The-Last-Dance-0.mp3
The-Last-Dance-0.mp4
The-Last-Dance-I.mp3
The-Last-Dance-I.mp4
The-Last-Dance-intro.mp3
[Intro]
There’s a growing erosion in confidence
Having to do with incompetence
Every opening of mouth is evidence
Of our circumstance
[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
[Verse 1]
Not just a whiff of tariff if
Something is rotten in Denmark
The mark of the devil (ill evil)
Says he will steal (not there’s no deal)
Demand the land of Greenland
Be damned!
[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
[Chorus]
There’s a growing erosion (in confidence)
Having to do with (incompetence)
Every opening of his mouth is evidence
(Of our circumstance)
[Bridge]
Can I have the last dance?
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(By chance)
The last dance
[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo]
[Verse 2]
Protectionism is not patriotism
Just sad sadism and narcissism
Isolationist wants to self-parish
A parasitic terroristic evangelic tarnish
[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(The horror of state terror)
In error…? (The state of terror!)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
[Chorus]
There’s a growing erosion (in confidence)
Having to do with (incompetence)
Every opening of his mouth is evidence
(Of our circumstance)
[Bridge]
Can I have the last dance?
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(By chance)
The last dance
[Break]
A lack of confidence
Taken up residence
A lack of confidence
(Is going down)
Going down all around
(Going down)
Going down, down, down
[Chorus]
There’s a growing erosion (in confidence)
Having to do with (incompetence)
Every opening of his mouth is evidence
(Of our circumstance)
[Outro]
A lack of confidence
Overflowing evidence
A lack of confidence
(Is going down)
Going down all around
(Going down)
Going down, down, down
ABOUT THE SONG
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Verse 1 (“not just a whiff of tariff,” “something is rotten in Denmark”) suggests serious corruption and dysfunction, not minor issues. The references to tariffs allude to Trump’s trade wars, which hurt the economy more than they helped. The lines about the “devil” and “stealing” hint at Trump’s unethical behavior, and the “Greenland” reference mocks his absurd 2019 idea to buy Greenland — seen as imperialist, ridiculous, and doomed from the start.
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Chorus (“growing erosion in confidence,” “incompetence”) directly indicts Trump’s leadership style — every time he speaks, public trust worsens, because his incompetence becomes more and more obvious.
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Bridge (“can I have the last dance”) introduces a metaphor of finality. It’s a request to end this era — “let this be the last dance”, “the last time we have to endure this.” There’s an emotional fatigue, but also hope for closure.
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Verse 2 (“protectionism is not patriotism,” “sadism and narcissism”) delivers a brutal analysis: Trump’s economic nationalism is portrayed as destructive, selfish, and driven by ego rather than love of country. The “self-perish” line suggests that his policies are self-defeating, leading the nation toward economic and diplomatic isolation and decay.
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The imagery of “parasitic terroristic evangelic tarnish” implies that Trump’s influence is not only damaging politically and economically, but also contaminates culture and morality — fusing extremism, violence, and distorted religiosity into governance.
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Break (“lack of confidence, taken up residence”) emphasizes that public distrust is no longer an occasional problem — it’s now permanent and pervasive under Trump’s leadership. The repetition of “going down” evokes a sinking ship — a country in freefall.
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Final Chorus and Outro hammer the point home: the nation is crumbling under the weight of incompetence, dishonesty, and chaos. The evidence is overwhelming, the fall inevitable.