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Wake up for one last time and I'm feeling neglective
I never thought that we would have gotten this far
Somewhere to know how much we could have made it last
But why believe it?
Spend it, follow a minute to empty out the time
We could save it if we let it walk the line
Reaching a dead caricature of ourselves
But we still can save it
Accounts of our imminent design
Retracing flaws in our decline
To keep understanding who we are
Would we believe it?
Send it into a life of a darker suspecting destructive cancer
Feeding on me
This kind of psychological disease
Will be the end of me still pushing to get out
Carry down
I get it
It's not right when it's characteristic
Bleeding out when there's thirty more on the floor
Waiting for their chance to prove that they're the ready ones too
Wake up for one last time and I'm feeling neglective
I never thought that we would have gotten this far
Somewhere to know how much we could have made it last
But why believe?
Why believe it?
Why believe?
Accounts of our imminent design
Retracing flaws in our decline
To keep understanding who we are
Would we believe it?
Can't we remember our lives entangled
selecting ones that we keep closer
forgetting lasting devotion
replacing part of ourselves
connected tissue collecting slowly
but never in time to carry further
could we remember
replacing part of ourselves
Accounts of our imminent design
Retracing flaws in our decline
To keep understanding who we are
Would we believe it?
Reciting our ultimate goodbyes
Awaiting the waning of our minds
Forever preserving who we are
So I believe it
“… And Everything In Between” was a great introduction to the band, and after having listened to it 2975295 times in a relatively short while I could appreciate “Artificial Void” (which is perhaps a bit more intricate?) better. Alice M.
Cool compositions and great production – Who Bit the Moon is full of prog-rock moments that uplift and quickly capture attention. Neat changes in tempo add interest, and plentiful guitar hooks deliver moments to savour. Michael Reilly
Fearless Records comes to Bandcamp, featuring searing hard rock & metalcore, like the brutal new LP from August Burns Red Bandcamp New & Notable May 9, 2020
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