Its so nice sitting very still
In a room where no one else feel
The pain that breaks my heart each day
Im not ok
Sunlight is shining through my window
Lets me know that I'm still alive
But why did I ever let you inside my heart
Im such a fool
I paint my face in shades of blood and grey
And take the seat right next to me
But I should have known that you were a killer
But now I’m dead
A gaping hole shot through my heart
A lost connection from your poison dart
Shot from your tongue to end my life
But in your blowing at the fire you light your strife
You’ll never know
The hardest thing about dying is
Knowing you’ll never see the light of day
A gaping hole shot through my heart
A lost connection from your poison dart
My head now spins and my ears bleed gold
I try so fucking hard but I can’t fit your mold
The hardest thing about dying is
Knowing you’ll never see the light of day
You ripped my heart out
You tore my eyes out
Now you’re gonna pay
I’ll stab you one time
Ill eat your heart out
So you feel my pain
Don’t you know that I always see in all of my dreams
I want to kill you
I want to kill you
But now I'm insane
supported by 12 fans who also own “From the Depths of Dreams”
This album can only be described as a masterpiece. It goes into painful detail describing the world they dreamed of, reality, and the constant internal debate of whether ending it now is the right choice. In the end, they decide the best thing to do is to just keep moving forward, hoping for a better future. 10/10 MelvinTheHugger
supported by 11 fans who also own “From the Depths of Dreams”
I can't really tell the songs apart, but I quite enjoy the album experience. This band has their sound dialed in extremely precisely. It's like Code Orange without the weird parts, but with more Slayer riffs. I thought The Acacia Strain were the kings of "nothing but the breakdowns, so help me god", but here is a serious challenger to that throne. fyeahmetal
Throwing mathcore, emo, and ambient into the mix, Estonia's Kaschalot push progressive rock's multitasking approach to its limits. Bandcamp New & Notable Mar 10, 2021