme rainfall.

  • Heatwaves + Humidity: Higher latent heat content makes nights hotter and reduces cooling.

Summary:

Latent heat acts like hidden energy in the climate system—just as it makes steam burns worse, it makes storms and extreme weather more powerful in a warming world.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderA Glimpse of the Sun

A-Glimpse-of-the-Sun-0.mp3
A-Glimpse-of-the-Sun-0.mp4
A-Glimpse-of-the-Sun-I.mp3
A-Glimpse-of-the-Sun-I.mp4
A-Glimpse-of-the-Sun-intro.wav

[Verse 1]
Under the shade of my eyelids
My id did get a glimpse of the sun
My eyes realized:
(I see the light!)

[Bridge]
Gaining insight (into the light)
My spirit takes flight
(into the light)
[Instrumental, Flute Solo]

[Chorus]
All the days left to run
(Intend to have them under the sun)
While me and we can be
’cause… (“It ain’t over ’till it’s done!”)

[Verse 2]
Through the skin that’s rather thin
In the shade of my eyelids
I could feel the ray brighten up my day
As my eyes realized:
(I see the light!)

[Bridge]
Gaining insight (into the light)
My spirit takes flight
(into the light)

[Chorus]
All the days left to run
(Intend to have them under the sun)
While me and we can be
’cause… (“It ain’t over ’till it’s done!”)

[Outro]
Soon to discover
(It’s over when it’s over)

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderA Haze

A-Haze-0.mp3
A-Haze-0.mp4
A-Haze-I.mp3
A-Haze-I.mp4
A-Haze-intro.wav

[Intro]
In a haze
(Day to days)

[Verse 1]
The setting of a fire
(The setting of the sun)
Our desire fuels us higher
(Until one has come undone)

[Chorus]
The world set ablaze
Does it cease to amaze
Ignoring all our ways
… does it even phase?

[Bridge]
In a haze
(Day to days)
The color fades
(Smoke’s gray shades)

[Verse 2]
Perpetuates and exacerbates
(Destined to set fates)
Our desire fuels us higher
(For fun we light it on fire)

[Chorus]
The world set ablaze
Does it cease to amaze
Ignoring all our ways
… does it even phase?

[Bridge]
In a haze
(Day to days)

[Chorus]
The world set ablaze
Will we seize to amaze
Ignoring all our ways
… does it even phase?

[Outro]
In a haze
(The End of Days)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “A Haze” is a poetic, haunting reflection on the climate crisis and the global wildfire epidemic, drawing a literal picture of a planet shrouded in smoke while also offering a deeper figurative critique of human apathy, hubris, and denial.

Literal Interpretation – Wildfires and Climate Crisis

[Verse 1]

The setting of a fire / (The setting of the sun)
The dual imagery reflects the literal ignition of wildfires—either by nature or by humans—and how these fires now coincide with the symbolic “setting” or decline of the natural world. The sun setting also hints at smoke-darkened skies and days lost to haze.

Our desire fuels us higher / (Until one has come undone)
This references human overconsumption and the carbon economy, which drive climate change and intensify fire seasons. “Undone” signals collapse—of ecosystems, lives, and climate stability.

[Chorus]

The world set ablaze / Does it cease to amaze
A literal vision of wildfires ravaging continents (California, Australia, Canada). “Does it amaze?” asks: Why are we still shocked? Or worse—are we no longer shocked at all?

Ignoring all our ways / … does it even phase?
Despite knowing the causes—deforestation, fossil fuels, unchecked development—we remain largely indifferent. “Does it even phase?” challenges our emotional numbness and political inaction.

[Bridge]

In a haze / (Day to days) / The color fades / (Smoke’s gray shades)
This paints the visual and psychological toll of wildfire smoke—days blur, skies turn gray, colors and clarity disappear. The literal haze mirrors the mental fog of denial and helplessness that climate disruption brings.

Figurative Interpretation – Psychological & Moral Decay

[Verse 2]

Perpetuates and exacerbates / (Destined to set fates)
Our actions don’t just continue the crisis—they accelerate it. “Set fates” implies that we are writing a tragic future with full awareness, yet still failing to change.

Our desire fuels us higher / (For fun we light it on fire)
This line critiques the reckless, profit-driven motives behind carbon-heavy lifestyles and industries. “For fun” could also refer to luxury, consumption, and carelessness, as if Earth is burning for our amusement.

[Bridge & Chorus Refrain]

The repetition of “In a haze” and “set ablaze” emphasizes both environmental degradation and societal blindness. We’re living through catastrophe, but still carry on “day to days” as if nothing’s changed.

Outro – The Final Warning

In a haze / (The End of Days)
The final words bring the full weight of apocalypse. The haze becomes symbolic of collapse, extinction, and judgment. The climate crisis is no longer abstract—it’s here, and it’s terminal if we don’t act.

Summary:

“A Haze” is a stunning dual metaphor for both wildfires and the psychological smoke-screen we’ve built to avoid confronting our role in planetary collapse. It blends ecological horror with moral introspection, asking:

  • Why do we continue down this path when we see the world burning?

  • Have we become desensitized to destruction?

  • Can we still see clearly—or are we lost in the haze?

It’s a song of reckoning—a smoldering elegy wrapped in ash, asking us if we’ll ever wake up before it’s too late.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderOn Fire

On-Fire-0.mp3
On-Fire-0.mp4
On-Fire-I.mp3
On-Fire-I.mp4
On-Fire-intro.wav

[Intro]
I’m on fire!
(Better sound the alarm… warn of the harm)
Fire!

[Verse 1]
When you turn on on
You ain’t foolin’ around
Though our prime’s long gone
Our trace is still found

[Chorus]
I’m on fire!
(Due to your desire)
Fire!
Taking the temperature…
Higher
(Higher for hire)

[Bridge]
Don’t want to paint a picture
(Of doom and gloom)
Just look to the future
(To see what we’ll be)
Is that what you want to do?

[Verse 2]
When you resume to consume
You ain’t foolin’ around
All those second helpings…
Aren’t helping

[Verse 3]
Look out your siding…
From behind your hiding
The future’s bound to be found
Where you’re residing

[Chorus]
I’m on fire!
(Due to your desire)
Fire!
Taking the temperature…
Higher
(Higher for hire)

[Bridge]
Don’t want to paint a picture
(Of doom and gloom)
Just look to the future
(To see what we’ll be)
Is that what you want to do?

[Outro]
Know the future turned to now
(Now you know)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “On Fire” is a powerful metaphorical expression of Earth speaking directly to humanity—a fiery elegy and warning wrapped in poetic reflection on the climate crisis. The voice of the planet is urgent, wounded, and deeply aware of what human behavior has ignited—literally and figuratively.

 [Verse 1]

When you turn on / You ain’t foolin’ around
This line represents humanity’s relentless activation of industry, consumption, and fossil fuel combustion. “Turning on” implies powering up systems that are destructive.

Though our prime’s long gone / Our trace is still found
Earth remembers a more balanced, thriving era. Yet even in its damaged state, nature’s memory and scars persist—evidence of beauty, and now, of what’s been lost.

 [Chorus]

I’m on fire! (Due to your desire)
Earth is literally burning—through rising temperatures, wildfires, and ecological breakdown—as a direct consequence of human greed and overconsumption.

Taking the temperature… Higher (Higher for hire)
The phrase “for hire” skewers the corporate and political systems that profit from environmental exploitation. Earth’s pain is commodified—sold for short-term gain.

[Bridge]

Don’t want to paint a picture (of doom and gloom)
Earth resists sounding like a prophet of despair—this isn’t just alarmism.
Just look to the future (to see what we’ll be)
The consequences are inevitable and observable—unless change happens now.

Is that what you want to do?
This is the central ethical question: Is this truly the legacy humans want—to push the biosphere past its limits?

[Verse 2]

When you resume to consume / You ain’t foolin’ around
A critique of unsustainable consumption, especially post-crisis or during recovery efforts (e.g., after COVID or disasters), when we resume “normal” without reconsidering what normal caused.

All those second helpings / Aren’t helping
This brilliant wordplay addresses overconsumption and excess—the myth of unlimited growth, indulgence, and unchecked capitalism. We’re not just full—we’re sick.

 [Verse 3]

Look out your siding / From behind your hiding
A call for humanity to stop avoiding the truth. The crisis is right outside our homes—in the heatwaves, the floods, the fires. Denial is no longer protection.

The future’s bound to be found / Where you’re residing
Climate change is not abstract or far away—it’s local, intimate, happening in your backyard.

 [Chorus Repeats]

The repetition reinforces the planet’s condition—set ablaze by desire, denial, and delay.

[Outro]

Know the future turned to now / (Now you know)
There’s no more time to wait. The once-distant climate future is already here, already burning. It’s no longer a question of prevention—it’s a question of how we respond.

Summary:

“On Fire” is a devastating confession from a planet in pain, forced to confront the species it nurtured. It’s not just a warning—it’s a demand for reckoning, responsibility, and reversal. Earth doesn’t want to burn, but it can’t help it if we keep fueling the flames.

The song’s clever mix of irony, rhythm, and stark imagery makes it ideal for performance or adaptation into a climate-awareness video or spoken word.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThese Days

These-Days-I.mp3
These-Days-I.mp4
These-Days-II.mp3
These-Days-II.mp4
These-Days-intro.wav

[Intro]
These days (these days)
Are getting hot
These days (we pay)
For what we’ve got

[Verse 1]
What’s the price of convenience
Compared to the nuance of nuisance
In human consciousness
Can we bear to stare
The devil in the I

[Chorus]
These days (these days)
Are getting hot
These days (we pay)
For what we’ve got

[Bridge]
Just a taste (of our waste)

[Verse 2]
What’s the cost of generations lost
To ignorance and arrogance
Last chance….
To maintain sane through insanity
(To regain humane in humanity)

[Chorus]
These days (these days)
Are getting hot
These days (we pay)
For what we’ve got

[Bridge]
Just a taste (of our waste)
Time we face (our race)
The pace of the human race
Biggest crime (of all time)
Yet we claim no responsibility
(For our part in society)

[Chorus]
These days (these days)
Are getting hot
These days (we pay)
For what we’ve got

[Outro]
Last chance (at a last dance)
Regain humane (in humanity)
Will you dance with me?

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “These Days” is a layered, poetic lament that reflects the escalating urgency of the climate crisis—a raw reckoning with the moral, existential, and generational costs of humanity’s actions. It’s a plea for awakening, responsibility, and reunion with the empathy we’ve lost.

[Verse 1]:

What’s the price of convenience / Compared to the nuance of nuisance…

This opening reflects the central dilemma of climate inaction: we’ve traded long-term sustainability for short-term convenience. The “nuance of nuisance” speaks to our refusal to tolerate discomfort—like policy change, consumption limits, or lifestyle shifts—even when these are necessary.

Can we bear to stare the devil in the I

A powerful twist—“eye” becomes “I,” pointing inward. The “devil” isn’t some external force—it’s ourselves, our denial, our choices. It asks: Can we face our role in this crisis honestly?

[Chorus]:

These days (these days) / Are getting hot

Both literal and metaphorical:

  • Literally, the Earth is getting hotter—heatwaves, wildfires, rising global temperatures.

  • Figuratively, tension is rising—socially, politically, ecologically.

We pay for what we’ve got

This line punches hard. Our gains—industrialization, consumption, comfort—carry hidden costs: biodiversity loss, sea-level rise, atmospheric instability. The bill is due.

[Bridge 1]:

Just a taste (of our waste)

This haunting line suggests we’re only beginning to see the consequences. The floods, fires, and famines today are just previews of what unchecked emissions and environmental degradation will bring.

[Verse 2]:

What’s the cost of generations lost / To ignorance and arrogance

Here, the song widens its lens to intergenerational justice. It condemns the systemic failure to act despite overwhelming evidence. Arrogance = thinking we’re immune. Ignorance = choosing not to know.

Last chance… to maintain sane through insanity / To regain humane in humanity

This is the heart of the message. Amid ecological collapse and political chaos, it begs us to anchor ourselves in compassion, reason, and unity. There’s still a choice to reclaim our humanity before it’s too late.

[Bridge 2]:

Time we face (our race) / The pace of the human race

This wordplay is rich. It’s time to confront:

  • Our species (“race”)

  • Our obsession with speed and growth (“pace”)
    We’ve raced toward profit, consumption, and expansion—at the expense of the planet.

Biggest crime (of all time) / Yet we claim no responsibility

It calls out our collective climate denial and the failure of leadership. Despite knowing the science, we act as if we bear no blame—letting ecosystems collapse while we debate semantics.

[Chorus – repeated]:

These days… are getting hot / We pay for what we’ve got

Repetition reinforces inevitability. These aren’t isolated events; this is the new normal. And it’s directly tied to what we’ve built, bought, and burned.

[Outro]:

Last chance (at a last dance) / Regain humane in humanity / Will you dance with me?

A beautiful, final appeal. The “last dance” could be collapse or redemption. It’s an invitation—to act, to care, to change. It doesn’t end in blame but with a call to collective hope and courage, asking if we’ll step into the solution together.

Summary:

“These Days” is a soulful, unflinching song about the climate crisis. It blends urgency with introspection, critique with compassion. It acknowledges the gravity of what we face—our self-inflicted chaos—yet leaves the door open for connection, healing, and change. It’s not just a warning—it’s a last invitation to dance before the music stops.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderInfernal

Infernal-0.mp3
Infernal-0.mp4
Infernal-I.mp3
Infernal-I.mp4
Infernal-intro.wav

[Verse 1]
We present:
Intensely unpleasant
In the leading role —
Your soul

[Chorus]
Rile your infantile?
(All is infernal)
Well, living in hell
(All is infernal)

[Bridge]
(Burn, baby, burn)
Go to school, fool
(Learn!)

[Verse 2]
For what it’s worth…
Burnt you place of birth —
Earth
(You know, an inferno)

[Chorus]
Rile your infantile?
(All is infernal)
Well, living in hell
(All is infernal)

[Bridge]
(Burn, baby, burn)
Go to school, fool
(Learn!)

[Chorus]
Rile your infantile?
(All is infernal)
Well, living in hell
(All is infernal)

[Outro]
Not hard to tell…
(Living in hell)

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderTo the Touch

To-the-Touch-0.mp3
To-the-Touch-0.mp4
To-the-Touch-I.mp3
To-the-Touch-I.mp4
To-the-Touch-intro.wav

[Intro]
How does it feel
To the touch
(For real)
Hurt much?

[Verse 1]
Did you put your finger to it
And, if so… is it lit
Had you forgot…
It’s way too hot

[Chorus]
How does it feel
To the touch
(For real)
Hurt much?

[Verse 2]
Did you learn
How to burn
Did you earn
Your degree…
In degrees
(Oh, please)

[Chorus]
How does it feel
To the touch
(For real)
Hurt much?

[Bridge]
Ouch!
The third degree
(Is getting to me)
Beyond dead
(Skin’s dead)
I’m tellin’ ya sister
(It’s turned to blister)

[Chorus]
How does it feel
To the touch
(For real)
Hurt much?

[Outro]
Burnt black
(Ain’t no growing back)

A SCIENCE NOTE
Our latest climate model — now incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates, which predicted a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, and signals a dramatic acceleration of warming.

At this level of heating, large regions of the planet will become uninhabitable due to extreme heat, sea level rise, agricultural collapse, and mass migration. Critically, parts of the U.S. are already experiencing wet-bulb temperatures approaching or exceeding 31°C (87.8°F) — a physiological limit beyond which the human body can no longer regulate its internal temperature, even in the shade with ample water.

This is no longer a distant threat. The climate system is entering a phase of compound risk and cascading collapse — and we are already seeing the early signs.

Immediate, radical mitigation and adaptation efforts are now essential to preserve habitable zones, food systems, and public health.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderHandle It

Handle-It-0.mp3
Handle-It-0.mp4
Handle-It-I.mp3
Handle-It-I.mp4
Handle-It-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Can you handle it
(For a bit)

[Verse 1]
The stove is red hot
(Why not)
Stick out your hand
(Do you understand)

[Chorus]
Can you handle it
(For a bit)
Lay your hands
(On who commands)

[Verse 2]
Walk into the fire
(If you so desire)
Who am I to doubt
(Your know about)

[Chorus]
Can you handle it
(For a bit)
Lay your hands
(On who commands)

[Bridge]
The laws… (in the jaws)
Of physics
(Face the music)
Physics
(Sick, sick, sick)
Face the music
(Physics)

[Chorus]
Can you handle it
(For a bit)
Come to understand
(Who’s in command)

[Outro]
Walk into the fire
(If you so desire)
Can you handle it
(For a bit)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Handle It” is a stark, symbolic confrontation with the climate crisis and humanity’s reckless defiance of natural limits. Through visceral metaphors and repetition, it paints a picture of a species arrogantly daring the inevitable—testing the heat, walking into the fire, ignoring the laws of physics—until consequences can no longer be denied.

Verse 1:

The stove is red hot (Why not) / Stick out your hand (Do you understand)

This verse bluntly sets the scene: Earth’s “stove” is heating—global temperatures rising, climate tipping points nearing—yet humanity acts as if pain won’t follow. The image of sticking out one’s hand toward a red-hot stove is a metaphor for our deliberate ignorance or denial, despite clear warnings.

Chorus:

Can you handle it (For a bit) / Lay your hands (On who commands)

The chorus challenges us: How long can we bear the heat before burning? And who really commands—humanity, or the laws of nature? It subtly mocks human arrogance, as we try to “handle” climate chaos with control and short-term thinking. But nature, not man, holds the final say.

Verse 2:

Walk into the fire (If you so desire) / Who am I to doubt (Your know about)

This verse speaks with sarcastic resignation—almost as if Earth (or a wiser voice) is watching us self-destruct, despite knowing better. The “fire” is both literal (wildfires, global heating) and metaphorical (crisis, collapse). The second line ironically nods to human overconfidence, as if our “knowing” is somehow greater than nature’s reality.

Bridge:

The laws… (in the jaws) / Of physics / (Face the music)
Physics / (Sick, sick, sick) / Face the music (Physics)

This is the heart of the message. Physics doesn’t negotiate. It doesn’t care about politics, denial, or optimism. Carbon traps heat. Ice melts. Oceans rise. Fires spread. The phrase “face the music” becomes literal: the “music” is the consequence of our emissions and inaction. The repetition of “sick” conveys moral and physical sickness—a planetary fever.

Final Chorus & Outro:

Come to understand (Who’s in command)
Walk into the fire (If you so desire) / Can you handle it (For a bit)

The ending circles back to the core question—can you truly handle what’s coming? There’s an eerie taunt here: “Go ahead, test the fire. But don’t pretend you weren’t warned.” It leaves us with the urgency of self-awareness, daring listeners to see that Earth is in command now, and if we continue this path, our willful ignorance will be fatal.

Summary:

“Handle It” is a fierce, minimalist allegory about humanity’s dangerous dance with climate disaster. It exposes our arrogance, denial, and flirtation with irreversible consequences, daring us to finally recognize that physics—not politics, not profit—sets the rules. The question “Can you handle it?” becomes not just rhetorical, but existential.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderHow Much I Love You

How-Much-I-Love-You-0.mp3
How-Much-I-Love-You-0.mp4
How-Much-I-Love-You-I.mp3
How-Much-I-Love-You-I.mp4
How-Much-I-Love-You-intro.mp3

[Intro]
You don’t know how much I love you
(If you did, you wouldn’t do what you do)

[Verse 1]
Indeed, look at the deeds of other men
Then look again, at the man within
When it comes to a world of give….
Do you live…
To make or take?

[Chorus]
You don’t know how much I love you
If you did, you wouldn’t do what you do
’cause if we deplete all we eat
There’ll be no place for conceit

[Bridge]
(Retreat)
Time to hide that pride

[Verse 2]
The road you’re on… the path you choose
Hoping to stumble upon win or lose
Alive to strive to thrive?
Do you choose love above…
Or propagate hate

[Chorus]
You don’t know how much I love you
If you did, you wouldn’t do what you do
’cause if we deplete all we eat
There’ll be no place for conceit

[Bridge]
(Retreat)
Time to hide that pride
(Let empathy accompany)
Happiness by your side
(The light we’ll see)
And, it will be alright
(In the light)

[Outro]
You don’t know how much I love you
(If you did, you wouldn’t do what you do)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “How Much I Love You” is a haunting, emotional love letter from Mother Earth to humanity, casting the climate crisis not only as a scientific and political failure—but as a betrayal of love. Through metaphor and gentle confrontation, the song expresses Earth’s unconditional devotion, even as that love is abused and imperiled.

Verse 1:

Indeed, look at the deeds of other men / Then look again, at the man within
When it comes to a world of give…. / Do you live… / To make or take?

This opening invites self-reflection. It contrasts external blame with inner responsibility. Earth is asking: Are you a giver or a taker? In a “world of give,” nature provides freely—air, water, food, shelter. The question is whether humanity reciprocates, or just extracts.

Chorus:

You don’t know how much I love you / If you did, you wouldn’t do what you do
’cause if we deplete all we eat / There’ll be no place for conceit

This is the emotional core. Earth pleads: If you truly felt my love, you wouldn’t exploit me. The line “deplete all we eat” alludes to resource exhaustion—soil, oceans, biodiversity. “No place for conceit” warns that human arrogance will collapse under ecological collapse. There is no pride in ruin.

Bridge:

(Retreat) / Time to hide that pride

A direct call for humility. Earth is urging us to step back from dominance and relearn humility—to stop assuming superiority and start listening.

Verse 2:

The road you’re on… the path you choose / Hoping to stumble upon win or lose
Alive to strive to thrive? / Do you choose love above… / Or propagate hate

The “road” represents the trajectory of civilization—technological growth, consumption, division. The verse questions whether humanity is guided by love and care (for one another, and the planet), or whether we’re sowing hate and destruction. It’s a challenge to live with purpose, not drift toward ruin.

Second Chorus & Extended Bridge:

Let empathy accompany / Happiness by your side
(The light we’ll see) / And, it will be alright / (In the light)

This expands the message: there is still hope—if we choose empathy, humility, and unity, we can find a way forward. “The light” suggests healing and balance, not just survival but joy and coexistence.

Outro:

You don’t know how much I love you / (If you did, you wouldn’t do what you do)

A soft, sorrowful return to the beginning, leaving us with guilt wrapped in love. It’s not anger—it’s disappointment, and a last chance to awaken before it’s too late.

Summary:

“How Much I Love You” is a climate elegy framed as a love song. Mother Earth voices a gentle yet powerful lament, mourning not just environmental destruction but the loss of a sacred bond. The song implores humanity to remember that we are loved—and to start loving back through care, restraint, and a renewed relationship with the planet.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderOn the Road

On-the-Road-0.mp3
On-the-Road-0.mp4
On-the-Road-I.mp3
On-the-Road-I.mp4
On-the-Road-intro.mp3

[Intro]
On the road to nowhere
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Are we aware…
(We’re already there]

[Verse 1]
Headed off (bound for determination)
Some may scoff (at our misconception)
In search of the puzzle piece
Instead of the unpuzzled peace

[Chorus]
On the road to nowhere
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Setting the pace
(Leading the race)
On the road to nowhere
Are we aware…
(We’re already there]

[Verse 2]
On our way (the blind leading the blind)
Another day (forgetting the kind kind)
We say, “hope and pray”
That everything will be OK

[Chorus]
On the road to nowhere
Setting the pace
(Leading the race)
On the road to nowhere
Are we aware…
(We’re already there]

[Bridge]
Unaware
(Without a care)
Friends beware
(Know not their share)

[Outro]
On the road to nowhere
Are we aware…
(We’re already there]

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “On the Road” serves as a somber, poetic reflection on humanity’s misguided journey through the climate crisis. It critiques our collective delusion of progress while warning that our current path—driven by denial, consumerism, and false hope—is not leading to a solution, but rather to environmental collapse. Here’s a detailed interpretation:

Verse 1:

Headed off (bound for determination) / Some may scoff (at our misconception) / In search of the puzzle piece / Instead of the unpuzzled peace

This verse critiques the misdirected determination of humanity. We pursue technological or political “solutions” (“the puzzle piece”) without addressing the underlying truth—that peace with nature (the “unpuzzled peace”) requires humility and restraint. The “misconception” could point to the belief that growth and innovation alone will save us.

Chorus:

On the road to nowhere
Setting the pace / (Leading the race)
On the road to nowhere / Are we aware… / (We’re already there)

This chorus is the song’s core warning. We are racing to be first in progress, industry, or GDP, but we’re headed toward ecological oblivion—”nowhere.” The chilling realization—”We’re already there”—says we may have already passed key climate tipping points while still pretending there’s time to spare.

Verse 2:

On our way (the blind leading the blind) / Another day (forgetting the kind kind) / We say, ‘hope and pray’ / That everything will be OK

Here, the song speaks to passivity and denial. Leaders (and followers) are blind to the climate consequences, and we forget to show compassion (“the kind kind”)—to the Earth, to future generations, even to each other. “Hope and pray” reflects the danger of wishful thinking without action.

Bridge:

Unaware / (Without a care) / Friends beware / (Know not their share)

This bridge reveals a society unaware of its role and responsibility in the crisis. “Friends beware” is a call to action: even well-meaning people are complicit if they don’t recognize “their share” of the problem—be it carbon footprint, consumption, or silence.

Outro:

On the road to nowhere / Are we aware… / (We’re already there)

The repetition drives home the central idea: we are already deep into the consequences of climate change. The question of awareness isn’t rhetorical—it’s a challenge to the listener. Are we really paying attention? Or are we still speeding ahead, confident in our direction, while the world unravels?

Summary:

“On the Road” is a metaphorical, melancholic anthem about climate inertia and spiritual disorientation. It exposes how humanity continues to charge forward—blinded by ambition, false hope, and distraction—on a road that leads not to salvation, but to collapse already unfolding. The song invites reflection on whether we’re willing to turn around, or whether we’ll keep “leading the race” to nowhere.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderGoing Up

Going-Up-I.mp3
Going-Up-I.mp4
Going-Up-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3
Going-Up-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4
Going-Up-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Hold on! (This lift is going up)
Is that right? (Yup, going up)
To the top (might never stop)

[Verse 1]
1 point 1
(And we’re not done)
I’ll see you
(at 1 point 2)

[Bridge]
Hold on! (This lift is going up)
To the top (might never stop)
Is that right? (Yup, going up)
Hold tight!!

[Chorus]
You can depend
On the demand
Of man
He’ll come to know
How far to go
Below

[Verse 2]
Pushed right through
(1 point 2)
Didn’t pause to see
(1 point 3)

[Bridge]
Hold on! (This lift is going up)
We’re rollin’ on by (headed high)
(Is that right?) Yup, going up
(Hold tight!)

[Verse 3]
1 point 4
(No, no more)
Past 1 point 5
(Can no longer thrive)

[Bridge]
Hold on! (This lift is going up)
To the top (might never stop)
(Is that right?) Yup, going up
(Hold tight!)

[Chorus]
You can depend
On the demand
Of man
He’ll come to know
How far to go
(…. so)

[Outro]
Hold on! (This lift is going up)
(Is that right?) Yup, going up
(Hold tight!)
To the top (might never stop)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Going Up” uses the metaphor of an unstoppable elevator ride to capture the terrifying escalation of global temperatures due to human-driven climate change. It’s a stark, cleverly minimalist narrative about humanity’s relentless pursuit of growth and consumption—even as the climate “lift” speeds toward collapse.

Verse 1:

1 point 1 / (And we’re not done) / I’ll see you / (at 1 point 2)

This introduces global temperature rise in degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. At 1.1°C, we’ve already seen devastating effects—but the line “we’re not done” underscores our inertia. “I’ll see you at 1.2” suggests we’re on track to go higher, almost passively.

Bridge:

Hold on! (This lift is going up) / To the top (might never stop)

The lift represents the climate trajectory—an industrial, mechanical metaphor for a world getting hotter. The repeated “might never stop” is ominous: we are on an upward trajectory that, without drastic intervention, could spiral out of control.

Chorus:

You can depend / On the demand / Of man / He’ll come to know / How far to go / Below

This is a powerful indictment of human consumption and economic systems. The “demand of man” is driving climate change, and while “you can depend” on this relentless drive, it will ultimately bring humanity “below”—suggesting collapse, death, or moral and ecological ruin. It plays on the irony that “going up” in temperature means “going down” in survivability.

Verse 2:

Pushed right through / (1 point 2) / Didn’t pause to see / (1 point 3)

Here, the temperature climb continues—we skip past thresholds without heeding their warning signs. The lines emphasize recklessness and acceleration—we don’t stop to reflect or redirect.

Verse 3:

1 point 4 / (No, no more) / Past 1 point 5 / (Can no longer thrive)

This is the heart of the warning. 1.5°C is the widely accepted upper limit to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. Going beyond it risks triggering irreversible tipping points—melting ice sheets, dying coral reefs, mass displacement. “Can no longer thrive” implies the breakdown of ecological and social systems.

Outro:

Hold on! (This lift is going up) / (Is that right?) Yup, going up / (Hold tight!) / To the top (might never stop)

The song ends as it began: still climbing, still accelerating. The repetition of “Yup, going up” becomes chilling—a robotic affirmation of our trajectory, devoid of accountability or alarm.

Summary:

“Going Up” is a climate alarm bell in musical form. The imagery of rising temperature milestones—1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5°C—acts as both mile markers and warnings, and the “lift” captures how quickly, and thoughtlessly, we’re rising toward catastrophe. It critiques the faith in endless growth and technological progress while warning that this path leads to collapse below.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSmokin’

Smokin-0.mp3
Smokin-0.mp4
Smokin-I.mp3
Smokin-I.mp4
Smokin-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(Wow-eee!)
Did you see?

[Verse 1]
She….
(Is hot)
In case you forgot
(She’s hot)
With all she’s got

[Bridge]
Is she too hot
(Too, too hot)

[Chorus]
I ain’t jokin’
When I say she’s smokin’
Her entire attire
(Is on fire!)

[Bridge]
(Wow-eee!)
Did you see?

[Verse 2]
She is hot
(She’s on fire)
In case you forgot
(Take her higher)
With all you’ve got

[Bridge]
Is she too hot
(Too, too hot)

[Chorus]
I ain’t jokin’
When I say she’s smokin’
Her entire attire
(Is on fire!)

[Outro]
Is she too hot
(Too, too hot)

ABOUT THE SONG
The song “Smokin’” uses double entendre and wordplay to deliver a sharp allegory for the climate crisis, portraying Mother Nature (“She”) as both alluring and burning, quite literally. Beneath its catchy, flirtatious tone lies a warning about planetary overheating, and humanity’s dangerously passive or admiring gaze as the planet ignites.

Verse 1:

She… (Is hot) / In case you forgot / (She’s hot) / With all she’s got

“Hot” serves a dual meaning—on the surface, it’s sensual; deeper down, it signals dangerous temperature rise. “In case you forgot” hints at willful ignorance of nature’s current state. “With all she’s got” reflects both her abundance and the fury now unleashed as a result of environmental abuse.

Bridge:

Is she too hot (Too, too hot)

A rhetorical question—inviting the listener to reconsider whether we’ve crossed the climatic point of no return. Repetition of “too” drives the idea of excess, suggesting that nature’s rising heat is no longer a metaphor, but a physical, global threat.

Chorus:

I ain’t jokin’ / When I say she’s smokin’ / Her entire attire / (Is on fire!)

The cheeky tone contrasts with a deadly message: “smokin’” is literal. Wildfires, rising global temperatures, and burning landscapes are her “attire.” The phrase “I ain’t jokin’” cuts through the flirtatious language, reminding listeners that this is real—she’s burning, and it’s no joke.

Verse 2:

She is hot / (She’s on fire) / In case you forgot / (Take her higher) / With all you’ve got

This verse is even more pointed. “She’s on fire” is no longer metaphor—it evokes climate extremes, wildfires, heatwaves. “Take her higher / with all you’ve got” is darkly ironic, showing how our relentless consumption is pushing temperatures—and the crisis—even further.

Outro:

Is she too hot (Too, too hot)

Repeating this question leaves the listener with a moral reckoning. It echoes the question: have we pushed nature past the limit?

Summary:

“Smokin’” disguises a climate crisis dirge beneath a stylized, playful surface. Mother Nature is depicted as a beautiful woman whose beauty has turned lethal due to human carelessness. The song cleverly critiques how society objectifies and romanticizes nature, even as it burns her alive. It exposes our tendency to admire the disaster instead of averting it.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderTo Too Hot

To-Too-Hot-0.mp3
To-Too-Hot-0.mp4
To-Too-Hot-I.mp3
To-Too-Hot-I.mp4
To-Too-Hot-II.mp3
To-Too-Hot-II.mp4
To-Too-Hot-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Hey, about today
Are we on our way
To too hot
If no… why not?

[Bridge]
(On our way… today)

[Verse 1]
Another record year is here
Yet, humanity shows no fear
Our self-inflicted end nears
To resounding cheers

[Chorus]
(Hey!) …about today
Are we on our way
To too hot
(If no… why not?)

[Bridge]
Look at what we’ve brought
(With all the crap we bought)
Watching souls rot
What you paid for… (you got)

[Verse 2]
The temperature’s going higher
Set the whole wide world on fire
Now there’s no place to hide
Guess we’re along for the ride

[Chorus]
(Hey!) …about today
We are on our way
To too hot
(In case you forgot)

[Bridge]
Look at what we’ve brought
(With all the crap we bought)
Watching souls rot
What you paid for… (you got)

[Chorus]
(Hey!) …about today
We are on our way
To too hot
(In case you forgot)

[Outro]
The ultimate goal
(Rotting of the soul)

A SCIENCE NOTE
The song “To Too Hot” is a biting and urgent commentary on the climate crisis, portraying humanity as willfully marching toward environmental catastrophe while celebrating its own destruction.

Verse 1:

Another record year is here / Yet, humanity shows no fear / Our self-inflicted end nears / To resounding cheers

This verse highlights climate denial and complacency. Despite consecutive record-breaking years of heat (a clear consequence of global warming), humanity remains indifferent—even celebratory. The “resounding cheers” may symbolize consumerist pride or blind optimism, ignoring the grim reality.

Chorus:

(Hey!) …about today / Are we on our way / To too hot / (If no… why not?)

The chorus is a call to consciousness. The phrasing “To too hot” implies an irreversible tipping point—a world made unlivable by heat. The parenthetical “If no… why not?” suggests sarcasm, confronting listeners who dismiss the crisis with a challenge: why aren’t we taking action if we’re not headed there?

Bridge:

Look at what we’ve brought / (With all the crap we bought) / Watching souls rot / What you paid for… (you got)

This section condemns consumer culture as a key driver of environmental destruction. The line “souls rot” connects spiritual decay with material excess. “What you paid for… you got” emphasizes that the climate consequences are the direct result of our choices.

Verse 2:

The temperature’s going higher / Set the whole wide world on fire / Now there’s no place to hide / Guess we’re along for the ride

A bleak update: things are worsening rapidly, with climate disasters becoming inescapable. The fire metaphor evokes literal wildfires and a planet in peril. The resignation in “along for the ride” hints at fatalism—a passive acceptance of doom.

Chorus (Reprise):

(Hey!) …about today / We are on our way / To too hot / (In case you forgot)

Repetition of the chorus drives home the urgency. The added line “In case you forgot” suggests society’s short attention span and repeated failure to act meaningfully on climate warnings.

Outro:

The ultimate goal / (Rotting of the soul)

A final, haunting note that ties it all together. It implies that the true cost of ignoring the crisis is not just ecological collapse but moral and spiritual ruin. The “goal” could be sarcastic—a reflection of how our systems prioritize short-term profit over long-term survival, leading to ethical and existential decay.

Summary:

To Too Hot” is a scathing critique of climate apathy, consumerism, and moral decay in the face of escalating global heating. It warns of an impending environmental collapse caused by our own hands—and our refusal to change. The song calls out the disconnect between the gravity of the crisis and the banality of our behavior, urging a wake-up before it’s too late.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderJust Hold Your Breath

Just-Hold-Your-Breath-I.mp3
Just-Hold-Your-Breath-I.mp4
Just-Hold-Your-Breath-II.mp3
Just-Hold-Your-Breath-II.mp4
Just-Hold-Your-Breath-intro.mp3

[Intro]
They say:
“Start with the breathing”
Each day…
On the depth and breadth
(Of your breath)

[Bridge]
Focus
(On what’s left of us)
Kick up a fuss!

[Verse 1]
Passing through the graveyard
(Just hold your breath)
Going through a tunnel
(Just hold your breath)

[Chorus]
They say:
“Start with the breathing”
Each day…
On the depth and breadth
(Of your breath)

[Bridge]
Focus
(On what’s left of us)
Kick up a fuss!

[Verse 2]
Traveling over a bridge
(Just hold your breath)
Amidst the urge to submerge
(Just hold your breath)

[Chorus]
They say:
“Start with the breathing”
Each day…
On the depth and breadth
(Of your breath)

[Bridge]
Focus
(On what’s left of us)
Kick up a fuss!

[Outro]
If you’re afraid of your death
(Just hold your breath)

From the album “Under Control

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment