Goal. Motion is my one and only goal. Stagnation is the deepest fear I hold. Waves of indecision they make short work of these plans and wash away the walls of my resolve. I guess nothing lasts. And so it goes, but is anyone themselves, bound to current trends for beauty, shackled to the never ending scramble for wealth?
Yeah I’d love to remember a single time that I was a real person but I’m not convinced that I ever really was. I guess nothing lasts. I know it’s fucked up, I know it’s a cold world. Turn our backs and leave, we could just turn our backs and leave. Is it worth it, the fight? The pushing back against the constant caving in of life? When all our epitaphs will read the same when our time has passed -Here lies one whose name was writ in water-
I guess nothing lasts. I know it’s fucked up, I know it’s a cold world. Turn our backs and leave, we could just turn our backs and leave. I know I fucked up, a cruel man in a cold world. So turn your back and
leave. You can just turn your back and leave. Now everybody wants to talk about mental health, like everybody thinks by talking they can work their problems out. I’ve never been one for talking about myself so
if talking is the only way to solve this, I don’t want to sort it out. I’ll keep it in, chew it up, spit it out with unwanted aggression. I’ll be like, test me and see what happens, I am dying to see that happen. I am dying
to see that happen.
supported by 48 fans who also own “Everybody Wants To Talk About Mental Health”
I generally appreciate the album by album move away from hardcore towards extreme metal. Yet for me personally, this is where the balance is perfect. Kind of like Metallica's Ride the Lightning: subsequent albums were more sophisticated and complex, yet less intense, too. Great to come back to, again and again. jornfin
supported by 45 fans who also own “Everybody Wants To Talk About Mental Health”
Awesome psychedelic sludgy metal with some post-metal influences that build and morph often enough to stay fresh throughout each of the lengthy runtimes. Highly recommended for anyone looking for some psych-tinged sludgy goodness! Colin M.
Toronto band Respire deliver a post-hardcore tour de force on the largest scale possible, orchestrally rich and incessantly uncompromising. Bandcamp New & Notable Jan 6, 2021
supported by 45 fans who also own “Everybody Wants To Talk About Mental Health”
It's hard to describe why I love this album so much. It's just perfect in every way. Every track is so spectacular, but Knives and it's build up to that spectacular heavy part just takes the cake. Fantastic album from a fantastic band that needs to get back together. whatwasallthisfor