: A high-energy opener that remains one of their most popular songs. It perfectly captures the band's ability to blend infectious melodies with a message of resilience.
Polar caps melt like the ice cream man Tidal wave comin' for the rich man's land But he buy a new plot on a higher hill Leave the poor to drown—that's a crooked will Radiation leak, plastic in the sea What kind of world for the youth to see? They sell us poison and call it growth The roots of this system—a wicked oath earth crisis steel pulse
Elias walked back into the single room of his apartment. On the table sat the object that could get him killed—a solid steel canister, uncorrupted by the rust that devoured everything else. It wasn't a weapon. It was a seed bank, preserved in vacuum-sealed steel. A gift from his grandfather, buried deep in the Blue Mountains before the Corporate Wars scorched the peaks. : A high-energy opener that remains one of
: Perhaps the album's most controversial track, featuring David Hinds’ raw disillusionment with modern science, technology, and social shifts. "Bodyguard" They sell us poison and call it growth
: A high-energy opener that remains one of their most popular songs. It perfectly captures the band's ability to blend infectious melodies with a message of resilience.
Polar caps melt like the ice cream man Tidal wave comin' for the rich man's land But he buy a new plot on a higher hill Leave the poor to drown—that's a crooked will Radiation leak, plastic in the sea What kind of world for the youth to see? They sell us poison and call it growth The roots of this system—a wicked oath
Elias walked back into the single room of his apartment. On the table sat the object that could get him killed—a solid steel canister, uncorrupted by the rust that devoured everything else. It wasn't a weapon. It was a seed bank, preserved in vacuum-sealed steel. A gift from his grandfather, buried deep in the Blue Mountains before the Corporate Wars scorched the peaks.
: Perhaps the album's most controversial track, featuring David Hinds’ raw disillusionment with modern science, technology, and social shifts. "Bodyguard"