bookmark_borderSquawking Bird

Squawking-Bird-0.mp3
Squawking-Bird-0.mp4
Squawking-Bird-I.mp3
Squawking-Bird-I.mp4
Squawking-Bird-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Standing at the podium
Spouting out about
Ad nauseam
And raising doubt

[Chorus]
Gawking bird
(Squawking the absurd)
Squawking bird
(No truth in word)
Word.

[Verse 2]
Trying to address
Failing to impress
Rhetoric and lies
Need to die
(Realize!)
Try!

[Chorus]
Gawking bird
(Squawking the absurd)
Squawking bird
(No truth in word)
Word.

[Bridge]
Spouting out
(Casting doubt)
Can’t figure out
(A word that you say)
Any way
(Anyway)
Not another day
(No, no way)

[Chorus]
Gawking bird
(Squawking the absurd)
Squawking bird
(No truth in word)
Word.

[Outro]
Absurd squawking bird
(No truth in word)
Word.

ABOUT THE SONG

  • Verse 1 (“standing at the podium, spouting out about ad nauseam, and raising doubt”) sets the scene: Trump at his podium, speaking at length — often repeating himself, overwhelming audiences with endless talking points, and most importantly, sowing confusion and distrust.

  • Chorus (“gawking bird / squawking the absurd / no truth in word”) paints Trump as a loud, attention-grabbing figure — much like a noisy bird — whose statements are full of absurdities and falsehoods. The repetition of “Word” at the end emphasizes the hollowness of his speech, as if even the act of “speaking” has lost its meaning.

  • Verse 2 (“trying to address, failing to impress, rhetoric and lies need to die”) points out that while Trump may have tried to tackle serious issues, his reliance on bombast, misinformation, and self-promotion led to failure to inspire trust or confidence. There’s a plea for honesty and clarity (“Realize! Try!”), suggesting frustration with his unwillingness or inability to do better.

  • Bridge (“spouting out, casting doubt, can’t figure out a word that you say”) highlights how his speech often seemed incoherent or contradictory — to the point where listeners struggled to follow or believe anything being said. The repeated feeling of “not another day” expresses weariness and desperation from the public.

  • Chorus and Outro (“absurd squawking bird / no truth in word”) drive home the image of Trump’s press conferences as a noisy spectacle of nonsense and lies, offering no real leadership or communication, only empty, chaotic sound.

From the album “Under Control

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThe Commander

The-Commander-0.mp3
The-Commander-0.mp4
The-Commander-I.mp3
The-Commander-I.mp4
The-Commander-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3
The-Commander-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4
The-Commander-Unplugged.mp3
The-Commander-Unplugged.mp4
The-Commander-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Under the command (of man)
The commander in chief
Offers no relief (just grief)
From what I can understand
(He can’t command)

[Bridge]
Oh (no!) He doesn’t understand

[Chorus]
So our going gets tough
As he makes it rough
Uncle! (Sam) We’ve had enough
(Oh) Please let go
(Set me free! Let us be!)

[Verse 2]
The damned do demand
The commander in chief
Remove faith in belief
(Oh) The message they send…
They can’t comprehend
Bringing on The End

[Bridge]
Oh (no!) Man doesn’t understand

[Chorus]
So our going gets tough
As he makes it rough
Uncle! (Sam) We’ve had enough
(Oh) Please let go
(Set me free! Let us be!)

[Outro]
Oh (no!) Man doesn’t understand
They can’t comprehend
Bringing on The End

ABOUT THE SONG

  • Verse 1 (“Under the command of man,” “commander in chief offers no relief”) suggests that while Trump holds the title of Commander in Chief, he provides no real leadership, comfort, or solutions — only grief and hardship. The line “He can’t command” underlines a view that he lacks the ability or competence needed for serious leadership.

  • Bridge (“Oh no! He doesn’t understand”) bluntly states that Trump does not grasp the gravity or complexity of his responsibilities, leaving the country rudderless.

  • Chorus (“our going gets tough as he makes it rough,” “Uncle Sam, we’ve had enough”) captures a sense of national exhaustion — the harder things get for Americans, the more Trump’s actions exacerbate the suffering. The call to “let go” and “set me free” reflects a desperate public desire to break free from his control and failures.

  • Verse 2 (“the damned do demand,” “remove faith in belief”) implies that Trump’s leadership is so corrosive that it leads people to lose faith not just in him, but in the very institutions and ideals he represents. The “message they send” — though urgent — “can’t comprehend” the full consequences of their own actions, meaning both Trump and his supporters may be unknowingly hastening national decline.

  • Bridge and Outro (“bringing on The End”) reinforce that Trump’s inability to understand or lead is portrayed as not just damaging — but potentially apocalyptic, accelerating America’s collapse.

From the album “Under Control

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderUnder Control

Under-Control-0.mp3
Under-Control-0.mp4
Under-Control-I.mp3
Under-Control-I.mp4
Under-Control-II.mp3
Under-Control-II.mp4
Under-Control-Reggae.mp3
Under-Control-Reggae.mp4
Under-Control-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Under control of the resident president
(Nothing is under control)
His role…
(Is out of control)

[Verse 1]
As our eyes roll
(Heads roll)
He’s taking his toll
On our nation’s soul

[Chorus]
Under control of the resident president
(Nothing is under control)
His role…
(Is out of control)

[Bridge]
Chaos (upon us)
Disastrous (economy)
Disastrous (in all we see)
Ridiculousness (mess)
Thick in slapstick

[Verse 2]
Under the control
(Of moles and trolls)
They have no goals
(“Let the heads roll”)

[Chorus]
Under control of the resident president
(Nothing is under control)
His role…
(Is out of control)

[Bridge]
Chaos (upon us)
Disastrous (economy)
Disastrous (in all we see)
Ridiculousness (mess)
Thick in slapstick

[Outro]
Chaos (upon us)
Disastrous (economy)
Disastrous (in all we see)
Ridiculousness (mess)
Thick in slapstick

ABOUT THE SONG

  • Verse 1 (“eyes roll,” “taking his toll on our nation’s soul”) suggests widespread public disillusionment and exhaustion as Trump continues — after already being in power — to further damage the moral and foundational integrity of the country.

  • Chorus (“under control of the resident president / nothing is under control”) is deeply ironic. It highlights a contradiction — although Trump firmly holds presidential power during his second term, the situation feels increasingly chaotic and leaderless, suggesting either heightened incompetence, authoritarian overreach, or both.

  • Bridge (“chaos upon us,” “disastrous economy,” “ridiculousness thick in slapstick”) paints a picture of accelerating societal and economic collapse. The government’s actions seem absurd or clownish, resembling slapstick comedy — but the outcomes are gravely serious and destructive.

  • Verse 2 (“under the control of moles and trolls,” “no goals”) suggests that Trump’s second-term administration is dominated by bad actors, conspiracy theorists, and opportunists — people focused more on disruption and personal gain than on governance, with no real goals other than perpetuating chaos (“let the heads roll”).

  • Repetition of chaos and disaster in the outro emphasizes that disorder and decline are no longer shocking — they have become entrenched and inescapable realities under Trump’s ongoing leadership.

From the album “Under Control

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

bookmark_borderSlice of the Pie

Slice-of-the-Pie-I.mp3
Slice-of-the-Pie-I.mp4
Slice-of-the-Pie-II.mp3
Slice-of-the-Pie-II.mp4
Slice-of-the-Pie-intro.mp3

[Intro]
What’s your slice of the pie
[Bridge]
Do you wonder why?
The angle’s getting tight
(Squint with all your might)

[Refrain]
Is it getting smaller
(Smaller and smaller)
Shrinkage of your dollar
(Smaller and smaller)

[Chorus]
What’s your slice of the pie
(Not like the good ole days)
Life’s changed in so many ways
(What’s your slice of the pie)

[Bridge]
Do you wonder why?
(Pay taxes and die)

(What’s your slice of the pie)

[Refrain]
Is it getting smaller
(Smaller and smaller)
Shrinkage of your dollar
(Smaller and smaller)

[Chorus]
What’s your slice of the pie
(Not like the good ole days)
Life’s changed in so many ways
(What’s your slice of the pie)

[Outro]
Do you wonder why?
(Pay taxes and die)
The angle’s getting tight
(Squint with all your might)

From the album “Angle

bookmark_borderInfinitely

Infinitely-I.mp3
Infinitely-I.mp4
Infinitely-II.mp3
Infinitely-II.mp4
Infinitely-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Degrees
(Go on infinitely)
When one sees
(Mathematically)

[Verse 1]
A full circle
(Three hundred and sixty degrees)
If our will stands still
(Infinity’s reality frees)

[Chorus]
Degrees
(Go on infinitely)
When one sees
(Mathematically)

[Bridge]
Number upon number
(And on and on)
Smaller and smaller
(But never gone)
Goes on and on
(And on and on)

[Verse 2]
Between any two
(There’s quite a few)
It got to an amount
(I think I lost count)
Now it’s starting to dawn
(To infinity… and beyond!)

[Chorus]
Degrees
(Go on infinitely)
When one sees
(Mathematically)

[Bridge]
Number upon number
(And on and on)
Smaller and smaller
(But never gone)
Goes on and on
(And on and on)

[Outro]
Degrees
(Go on infinitely)
When one sees
(Mathematically)

A MATH AND SCIENCE NOTE

There are infinitely many degrees when you think about it mathematically!

In angles:

  • A full circle is 360 degrees.

  • But between any two degrees (like between 45° and 46°), you can have 45.1°, 45.01°, 45.001°, 45.0001°, and so on — forever.

  • Decimals can go on infinitely, meaning you can always divide degrees smaller and smaller without limit.

 So technically, even though a circle is “only” 360°, the number of possible degree measurements is infinite because you can have infinitely small subdivisions.

In temperature:

  • Same thing! You can have 20°C, 20.5°C, 20.05°C, 20.005°C… endlessly.

  • Temperatures can also be divided infinitely smaller.

From the album “Angle

bookmark_borderStraight

Straight-0.mp3
Straight-0.mp4
Straight-I.mp3
Straight-I.mp4
Straight-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Is a straight angle
An angle at all
(What do you recall?)

[Verse 1]
Alas math class
Seems so long ago
(I just don’t know)

[Chorus]
Is a straight angle
An angle at all
(What do you recall?)

[Verse 2]
Jog my memory
Of geometry
(Help me see)

[Chorus]
Is a straight angle
An angle at all
(What do you recall?)

[Bridge]
More and more over time
(Looking like a straight line)
All the time that I spend
(I still don’t see a bend)
Are you telling me
(Flat is where it’s at)
Really?
Come on
(Oxymoron)

[Chorus]
Is a straight angle
An angle at all
(What do you recall?)

[Outro]
The point is much too dull
(Of a straight angle)

From the album “Angle

bookmark_borderSharp

Sharp-I.mp3
Sharp-I.mp4
Sharp-II.mp3
Sharp-II.mp4
Sharp-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Just a degree or two
Separating me from you
Getting to the point
To anoint

[Chorus]
Our authority
(In amour-ity)
Is growing
(And showing)

[Verse 2]
The angle of the tip
Getting to the point
Into my heart you rip
Welcome to Cupid’s joint

[Chorus]
Our authority
(In amour-ity)
Is growing
(And showing)

[Bridge]
Here’s to knowing
(You, too)
Let the love out
(Show it about)
Let the love show
(So all will know)

[Chorus]
Our ability
(In amour-ity)
Is growing
(And showing)

[Outro]
Here’s to knowing
(You, too)

From the album “Angle

bookmark_borderTo What Degree?

To-What-Degree-0.mp3
To-What-Degree-0.mp4
To-What-Degree-I.mp3
To-What-Degree-I.mp4
To-What-Degree-intro.mp3

[Intro]
To what degree…
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(Guess we’ll see)

[Verse 1]
What degree of reaction
To reach sanctification
To what height…
In Fahrenheit?

[Bridge]
To what degree…
(Guess we’ll see)
Apparently (to what degree)

[Chorus]
Fulfill (part of a circle)
Position (as notes transition)
Reaction to change
(Seem strange?)

[Verse 2]
What degree of education
Feel our saturation
Tell us…
In Celsius!

[Bridge]
To what degree…
Apparently (the degree)
To which (I’m free)

[Chorus]
Fulfill (part of a circle)
Position (as notes transition)
Reaction to change
(Seem strange?)

[Outro]
Now you see…
(To what degree)

A MATH AND SCIENCE NOTE

A “degree” can mean different things depending on the subject! Here’s a clear breakdown:

Degrees for Angles:

  • 1 degree (°) = 1/360th of a full circle.

  • Used in geometry, trigonometry, navigation, engineering, etc.

  • Example: A right angle = 90 degrees.

Degrees for Temperature:

  • Measures how hot or cold something is.

  • Different temperature scales:

    • Celsius (°C): Water freezes at 0°C, boils at 100°C.

    • Fahrenheit (°F): Water freezes at 32°F, boils at 212°F.

    • Kelvin (K): Absolute temperature scale used in science — no “degree” symbol for Kelvin, just “K.”

Degree in Education:

  • A degree is also an award given by a school or university (like a bachelor’s degree, master’s degree, doctorate).

Degree in Music:

  • Refers to the position of a note in a scale.

  • Example: In C major, C is the 1st degree, D is the 2nd degree, E is the 3rd degree, etc.

Degree of Reaction/Change (in chemistry and physics):

  • Sometimes “degree” means the extent or intensity of a reaction, transformation, or phase change.

  • Example: Degree of dissociation in a chemical reaction.

 Quick summary:

Field What “degree” measures
Angles Part of a full circle
Temperature Level of heat/cold
Education Level of academic achievement
Music Position of a note in a scale
Chemistry/Physics Extent of a reaction or change

From the album “Angle

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderUntangle

Untangle-I.mp3
Untangle-I.mp4
Untangle-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3
Untangle-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4
Untangle-intro.mp3

[Intro]
The human angle
(Ever harder to untangle)

[Bridge]
Must confess
(Quite a mess)

[Verse 1]
Our vectors
Getting all entwined
Lost hectors
Of forest that we mined

[Chorus]
The human angle
(Ever harder to untangle)
Standing on our shoelaces
(Falling on our faces)

[Bridge]
Untangle
(Our angle)
Must confess
(Quite a mess)

[Verse 2]
Our vectors
Getting all entwined
Lost hectors
Of forest that we mined

[Chorus]
Figuring our angle
(Ever harder to untangle)
Shoelaces tied together
(Tripping now to nether)

[Bridge]
Untangle
(Our angle)
Quite a mess
(Hard to digest)

[Chorus]
Figuring our angle
(Ever harder to untangle)
Weather together
(Whether to nether)

[Outro]
Couldn’t untangle
(Our warped angle)
Quite a mess
(Failed the test)

A MATH AND SCIENCE NOTE

A vector diagram of human-induced climate change would show:

  • Each major human activity as a vector (an arrow).

  • Each vector would have:

    • Magnitude = how strong the effect is (how much it drives climate change).

    • Direction = what type of effect it causes (warming, cooling, feedback loops, etc.).

Some of the main vectors would be:

Activity Vector Direction Vector Magnitude
Burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas) Strongly toward global warming Very large
Deforestation Toward warming (loss of carbon sinks) Large
Industrial agriculture Toward warming (methane, nitrous oxide) Medium-large
Aerosol pollution (tiny particles) Slightly toward cooling (reflect sunlight) Small-medium
Urbanization (heat islands) Toward local and global warming Medium
Climate feedback loops (like melting ice reducing reflectivity) Toward accelerated warming Growing rapidly

How the diagram would look:

  • A large cluster of vectors mostly pointing in the same general warming direction.

  • A few smaller vectors pointing opposite (cooling, like aerosols) — but not strong enough to cancel out the warming ones.

  • Some vectors bending and amplifying others, showing feedback loops (ex: hotter temperatures = more wildfires = more CO₂ released = even hotter temperatures).

Conceptually:

  • Human-induced climate change would look like an overwhelmingly strong push (vector sum) toward global warming.

  • The overall resultant vector would be:

    • Very long

    • Very sharply pointed toward higher temperatures, more extreme weather, rising seas, ecosystem collapse, etc.

In simple terms:
Imagine a bunch of arrows (vectors) — the biggest and most powerful ones (like fossil fuel burning) all point toward “Warming” with huge force. A few tiny arrows (like aerosol cooling) point the other way, but they’re way too small to stop the giant surge.

From the album “Angle

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRaise the Specter

Raise-the-Specter-0.mp3
Raise-the-Specter-0.mp4
Raise-the-Specter-I.mp3
Raise-the-Specter-I.mp4
Raise-the-Specter-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Bridge]
(Oh, of course)

[Verse 1]
Very sharply pointed
(Higher and higher)
Showing our direction
(Aspire to dire)

[Chorus]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Bridge]
Made us veer
(Time we steer)
Clearly (back to reality)

[Verse 2]
A large cluster of vectors
(Pointing the same way)
So much for the hecklers
(Wallow in dismay)

[Chorus]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Bridge]
Made us veer
(Time we steer)
Clearly (back to reality)

[Chorus]
Raise the specter
(To our vector)
We’re the force
(Throwing us off course)

[Outro]
Steer us (nearly)
Clearly (to reality)

A MATH AND SCIENCE NOTE

What are vectors?

  • A vector is something that has both magnitude (size) and direction.

  • It’s like an arrow:

    • The length shows how strong it is.

    • The arrowhead shows where it’s going.

Examples of vectors:

  • Wind blowing at 10 mph east.

  • A car moving 60 mph northwest.

  • Force pushing an object 5 Newtons upward.

Not just size — also where it’s aimed.

What is the angle between two or more vectors called?

It’s simply called the angle between the vectors.

More formally:

  • It’s the smallest angle you would rotate one vector around to make it line up with the other.

  • It’s important because it shows how closely two directions or forces are aligned.

  • In physics and math, you often calculate it using the dot product formula:

cos⁡(θ)=A⃗⋅B⃗∣A⃗∣∣B⃗∣\cos(\theta) = \frac{\vec{A} \cdot \vec{B}}{|\vec{A}||\vec{B}|}

where:

  • θ\theta = the angle between the vectors

  • A⃗⋅B⃗\vec{A} \cdot \vec{B} = dot product (a way of multiplying two vectors)

  • ∣A⃗∣|\vec{A}| and ∣B⃗∣|\vec{B}| = magnitudes (lengths) of the vectors

Why is the angle between vectors important?

  • In physics, it helps understand how much one force affects another.

  • In engineering, it tells you how efficiently forces work together (or against each other).

  • In navigation, it shows how far off-course you are.

Simple picture:

  • Two arrows from the same point.

  • The angle between their directions = the “angle between vectors.”

A vector diagram of human-induced climate change would show:

  • Each major human activity as a vector (an arrow).

  • Each vector would have:

    • Magnitude = how strong the effect is (how much it drives climate change).

    • Direction = what type of effect it causes (warming, cooling, feedback loops, etc.).

Some of the main vectors would be:

Activity Vector Direction Vector Magnitude
Burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas) Strongly toward global warming Very large
Deforestation Toward warming (loss of carbon sinks) Large
Industrial agriculture Toward warming (methane, nitrous oxide) Medium-large
Aerosol pollution (tiny particles) Slightly toward cooling (reflect sunlight) Small-medium
Urbanization (heat islands) Toward local and global warming Medium
Climate feedback loops (like melting ice reducing reflectivity) Toward accelerated warming Growing rapidly

How the diagram would look:

  • A large cluster of vectors mostly pointing in the same general warming direction.

  • A few smaller vectors pointing opposite (cooling, like aerosols) — but not strong enough to cancel out the warming ones.

  • Some vectors bending and amplifying others, showing feedback loops (ex: hotter temperatures = more wildfires = more CO₂ released = even hotter temperatures).

Conceptually:

  • Human-induced climate change would look like an overwhelmingly strong push (vector sum) toward global warming.

  • The overall resultant vector would be:

    • Very long

    • Very sharply pointed toward higher temperatures, more extreme weather, rising seas, ecosystem collapse, etc.

In simple terms:
Imagine a bunch of arrows (vectors) — the biggest and most powerful ones (like fossil fuel burning) all point toward “Warming” with huge force. A few tiny arrows (like aerosol cooling) point the other way, but they’re way too small to stop the giant surge.

From the album “Angle

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderDihedral

Dihedral-0.mp3
Dihedral-0.mp4
Dihedral-I.mp3
Dihedral-I.mp4
Dihedral-Reggae.mp3
Dihedral-Reggae.mp4
Dihedral-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3
Dihedral-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4
Dihedral-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Dihedral triangular
(Can your mind’s eye see…)
In 3D
[Bridge]
(da, dee, dee)
Up the bid
(Build a pyramid)

[Verse 1]
Will your base
Take a side
The human race
Shall decide

[Bridge]
Dihedral triangular
(Can your mind’s eye see…)
In 3D (da, dee, dee)

[Chorus]
Castles of your dreams
(Make things what they seem)
Turning dreams to scenes
(Sower of seeds and seams)

[Bridge]
Build a pyramid
(We did!)
(Pyramid)

[Verse 2]
All sides hold us together
Proud to report (group support)
Hope resides in whether
We resort (in our last hope)

[Bridge]
Dihedral triangular
(Can your mind’s eye see…)
In 3D (dee, dee)

[Chorus]
Castles of your dreams
(Make things what they seem)
Turning dreams to scenes
(Sower of seeds and seams)

[Outro]
Turning dreams to scenes
(Turning dreams to scenes seen)

A MATH AND SCIENCE NOTE

Pyramid (like a square-based pyramid):

  • Think of a 3D shape with a base (usually a square) and triangular sides that meet at a single top point (the apex).

  • The faces (the sides) are usually isosceles triangles.

  • Angles in a pyramid:

    • The base angles of the triangular sides are typically equal (like an isosceles triangle).

    • The angles between the base and sides (called dihedral angles) are important in 3D — they control how steep or flat the pyramid is.

    • The triangles themselves have angles depending on the slope of the pyramid.

So pyramids are made up of isosceles triangles, and their structure involves a mix of plane angles (in the triangles) and 3D angles (between faces).

From the album “Angle

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

bookmark_borderIsosceles and Icarus

Isosceles-and-Icarus-0.mp3
Isosceles-and-Icarus-0.mp4
Isosceles-and-Icarus-I.mp3
Isosceles-and-Icarus-I.mp4
Isosceles-and-Icarus-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Isosceles
(If you please)
Our angle’s the same
(In this game)

[Verse 1]
It’s not a matter of whether
We’re all in this together
Now it’s a matter of weather
Caused by human endeavor

[Chorus]
Opposite sides (of the same bird)
Along for the ride (though absurd)
Nowhere to hide (have you heard the word)
Too much pride

[Bridge]
Isosceles
(If you please)
Our angle’s the same
(In this game)
Don’t fly too close to the sun
(We might come undone)
Icarus is us

[Verse 2]
It’s not a matter of whether
Things are going to get hot
It’s baked into the weather
Thought’s the only hope we’ve got

[Chorus]
Opposite sides (of the same bird)
Along for the ride (though absurd)
Nowhere to hide (have you heard the word)
Too much pride

[Bridge]
Isosceles
(If you please)
Our angle’s the same
(In this game)
Don’t fly too close to the sun
(We might come undone)
Icarus is us

[Outro]
Opposite sides (of the same bird)
Along for the ride (though absurd)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Isosceles triangle:

  • Has two sides of equal length.

  • The angles opposite those two sides are equal too.

  • So:

    • Two angles are the same (acute or obtuse, depending on the triangle).

    • The third angle can be different — if the isosceles triangle is perfectly upright, the third angle is often different (usually at the top).

Examples:

  • If the two base angles are 70° each, the top angle is 40° (because all three must add to 180°).

  • In a right isosceles triangle, the two equal angles are 45°, and the third is 90°.

Icarus

In Greek mythology, Icarus was the son of the craftsman Daedalus. He tragically died after flying too close to the sun with wings made of wax and feathers, ignoring Daedalus’s warnings. The story of Icarus is often used as a metaphor for overreaching ambition or recklessness.

From the album “Angle

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderAngle of Impact

Angle-of-Impact-0.mp3
Angle-of-Impact-0.mp4
Angle-of-Impact-I.mp3
Angle-of-Impact-I.mp4
Angle-of-Impact-intro.mp3

[Intro]
It’s a fact
(The angle of impact)
The force
(Can change course)
Of your train of thought
(Reign wrought)
Brain rot

[Verse 1]
Coming straight on for you
(Steeper and deeper)
Not a lot you can do
(My angle’s askew)

[Chorus]
It’s a fact
(The angle of impact)
The force
(Will change the course)

[Bridge]
Of your train of thought
(Reign wrought)
Rain brought
(Destiny upon me)

[Verse 2]
Kinetic energy
(Mass and velocity)
Frequency
(Intensity)

[Chorus]
It’s a fact
(The angle of impact)
The force
(Will change the course)

[Bridge]
Of your train of thought
(Reign wrought)
Rain brought
(Reign wrought)
Brain rot
(Destiny down on me)

[Outro]
It’s a matter of fact
(The angle of impact)
The damaging force
(Changed our course)

A SCIENCE NOTE: The Reign of Violent Rain

Physics of the angle of impact from precipitation (like rain or hail):

  • Steeper angles (close to 90°, falling almost straight down):

    • Higher force per unit area because gravity acts almost directly downward.

    • Droplets or hailstones hit surfaces harder.

    • Leads to more damage, like erosion of soil, denting of cars, breaking leaves, and even bruising fruits and crops.

  • Shallow angles (smaller than 90°, more sideways rain):

    • Spread out over more area.

    • Less direct force per point — but wider impact.

    • Can cause sideways rain damage to walls, windows, and exposed structures that normally don’t get direct rainfall.

Force and damage from precipitation depends on:

  1. Mass of the droplet or hailstone (bigger = more force).

  2. Velocity (speed falling — increases with height and wind help).

  3. Angle of impact (straighter = harder hit; sideways = spread hit).

  4. Surface (hard vs soft material receiving the impact).

In physics terms, the momentum and kinetic energy of a raindrop or hailstone are key:

  • Kinetic Energy (KE) = ½ * mass * velocity²

  • The angle affects how much of that energy is transferred directly vs spread sideways.

Now: Does climate change play a role?

YES — and a big one. Climate change increases both intensity and frequency of extreme precipitation events:

  • Warmer air holds more water vapor (about 7% more per 1°C rise).

  • Stronger storms (like supercell thunderstorms, hurricanes) form more often.

  • More intense rainfall → faster, heavier, and larger raindrops and hailstones.

  • Higher wind speeds during storms → causes sharper, more damaging impact angles (not just vertical — but violent, sideways rain and hail).

Result:

  • More erosion (even from “regular” storms).

  • More flooding from heavy rainbursts.

  • More structural damage — roofs, windows, crops, soil, buildings.

  • More inland damage from hurricanes and tropical storms that carry powerful rain farther than they used to.

In short:

  • The physics of impact angles explains how rain and hail cause damage.

  • Climate change makes the rain and hail bigger, faster, and sometimes hit at worse angles, massively boosting damage.

The Reign of Violent Rain

From the album “Angle

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderProtractor

Protractor-0.mp3 Protractor-0.mp4 Protractor-I.mp3 Protractor-I.mp4 Protractor-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Trying to figure out
Your angle
What you’re about…
Thoughts dangle

[Verse 1]
How do you measure up
Specifically
What is your degree

[Chorus]
Trying to figure out
Your angle
What you’re about…
Thoughts dangle

[Verse 2]
Taking a closer look
Are you acute or obtuse…
Are you of any use

[Chorus]
Trying to figure out
Your angle
What you’re about…
Thoughts dangle

[Bridge]
Protractor
(The factor)
To figure your degree
(With certainty)

[Chorus]
Trying to figure out
Your angle
What you’re about…
Thoughts dangle

[Outro]
The protractor (factor)
Fact or….
(factor)

A SCIENCE NOTE

noun: protractor; plural noun: protractors; noun: protractor muscle; plural noun: protractor muscles
  1. an instrument for measuring angles, typically in the form of a flat semicircle marked with degrees along the curved edge.
     
  2. Zoology
    a muscle serving to extend a part of the body.

From the album “Angle

bookmark_borderThe Long Way

The-Long-Way-I.mp3
The-Long-Way-I.mp4
The-Long-Way-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3
The-Long-Way-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4
The-Long-Way-intro.mp3

[Intro]
What do you say
(Take the long way)
And wrap around
(Where the sound’s found?)

[Verse 1]
Shout!
(Spread out)
Wait!
(Don’t dissipate)

[Bridge]
Anticipate
Take the long way
(Around the bend)
Let’s stretch out the day
(With the music we lend)

[Chorus]
What do you say
(Take the long way)
And wrap around
(Where the sound’s found?)

[Verse 2]
Shout!
(Find out)
Bend!
(Blend smoothly)

[Bridge]
Naturally
Take the long way
(Around the bend)
Let’s stretch out the play
(And the message we send)

[Chorus]
What do you say
(Take the long way)
And wrap around
(Where the sound’s found?)

[Outro]
Take the long way
(Let’s sway)

A SCIENCE NOTE

In a reflex angle, instead of measuring the small angle between two lines, you’re measuring the bigger, bent-back sweep — the part that “wraps around” past 180°. It’s like you’re bending the angle backward to cover the larger part of the circle.

  • Regular angles measure the “short way” between two lines.

  • Reflex angles measure the “long way” — bending around the point.

When sound hits a reflex angle (a surface or corner with an angle greater than 180°), a few things can happen:

  • Sound waves spread out more:
    Since the surface is wide and open, the sound doesn’t reflect sharply like it would off a flat wall or a right-angle corner. Instead, it spreads out (a bit like light scattering).

  • Weaker reflections:
    In a reflex angle, the energy of the sound tends to dissipate more. You get softer echoes or even a “diffused” effect because the surfaces aren’t concentrating the sound in a tight bounce.

  • Less echo or more diffusion:
    Reflex angles can cause sound to scatter instead of bouncing directly back, leading to a softer, more natural sound. That’s why concert halls often have special angled walls — to control echoes and make the sound blend smoothly!

Quick example:
Imagine shouting into a big, open corner (wider than 180°) — your voice won’t bounce straight back like it would in a narrow hallway. It kind of spreads out and fades instead.

From the album “Angle