melting what was once you
and setting up to go through
the fight with anything,
screaming as we're killing through the night
anything, yet we never seem to even feel
a thing until we are despised, yet it never seems
freezing time as we fail
to end this body trail, it's underneath
to fight anything that moves in sight
does it make you feel
to spite anything with signs of life
for a world without a ceiling
sent from his tongue
carried by our blood
we feel hasty, it's their blood we're tasting
did we become what we are, did we feel from the start
did we become what we are
to fight anything that moves in sight
does it make you feel
to spite anything with signs of life
for a world without a ceiling
take the meaning out of this world
to fight with anything, it never seems (real, too real)
to spite anything, does it ever seem
did we become what we are, did we feel from the start
did we become what we are
to fight anything that moves in sight
does it make you feel
to spite anything with signs of life
for a world without feeling.
supported by 35 fans who also own “Dissent: The Fight”
I like the fact that this guy is not in “omg I love djent so much I’ll only let *that* express in my songs” mode. With his friends he crafts thoughtful and diverse songs which can be either playful or touching. Alice M.
supported by 35 fans who also own “Dissent: The Fight”
What a creative and unique EP from David! I love the intricacy and level of detail in the soundscape so much. There's always something for my ear to catch each time I visit this release. This is one of his more underrated releases, in my opinion. Great job, David! :D Erkadur
Midwestern prog-metal stalwarts go for the throat on their new EP, featuring a roiling cover of the Smashing Pumpkins' “1979.” Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 7, 2019
supported by 30 fans who also own “Dissent: The Fight”
The buildup section in the early-middle part of "Mbinguni Amina" is one of my favorite bits of music that's ever been written, and the drop that follows that buildup is the the heaviest drop of all time. Don't @ me. Kadin Wisniewski