bookmark_borderDays Like These

Days-Like-These.mp3
Days-Like-These.mp4
Days-Like-These-Unplugged-Underground-XXI.mp3
Days-Like-These-Unplugged-Underground-XXI.mp4
Days-Like-These-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Days like these….
(Please)

[Verse 1]
Man’s best friend
(To the rescue, again)
True friend till the end
(Ready to start. Begin.)

[Chorus]
Spring, winter, summer, or fall
It doesn’t really matter at all
Days like these….
(Please)

[Bridge]
The tease in the breeze
(The aire of the air)

[Verse 2]
You ain’t nothin’ but a hound dog?
(Oh, well, oh, well) Not exactly
Depends by what you mean “high on the hog”
(Do tell, do tell) More specifically

[Chorus]
Spring, winter, summer, or fall
It doesn’t really matter at all
Days like these….
(Please)

[Bridge]
The tease in the breeze
(The aire of the air)

[Outro]
Spring, winter, summer, or fall
Been lovin’ ’em all
(Days like these please)
More days like these….
(Please)

From the album “Daze Days

bookmark_borderSpin Span

Spin-Span.mp3
Spin-Span.mp4
Spin-Span-Unplugged-Underground-XXI.mp3
Spin-Span-Unplugged-Underground-XXI.mp4
Spin-Span-intro.mp3

[Intro]
What is the span of your spins?
(You know… round and round you go)

[Verse 1]
So, how old are you now
Another year… or just another day?
I guess it’s getting harder somehow
To calculate it either way

[Bridge]
What is the span of your spins?
(You know… round and round you go)

[Chorus]
What is the span of your spins
(Spinning round… going round the sun)
How many losses… how many wins
(When your spinning’s all said and spun)

[Bridge]
What is the span of your spins?
(You know… round and round you go)

[Verse 2]
Have you been told (You’re growing old)
Un-bold, did you fit within the fold
(Nope, not outside of the envelope?)
All clocks (Inside the box)
Tick-tock

[Bridge]
What is the span of your spins?
(You know… round and round you go)

[Chorus]
What is the span of your spins
(Spinning round… going round the sun)
How many losses… how many wins
(When your spinning’s all said and spun)

[Outro]
What is the span of your spins?
Have you come undone
(Totally spun)

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRare Earth

Rare-Earth-Best-Of.mp3
Rare-Earth-Best-Of.mp4
Rare-Earth.mp3
Rare-Earth.mp4
Rare-Earth-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Claim the mine is mine
(The mining claim game)
Biggest crime of all time
(Brushing it off all the same)

[Chorus]
You’ve given birth
To rare earth
Extraction satisfaction
Has put the best to rest

[Bridge]
Black gold
(Texas tea)
Should’ve been told
(Gonna get the best of me)

[Verse 2]
Whine the mine is mine
(Gonna bleed it dry)
No, all is not fine
(We’re all gonna die)

[Chorus]
You’ve given birth
To rare earth
Extraction satisfaction
Has put the best to rest

[Bridge]
Black gold
(Texas tea)
Should’ve been told
(Gonna get the best of me)

[Chorus]
You’ve given birth
To rare earth
Extraction satisfaction
Has put the best to rest

[Outro]
Take, take, take
(Fast fashion mistake)

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderIn the Old Daze

In-the-Old-Daze.mp3
In-the-Old-Daze.mp4
In-the-Old-Daze-Unplugged-Underground-XXI.mp3
In-the-Old-Daze-Unplugged-Underground-XXI.mp4
In-the-Old-Daze-intro.mp3

[Intro]
In the old daze
(We walked miles both ways)

[Verse 1]
Old men reigning over man
Really, really hard to understand
Why the masses choose to lose
Rather bruise than cruise

[Bridge]
Getting numb to the situation
Capitulation of a nation

[Chorus]
In the old daze
(The song remains the same)
Still sleepwalking
(Talking and talking)
Such a lame game

[Bridge]
In the old daze
(We walked miles both ways)

[Verse 2]
Bigots and racists rule the land
Really, really hard to understand
Why not rise up, take a stand
Then to watch us all fall

[Bridge]
Getting numb to the situation
Capitulation of a nation

[Chorus]
In the old daze
(The song remains the same)
Still sleepwalking
(Talking and talking)
Such a lame game

[Bridge]
In the old daze
(We walked miles both ways)

[Outro]
In a trance (we dance)
Past our last chance
(Dance)

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderGreat Vibrations

Great-Vibrations.mp3
Great-Vibrations.mp4
Great-Vibrations-Pt-2.mp3
Great-Vibrations-Pt-2.mp4
Great-Vibrations-Reggae.mp3
Great-Vibrations-Reggae.mp4
Great-Vibrations-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
If the beach is out of reach
(You can hear it here)
A summer adolescence does teach
(Love is not to fear)

[Chorus]
Musical sensations
Bringing on great vibrations
Perpetuating peace and love
With a sound from above

[Bridge]
(Love, love, love)
Love, love, love
(Sing of love)

[Verse 2]
Everybody’s going surfin’
(Surf’s up again!)
Grab a smile and a grin
(Let the good times begin)

[Chorus]
Musical sensations
Bringing on great vibrations
Perpetuating peace and love
With a sound from above

[Bridge]
(Love, love, love)
Love, love, love
(Sing of love)

[Chorus]
Musical sensations
Bringing on great vibrations
Perpetuating peace and love
With a sound from above

[Outro]
(Love, love, love)
Love, love, love
(Sing of love)

ABOUT THE SONG: Brian Wilson, Beach Boys Co-Founder and Singer, Dies at 82
The Beach Boys were one of the most listened-to bands of my childhood. While the Beatles may have been more famous and heard more often on the radio, I remember singing along to more Beach Boys songs—they were the soundtrack to so many moments.

Brian Wilson and Sly Stone were both pioneers in what I would soon come to deeply admire: multi-instrumentalists, producers, engineers, singer-songwriters, and fearless creators of original sound. They didn’t just make music—they reshaped it. I would spend the rest of my life doing the same thing.

It’s deeply sad to see both of these musical giants pass in the same week. Their influence runs through generations, and their sounds will echo on.

From the album “Daze Days

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

bookmark_borderAblaze

Ablaze.mp3
Ablaze.mp4
Ablaze-Pt-2.mp3
Ablaze-Pt-2.mp4
Ablaze-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Counting down
To ignition
Just look around
For conformation

[Chorus]
All the world’s ablaze
Breathing in the haze
Situation of fire
Growing ever higher

[Bridge]
Fan the flames
(Who’s to blame)

[Verse 2]
Don’t be confused
Lit the fuse
Just a matter of time
Before we find…

[Chorus]
All the world’s ablaze
Breathing in the haze
Situation of fire
Growing ever higher

[Bridge]
Fan the flames
(Who’s to blame)
The alarm is sounding
(So resounding)
Better pour on water
(Save your son and daughter)

[Chorus]
All the world’s ablaze
Breathing in the haze
Situation of fire
Growing ever higher

[Outro]
Better pour on water
(Save your son and daughter)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Ablaze” is a powerful and urgent anthem that captures the terrifying reality of the climate crisis through the imagery of wildfire. With its stark warnings and escalating tension, the song reflects the rising intensity, frequency, and devastation of wildfires driven by global warming, reckless policy, and delayed action. Every line deepens the sense that the world is not just metaphorically—but literally—on fire.

Verse 1:
“Counting down to ignition / Just look around for conformation” presents the world as a ticking time bomb. The word “conformation” can be read as both evidence and twisted affirmation—the fires are here, the science is clear, yet we’re still looking for signs as if denial could delay disaster. Wildfire season is no longer a season—it’s perpetual, and we’re living in its shadow.

Chorus:
“All the world’s ablaze / Breathing in the haze” speaks to both the visual horror and the public health crisis. It evokes smoke-choked skylines in places like California, Alberta, and Australia. This isn’t abstract—it’s happening now. The “situation of fire growing ever higher” reflects both the literal spread of flames and the broader existential threat posed by the accelerating climate emergency.

Bridge (1):
“Fan the flames / Who’s to blame?” cuts to the heart of the matter—our collective complicity and the deliberate choices of fossil fuel companies, deregulation, and politicians who feed the fire for profit or power. The passive phrasing belies an active role: we’ve stoked this blaze with carbon, greed, and delay.

Verse 2:
“Don’t be confused / Lit the fuse / Just a matter of time before we find…” underscores that this wasn’t a natural accident—it was triggered. The “fuse” is decades of ignored warnings, rising emissions, deforestation, and extractive industry. The next catastrophe isn’t a question of “if,” but “when.”

Bridge (2):
The second bridge raises the emotional stakes:
“The alarm is sounding (So resounding)” evokes the literal fire alarms and the louder call of climate scientists.
“Better pour on water / Save your son and daughter” personalizes the plea. This isn’t just about statistics or policy—it’s about the survival of future generations. The water we need is action—policy change, adaptation, mitigation. And time is running out.

Final Chorus and Outro:
Repeating the chorus hammers in the message: the crisis is global, the danger is growing, and the smoke is choking us all. The outro“Better pour on water (Save your son and daughter)”—is both a plea and a command. There’s still hope, but only if we act now.

Summary:

“Ablaze” is a blistering climate protest song that uses the wildfire as both metaphor and reality. It channels the collective anxiety of living through a planet that’s literally burning, while calling out the failures that brought us here. The repetition of flames, haze, and alarms creates a visceral experience—reminding us this isn’t distant or hypothetical. It’s here. It’s now.

It’s not just a song—it’s a warning shot.

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThe Book of Days

The-Book-of-Days-Best-Of.mp3
The-Book-of-Days-Best-Of.mp4
The-Book-of-Days.mp3
The-Book-of-Days.mp4
The-Book-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Did you take a look
At the Book
What does it say
About your judgement day?

[Bridge]
Angels of mercy?
(Heresy)
Conspiracy

[Chorus]
In a juggernaut
On judgement day
Reigning arrogant
(What more can I say?)

[Verse 2]
All your do’s
Are past due
Neglected to pay
Along the way

[Bridge]
Angels of mercy?
(Heresy)
Conspiracy?
(Welcome to transparency)

[Chorus]
In a juggernaut
On judgement day
Reigning arrogant
(What more can I say?)

[Outro]
Welcome to transparency
Your accounting fell short
Left with no retort
It’s easy to see….
(Your destiny)

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSo(w)

So-w.mp3
So-w.mp4
So-w-Pt-2.mp3
So-w-Pt-2.mp4

[Verse 1]
She gets by with a little help from her friends
But you can keep yours, all mine are dead end
And her dreams are all made with a needle and thread
And your dreams are all made with a hole in your head

[Chorus]
So come on, come on, come on

[Verse 2]
She puts up with a little help from her foes
But you don’t need yours, everybody knows
And her life is all made of a needle and thread
And your life is all made of a hole in your head

[Chorus]
So come on, come on, come on

[Instrumental]

An accidental AI experiment.

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderAmaze

Amaze.mp3
Amaze.mp4
Amaze-Reggae.mp3
Amaze-Reggae.mp4
Amaze-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Amaze-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Amaze-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Some people pray
Their days away
Others cry
’till the day they die

[Break]
Why?

[Chorus]
The Age of the Haze Days
(Amaze!)
The end page on rage
(Amaze!)

[Bridge]
Quick!
(Strike up the music)
Music

[Verse 2]
Some people work
… slave every day
More than a quirk
Wouldn’t ya say?

[Break]
OK?

[Chorus]
The Age of the Haze Days
(Amaze!)
The end page on rage
(Amaze!)

[Bridge]
Quick!
(Strike up the music)
Music

[Chorus]
The Age of the Haze Days
(Amaze!)
The end page on rage
(Amaze!)

[Outro]
One more song!
(Amaze!)
It’s a sing-a-long
(For days and days)
Amaze!
(One more song!)

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderEntrées

Entrees-Best-Of.mp3
Entrees-Best-Of.mp4
Entrees.mp3
Entrees.mp4
Entrees-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Can I trouble you
For a menu…
Is there gore galore
(And so much more?)

[Chorus]
What are the entrées
Of the day
Are they appetizing
(Or compromising?)

[Bridge]
In these days of haze
(What are the entrées)
Tacos with the suppression sauce
(Chicken racism hold the light)
Did I get your order right?

[Verse 2]
Can I bother you
Do you have take out, too
Oh, lord, a smorgasbord
With a side of “dies”
(Realize!)

[Chorus]
What are the entrées
Of the day
Are they appetizing
(Or compromising?)

[Bridge]
In these days of haze
(What are the entrées)
Tacos with the suppression sauce
(Chicken racism hold the rights)
Pay the bill.. don’t put up fights

[Chorus]
What are the entrées
Of the day
Are they appetizing
(Or compromising?)

[Outro]
In these days of haze
(What are the entrées)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Entrées” is a biting satirical metaphor, presenting a dystopian menu that serves up the worst consequences of environmental collapse and authoritarian politics. Using the language of dining, the song critiques both the tangible devastation of climate change—embodied by air pollution and Canadian wildfires—and the moral decay brought on by Trump-era policies that threaten Constitutional and human rights.

Interpretation of “Entrées”

Verse 1:
“Can I trouble you / For a menu…” sets the tone—a seemingly polite request turns dark with “Is there gore galore (And so much more?).” The idea of “gore” as a menu item evokes mass suffering, violence, and disaster—suggesting that what’s being served in society today is not nourishment but destruction. This could symbolize the fires choking the skies, the bodies affected by polluted air, or the assault on freedoms under authoritarianism.

Chorus:
“What are the entrées of the day / Are they appetizing (Or compromising?)” highlights the false choices we’re offered: policies or leaders that may seem appealing on the surface but are deeply toxic underneath. The line draws attention to how climate and civil rights issues are often dressed up with spin, hiding the harm they inflict.

Bridge (1):
“In these days of haze (What are the entrées)” explicitly connects the metaphor to literal climate chaos—air choked with smoke from wildfires, visibility clouded not just physically but morally and politically.
“Tacos with the suppression sauce / (Chicken racism hold the light)” skewers performative justice. The “suppression sauce” is a clever jab at voter suppression and free speech restrictions. “Chicken racism” sounds absurd—until we see it as an indictment of cowardice in confronting systemic racism, served without “light” or truth.

Verse 2:
“Do you have take out, too” critiques the commodification of crisis—people can now consume destruction remotely.
“Oh, lord, a smorgasbord / With a side of ‘dies’ (Realize!)” is a chilling play on “side of fries.” “Dies” represents both literal death—climate casualties, victims of hate and policy neglect—and the death of rights, norms, and truth. The parenthetical “realize!” is a call to wake up.

Bridge (2):
The bridge repeats, now with more menace: “Chicken racism hold the rights / Pay the bill… don’t put up fights”—a warning that the cost of silence is paid in rights lost. It’s an indictment of those complicit or complacent.

Outro:
Repeating “In these days of haze (What are the entrées)” leaves us unsettled. The haze has not lifted. The menu hasn’t changed. The cycle continues—unless we stop consuming what’s killing us.

Summary:

“Entrées” is a darkly clever song that uses food-service satire to skewer environmental neglect and political repression. With the Canadian wildfire smoke clouding cities, and democracy under threat from Trump-era tactics like protest suppression, media retaliation, and racial scapegoating, the song captures the moment’s absurdity and horror.

The “entrées” of our time are disasters we’ve normalized—pollution, authoritarianism, racism—served daily, while we pretend to place polite orders.

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRemedy Tragedy

Remedy-Tragedy.mp3
Remedy-Tragedy.mp4
Remedy-Tragedy-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Remedy-Tragedy-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Remedy-Tragedy-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Oh, lost the thrill
(Been on the decline)
Got sick and fill ill
(Here me moan and whine)

[Chorus]
In need of an elixir
To fix her
Some medicine
To revive her again

[Bridge]
(If you ask me…)
It’s a remedy tragedy
Miss America
(The love has left ya)
If you ask me…
(It’s a remedy tragedy)

[Verse 2]
Oh, still feeling ill
(Down, down in the dumps)
Can’t pay the doctor’s bill
(Worse than measles and mumps)

[Chorus]
In need of an elixir
To fix her
Some medicine
To revive her again

[Bridge]
(If you ask me…)
It’s a remedy tragedy
Miss America
(The love has left ya)
If you ask me…
(It’s a remedy tragedy)

[Chorus]
In need of an elixir
To fix her
Some medicine
To revive her again

[Outro]
(If you ask me…)
It’s a remedy tragedy

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderHazy

Hazy.mp3
Hazy.mp4
Hazy-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Hazy-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Hazy-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Humanity is in a fog
Can’t see their in hand before their face
Watching freedom getting flogged
What’s happened to the human race

[Bridge]
(Fallen in disgrace)
Fattened the hog

[Chorus]
It’s getting hazy out
(Hazier and hazier)
Visibility is in doubt
(Crazier and crazier)

[Verse 2]
Gone are the days of agog
Fading away day by day
No longer a race more a slog
Gone the wrong way… gone astray

[Bridge]
(Fallen in disgrace)
Fattened the hog

[Chorus]
It’s getting hazy out
(Hazier and hazier)
Visibility is in doubt
(Crazier and crazier)

[Outro]
Hazy
(World’s gone crazy)
Hazy
(World’s gone crazy)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Hazy” is a layered and haunting metaphor that connects the literal smog of air pollution—particularly from Canadian wildfires intensified by climate change—with the figurative haze clouding American democracy under Trump-era policies. Here’s an interpretation that weaves those themes together:

Interpretation of “Hazy”:

At its core, “Hazy” is a protest anthem wrapped in poetic ambiguity. The opening verse—“Humanity is in a fog / Can’t see their hand before their face”—evokes both environmental and societal blindness. The “fog” is literal—smoke-choked skies from record-breaking wildfires in Canada, a direct consequence of unchecked global warming—but it’s also metaphorical, symbolizing a populace lost in confusion, misinformation, and denial.

“Watching freedom getting flogged / What’s happened to the human race” mourns the deterioration of civil liberties and human decency, likely referencing policies under Trump that undermined the Constitution—such as the suppression of protests, threats against the free press, and punitive actions against dissenting institutions and individuals.

The bridge“Fallen in disgrace / Fattened the hog”—condemns greed and authoritarian excess. The imagery of “fattening the hog” implies an elite profiting from destruction—of the planet and of democratic norms—while the rest of society bears the cost.

The chorus captures the dual crises: environmental collapse and democratic decay. “It’s getting hazy out / Hazier and hazier” speaks to worsening air quality and a fading ability to discern truth from lies, justice from corruption. “Visibility is in doubt” resonates with the loss of direction in both governance and climate leadership—while “Crazier and crazier” nods to the escalating absurdity and danger of the political landscape.

Verse 2 continues the theme of decline—“Gone are the days of agog” reflects lost wonder and hope. The path ahead, once driven by progress, is now a slog marked by backtracking and moral erosion.

The outro“Hazy / World’s gone crazy”—delivers the final gut-punch. The repetition reinforces a sense of inevitability, confusion, and chaos. It’s not just the skies that are choking—it’s the very air of democracy and humanity.

Summary:
“Hazy” is an urgent warning. It fuses the visible symptoms of a planet on fire—literally, through worsening wildfire smoke—with the deeper, more insidious erosion of democratic and human rights under Trump. The song’s brilliance lies in its ability to make that connection feel emotional, not just political—like choking on both smoke and betrayal at once.

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderYour Wake

Your-Wake-Best-Of.mp3
Your-Wake-Best-Of.mp4
Your-Wake.mp3
Your-Wake.mp4
Your-Wake-Reggae.mp3
Your-Wake-Reggae.mp4
Your-Wake-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Your-Wake-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Your-Wake-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
At your wake, what will be the take…
Life’s mistake?
Do you know… how you live
Is in how you give

[Chorus]
In the wake of all your days
We’re you awake… or in a daze
Did you partake in how to make
Or choose to take, take, take

[Bridge]
What will be the take
(At your wake)
Dearly, beloved… we are gathered here today
To lay to rest (less than the best)

[Verse 2]
How will your eulogy read
As the You-low-gee deed
Do you know… how you live
Is in how you give

[Chorus]
In the wake of all your days
We’re you awake… or in a daze
Did you partake in how to make
Or choose to take, take, take

[Bridge]
What will be the take
(At your wake)
Dearly, beloved… we are gathered here today
To lay to rest (less than the best)

[Chorus]
In the wake of all your days
We’re you awake… or in a daze
Did you partake in how to make
Or choose to take, take, take

[Outro]
What will be the take
(At your wake)

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderDays Ago

Days-Ago.mp3
Days-Ago.mp4
Days-Ago-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Days-Ago-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Days-Ago-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Excuse me
(For not living in the past)
But, each moment is better
(Than the last)

[Bridge]
Rather ensure future (for sure)

[Chorus]
Was it only days ago
Or has it been years
It’s getting hard to know
Hopes from fears

[Verse 2]
I’m sorry
(For not living in history)
Just the future’s so bright
(Rather remain in the light)

[Bridge]
Rather ensure future (for sure)

[Chorus]
Was it only days ago
Or has it been years
It’s getting hard to know
Hopes from fears

[Bridge]
Rather ensure future (for sure)

[Outro]
Rather ensure future (for sure)
Future

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Daze Days

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderDon’t Be Shy

Dont-Be-Shy-Best-Of.mp3
Dont-Be-Shy-Best-Of.mp4
Dont-Be-Shy.mp3
Dont-Be-Shy.mp4
Dont-Be-Shy-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Don’t be shy
(Be ssss, sly!)

[Verse 1]
I was never alone
With the Family Stone
Always felt at home
When I’d hear that tone

[Chorus]
I’d like to thank you
For kickin’ da music
It was thick (and sick sick sick)
Oh, yes… you know it’s true
You funked it up good
(Like only you could)

[Bridge]
Don’t be shy
(Be ssss, sly!)

[Verse 2]
What the say is true
Fame and fortune will kill you
So be careful what you do
While you’re trying to get through

[Chorus]
I’d like to thank you
For kickin’ da music
It was thick (and sick sick sick)
Oh, yes… you know it’s true
You funked it up good
(Like only you could)

[Bridge]
Don’t be shy
(Be ssss, sly!)
Let’s hear you cry!

[Chorus]
I’d like to thank you (thank you)
For kickin’ da music (music!
It was thick (and sick sick sick)
Oh, yes… you know it’s true (true true)
You funked it up good (oh so good)
The test of time stood (like only you could)

[Outro]
Don’t be shy
(Let’s hear you cry!)
Be ssss, sly!

“Don’t Be Shy” is a tribute to the legendary Sly Stone, who passed away today at the age of 82. It’s hard to believe he’s gone, though even harder to believe he made it this far, given the wild, revolutionary life he lived. Sly was more than a musician—he was a force. A brilliant multi-instrumentalist, producer, and visionary, he didn’t just create music—he redefined it. His fusion of funk, rock, soul, and psychedelia shaped an entire era and gave voice to a generation.
This song is my humble homage. I perform both guitar and keys live in a loose, funked-up rock jam that channels the spirit of those epic Woodstock-era moments. It’s raw, celebratory, and a little unhinged—just the way Sly might have liked it.

Thank you, Sly, for showing us how to be bold, to be soulful, to be loud—and to never, ever be shy. You funked it up like only you could, and your sound will echo forever.

Rest in power.

From the album “Daze Days