Overturn

[Silence]

[Instrumental, Guitar, Organ, Bass, Percussion, Drums]

[Intro]
[Instrumental Intro: Deep Bass Groove, Organ Swell, Sparse Percussion]
[Muted Guitar Chords, Slow Build]

[Spoken Vocal]
Watch the wheel
(It will turn)
Every system
(Must learn)

[Instrumental Break]
[Organ Riff]
[Percussion Builds]

[Verse 1]
Hey!
(Feel the ground)
Old ideas
(Turning round)

Lines erased
(New returns)
Truth revealed
(When we learn)

[Chorus]
Come to learn
(Overturn)
Discover
(Over)
Turn
(Churn)

[Instrumental Jam]
[Guitar Solo — gritty blues phrasing]
[Organ Stabs, Walking Bass]
[Percussion Improvisation]

[Verse 2]
Change arrives
(Without a sound)
Quiet shifts
(Spin the ground)

Structures move
(Once they burn)
Watch the tide
(Overturn)

[Chorus]
Come to learn
(Overturn)
Discover
(Over)
Turn
(Churn)

[Bridge – Breakdown]
[Percussion Only → Bass Joins]

Break the pattern
(Spin the frame)
Question power
(Change the game)

Truth emerging
(From concern)
Watch the system
(Overturn)

[Extended Instrumental Jam]
[Guitar Solo — aggressive, climbing]
[Organ Solo — swirling Hammond style]
[Heavy Bass Groove]
[Percussion Jam — polyrhythmic]

[Final Chorus – Big]
Come to learn
(Overturn)
Discover
(Over)
Turn
(Churn)

[Outro]
[Organ Drone, Bass Pulse, Light Percussion]

Turn the wheel
(Let it burn)
Every cycle
(Overturn)

[Fade Out]

About This Song – Overturn
“Overturn” explores the moment when a stable system suddenly changes direction. In science, history, and culture, progress often comes not from slow adjustment but from sudden reversals—moments when established ideas are challenged and replaced by better explanations. These turning points are sometimes called paradigm shifts, when new observations or insights overturn long-held assumptions and reshape how we understand the world.

The song also reflects the behavior of complex systems. In nonlinear dynamics, gradual pressures can build quietly until a threshold is crossed and the system reorganizes rapidly. Ecological changes, social movements, and scientific revolutions all demonstrate this pattern. What appears stable on the surface may already contain the forces that will eventually overturn it.

Musically, “Overturn” mirrors this process through extended improvisation and evolving grooves. Guitar, organ, bass, and percussion move from steady rhythms into swirling jams where themes are broken apart and reassembled. The chorus—Come to learn (Overturn) / Discover (Over) / Turn (Churn)—captures the cycle of inquiry: curiosity leads to discovery, discovery challenges assumptions, and the resulting churn creates new understanding.

Ultimately, the song celebrates learning as an active process. To learn is to question, and to question is sometimes to overturn what we thought we knew. In that sense, “Overturn” is both a musical jam and a reminder that growth—whether scientific, creative, or personal—often begins when we are willing to turn things upside down.

From the album “Turn

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