Come On

Come-On-Best-Of.mp3
Come-On-Best-Of.mp4
Come-On.mp3
Come-On.mp4
Come-On-Pt-2.mp3
Come-On-Pt-2.mp4
Come-On-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Come-On-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Come-On-Unplugged.mp3
Come-On-Unplugged.mp4
Come-On-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Come on (Come on)
Join in song
Come on (Come on)
You can’t go wrong
(Come on!)

[Verse 1]
Come on for real
(What’s the deal)
How the nation feels
(When the President steals)

[Bridge]
Though a bad, sad day for the U.S.
We can pull, though… all of us

[Chorus]
Come on (Come on)
Join in song
Come on (Come on)
You can’t go wrong
(Come on!)

[Verse 2]
As we reel…
(What’s the deal)
Trashing land, air, and stream
(Oh, no! Know what I mean?)

[Bridge]
Though a bad, sad day for the U.S.
We can pull though… all of us

[Chorus]
Come on (Come on)
Join in song
Come on (Come on)
You can’t go wrong
(Come on!)

[Bridge]
Enough whining and fuss
We can pull, though… all of us

[Chorus]
Come on (Come on)
Join in song
Come on (Come on)
You can’t go wrong
(Come on!)

[Outro]
Come on (Come on)
Join in song
Come on (Come on)
You can’t go wrong
(Come on!)

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Come On

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

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Your Matter

Your-Matter-Best-Of.mp3
Your-Matter-Best-Of.mp4
Your-Matter-Instrumental.mp3
Your-Matter-Instrumental.mp4
Your-Matter-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
In reference your difference
Do you make a difference
Or are you indifferent
To all that’s relevant?

[Chorus]
Does your matter (matter)
To anyone but you
Does your matter (matter)
Have you a clue?

[Bridge]
What’s a matter (matter)
Did your feeling get hurt (avert)

[Verse 2]
Are you in reverence
To your indifference
(… at our expense)
Do you know what it means to clean?

[Chorus]
Does your matter (matter)
To anyone but you
Does your matter (matter)
Have you a clue?

[Bridge]
What’s a matter (matter)
Did your feelings get hurt (avert)

[Chorus]
Does your matter (matter)
To anyone but you
Does your matter (matter)
Have you a clue?

[Outro]
What’s a matter (matter)
Did your feelings get hurt (alert)

From the album “States of Matter

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Consciousness

Consciousness-Pt-1.mp3
Consciousness-Pt-1.mp4
Consciousness-Pt-2.mp3
Consciousness-Pt-2.mp4
Consciousness-Reggae.mp3
Consciousness-Reggae.mp3
Consciousness-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Consciousness-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Consciousness-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
What is your state of consciousness
(For goodness sake, wake!)
What is your state of consciousness
(Come out of this hypnosis)

[Bridge]
La, la, la

[Chorus]
Consciousness
(The state of being awake)
Reality intake
(Are you aware there?)

[Verse 2]
What is your state of consciousness
(Not a peep. In a deep sleep.)
What is your state of consciousness
(Intoxication or suffocation)

[Bridge]
Oh, oh, oh

[Chorus]
Consciousness
(The state of being awake)
Reality intake
(Are you aware there?)

[Bridge]
Hey, hey, hey
Is he woke
(Has he spoke)
I don’t think
He can blink
(Some sorta freak)
Can he speak

[Chorus]
Consciousness
(The state of being awake)
Reality intake
(Are you aware there?)

[Outro]
Is he woke
(Has he spoke)

From the album “States of Matter

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

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Supercritical

Supercritical-Best-Of.mp3
Supercritical-Best-Of.mp4
Supercritical.mp3
Supercritical.mp4
Supercritical-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Do you have to be so critical
(Super duper)
Can’t you act more rational
(A normal formal state)

[Chorus]
Supercritical
(Fluctuates wildly)
Turning political
(To put it mildly)

[Verse 2]
To please me
(Stay away from my coffee)
Decaffeinated
(Is way overrated)

[Chorus]
Supercritical
(Fluctuates wildly)
Turning political
(To put it mildly)

[Bridge]
Compressibility spikes
(Yikes!)
Surface tension disappears
(Raising fears)
Time to anoint
(Where at a critical point)

[Chorus]
Supercritical
(Fluctuates wildly)
Turning political
(To put it mildly)

[Outro]
Supercritical
(Avoid the hypocritical)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Supercritical Fluid

  • Occurs above critical temperature & pressure.

  • Behaves like both a gas and a liquid.

  • Example: Supercritical CO₂ (used to decaffeinate coffee).

A supercritical fluid is a state of matter that occurs above a substance’s critical temperature and pressure—the point where the substance can no longer be distinguished as either a liquid or a gas.

It behaves as a hybrid:

  • Like a gas: fills a container completely and flows freely

  • Like a liquid: dissolves substances and has solvent-like properties

Critical Point: The Threshold

The critical point is defined by:

  • Critical Temperature (Tc): Above this, the substance cannot be liquefied by pressure alone.

  • Critical Pressure (Pc): Minimum pressure required to liquefy a gas at its critical temperature.

Examples of Supercritical Fluids

Substance Critical Temperature (°C) Critical Pressure (atm) Use / Notes
Carbon Dioxide (CO₂) 31.1 °C 73.8 atm (7.38 MPa) Decaffeinating coffee, green solvents
Water (H₂O) 374 °C 218 atm (22.1 MPa) Supercritical water oxidation (SCWO), chemistry reactions
Ammonia (NH₃) 132.4 °C 112.8 atm Experimental refrigeration
Methane (CH₄) -82.6 °C 45.8 atm Natural gas processing
Ethanol (C₂H₅OH) 241.6 °C 63 atm Solvent for organic materials

Why They’re Useful

  • Tunable solvents: Slight changes in temp/pressure adjust their solvency.

  • Green chemistry: CO₂ replaces toxic solvents in extraction or cleaning.

  • Penetrative: SCFs can diffuse through solids like a gas but dissolve substances like a liquid.

Behavior Near the Critical Point

  • Density fluctuates wildly.

  • Surface tension disappears (no distinct liquid/gas interface).

  • Compressibility spikes.

This makes supercritical fluids useful but difficult to control without precise equipment.

From the album “States of Matter

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Exotic States

Exotic-States-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Exotic-States-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Exotic-States.mp3
Exotic-States.mp4
Exotic-States-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Exotic States (high energy) extreme physics
(Kick in the music)

[Verse 1]
Liquid Crystal (mesophase)
Mesmerize (crystalize)
Between liquid and solid:
flows like a liquid,
ordered like a solid.

[Bridge]
Extreme (scene)
I mean….

[Chorus]
High energy
Extreme physics
Somewhere betwixt
The fate (of an exotic state)

[Verse 2]
Amorphous Solid
Absurd? Obsidian.
Disordered solid
… no long-range structure.
Think fast past glass

[Bridge]
Extreme (scene)
I’ve seen….

[Chorus]
High energy
Extreme physics
Somewhere betwixt
The fate (of an exotic state)

[Bridge]
Extreme scene
(The sheen….)

[Chorus]
High energy
Extreme physics
Somewhere betwixt
The fate (of an exotic state)

[Outro]
Extreme scene
(The sheen….)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Exotic States (high energy, extreme physics)

  1. Quark-Gluon Plasma

  2. Hot, dense soup of free quarks and gluons.

  3. Existed just after the Big Bang.

  4. Created in particle colliders like the LHC.

  5. Supercritical Fluid

  6. Occurs above critical temperature & pressure.

  7. Behaves like both a gas and a liquid.

  8. Example: Supercritical CO₂ (used to decaffeinate coffee).

  9. Time Crystal (hypothetical/experimental)

    • A structure that repeats in time, not just space.

    • No energy input, defies classical thermodynamics.

  10. Supersolid (experimental)

  • Matter with a rigid structure (solid) that also flows without friction (like a superfluid).

  1. Liquid Crystal (mesophase)

  • Between liquid and solid: flows like a liquid, has some order like a solid.

  • Example: LCD screens.

  1. Amorphous Solid

  • Disordered solid—has no long-range structure.

  • Example: Glass, obsidian.

From the album “States of Matter

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Quark-Gluon

Quark-Gluon.mp3
Quark-Gluon.mp4
Quark-Gluon-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Bang! (and I mean big, dig?)
Quark-Gluon!
(I could go on and on and on)

[Verse 1]
At the lark
Of a quark
Glue on
Gluon

[Bridge]
Quark-Gluon plasma
(No not phantasma)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
Energy density
(Extreme!)
No what I mean
(Intensity)

[Break]
Bang!
(Dang. That was the big bang

[Bridge]
Quark-Gluon!
(Go on, gluon, glue on and on and on)
.. glue on

[Verse 2]
More than a spark in the dark
Way more in the form of a quark
Three trillion degrees
Nothing could seize

[Bridge]
Quark-Gluon plasma
(No not phantasma)

[Chorus]
Energy density
(Extreme!)
No what I mean
(Intensity)

[Break]
Bang!
(Dang. That was the big bang)

[Outro]
Quark-Gluon!
(Go on, gluon, glue on and on and on)
.. glue on

A SCIENCE NOTE

Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) is an exotic state of matter believed to have existed just microseconds after the Big Bang, and it’s unlike anything we see in everyday life.

What is Quark-Gluon Plasma?

It’s a hot, dense soup of:

  • Quarks – the fundamental building blocks of protons and neutrons.

  • Gluons – the force carriers that “glue” quarks together using the strong nuclear force.

In normal matter (like atoms), quarks are confined inside protons and neutrons. But in quark-gluon plasma, that confinement breaks down and quarks and gluons roam freely.

Conditions Needed

  • Extreme temperature: Over 2 trillion °C (100,000 times hotter than the sun’s core).

  • Extreme energy density: Created in high-energy particle collisions.

Where is it made?

Scientists create QGP in particle accelerators, like:

  • CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC)

  • Brookhaven National Lab’s RHIC (Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider)

They smash heavy ions (like lead or gold nuclei) at near-light speed to momentarily recreate the conditions of the early universe.

Why It Matters

  • Reveals the behavior of matter at its most fundamental level.

  • Helps us understand:

    • The origin of matter.

    • How the early universe cooled and formed protons, neutrons, atoms, etc.

  • Confirms key parts of Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the theory of the strong force.

State of Matter?

  • QGP is considered a distinct state of matter, beyond:

    • Solid

    • Liquid

    • Gas

    • Plasma

  • It’s often described as the “perfect fluid” because it flows with almost zero viscosity—less than any other known substance.

From the album “States of Matter

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Condensate

Condensate-Best-Of.mp3
Condensate-Best-Of.mp4
Condensate.mp3
Condensate.mp4
Condensate-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Condensate (state)

[Verse 1]
Am I stupid
… it’s not gas, solid, or liquid?
What the atoms did
As one in unison

[Bridge]
Just for fun
(Dance as one)
The thrill
(Of chill)

[Chorus]
Condensate (state)
Cold (cold) cold
Radically different
(Can’t be indifferent)

[Bridge]
Just for fun
(Dance as one)

[Verse 2]
Absolute zero
(Absolutely)
A scientist’s hero
(Astutely)

[Bridge]
Just for fun
(Dance as one)
The thrill
(Of chill)

[Chorus]
Condensate (state)
Cold (cold) cold
Radically different
(Can’t be indifferent)

[Outro]
Just for fun
(Dance as one)
The thrill
(Of chill)

A SCIENCE NOTE

A condensate is a state of matter that appears under extremely low temperatures and/or specific quantum conditions. There are several types, but most fall under quantum states—radically different from solids, liquids, or gases.

Main Types of Condensates and Their States:

1. Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC)

  • State: Quantum, ultra-cold superfluid

  • Temperature: Just above absolute zero

  • Behavior: Atoms “collapse” into the same lowest energy state and behave like a single quantum entity—like a wave more than a particle.

  • Properties: Zero viscosity, can flow up walls, exhibits quantum weirdness at macroscopic scales.

  • Discovered: 1995 (Cornell & Wieman, Nobel Prize)

2. Fermionic Condensate

  • State: Also a superfluid, but formed from fermions (like electrons, protons, neutrons).

  • Requires pairing of fermions (like Cooper pairs in superconductors).

  • Observed in ultra-cold lithium atoms.

3. Exciton-Polariton Condensate / Photon Condensate

  • Light-like particles (photons or quasi-particles) condense into a single coherent quantum state.

  • Extremely exotic, used in cutting-edge quantum optics.

So What Is the State?

Condensates:

  • Are not solids, liquids, or gases in the classical sense.

  • Often called superfluids or quantum fluids.

  • Represent a fifth state of matter (beyond solid, liquid, gas, plasma).

Simple Analogy:

Imagine millions of atoms at normal temperatures acting like a wild crowd at a concert (each doing its own thing). In a condensate, it’s like everyone stops moving and dances in perfect unison—as if they become one single “super-atom.”

From the album “States of Matter

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Gel

Gel.mp3
Gel.mp4
Gel-Reggae.mp3
Gel-Reggae.mp4
Gel-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Oh, well (Gel)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Verse 1]
Hello, jello
You’re foggin’ up my eyes
Come to know
Physics philosophize

[Bridge]
Is it any surprise
(When colloids collide)

[Chorus]
Oh, well (Gel!)
Upended (Suspended)
Do tell (Gel!)
Solid (liquid)

A SCIENCE NOTE

There are “in-between” or transitional states of matter—these often occur during phase changes or under extreme or unusual conditions.

  1. Colloids and Gels

    • Mixtures where one state is suspended in another (solid in liquid, gas in solid, etc.).

    • Not pure states but can behave in-between two states.

    • Example: Jello (solid-liquid), fog (liquid-gas).

When colloids collide, several things can happen depending on the conditions like temperature, concentration, surface chemistry, and whether any forces (like electric charge) are acting on them. Here’s what can occur:

Possible Outcomes of Colloid Collision:

  1. They Bounce Off Each Other (Stable Colloid):

    • Why: If the particles have like charges or are stabilized by surfactants or polymers, they repel each other.

    • Example: Milk stays mixed because fat droplets repel one another.

  2. They Stick Together (Flocculation or Aggregation):

    • Why: If repulsive forces are weak or removed (e.g., by adding salt), van der Waals forces or hydrophobic interactions pull them together.

    • Result: Formation of clumps called flocs.

    • Example: Muddy water treated with alum to clarify it—particles stick and settle.

  3. They Coalesce (in Emulsions):

    • This happens mostly in liquid-in-liquid colloids (like oil droplets in water).

    • The droplets fuse into larger droplets, which can eventually separate into two phases.

    • Example: Old salad dressing where oil separates from vinegar.

  4. They Break Apart (Rare but Possible):

    • Under high shear forces (like in a blender or high-speed stirring), colloidal particles can break into smaller ones.

    • Often used to stabilize a colloid by making particles smaller and more uniform.

Why This Matters

  • The stability of colloids is crucial in food, medicine, cosmetics, and industrial applications.

  • Colloid science uses tools like the DLVO theory (Derjaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek) to model the balance of forces during collisions.

From the album “States of Matter

Also found on the album “Reggae Modern Day

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Coalesce

Coalesce.mp3
Coalesce.mp4
Coalesce-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Coalesce-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Coalesce-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Is it possible
To come together
As one

[Verse 2]
Is it reasonable
Whether weather
Is some

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Harmonica Solo, Violin, Bass]

[Chorus]
More or less
(Coalesce)
Immersions
(in Emulsions)

[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo]

[Verse 3]
Can’t refuse
To fuse…
Refuse or elude?

[Verse 4]
Liguid-in-liquid did
What I’d like to do
How ’bout you?

[Bridge]
(Liguid-in-liquid did)
[Instrumental, Harmonica Solo, Violin, Bass]
I’d like to…
(How ’bout you?)

[Instrumental, Whistle Solo]

[Chorus]
More or less
(Coalesce)
Immersions
(in Emulsions)

[Outro]
[Instrumental, Whistle Solo]
More or less
(Coalesce)
Immersions
(in Emulsions)

A SCIENCE NOTE

There are “in-between” or transitional states of matter—these often occur during phase changes or under extreme or unusual conditions.

Colloids and Gels

  • Mixtures where one state is suspended in another (solid in liquid, gas in solid, etc.).

  • Not pure states but can behave in-between two states.

  • Example: Jello (solid-liquid), fog (liquid-gas).

When colloids collide, several things can happen depending on the conditions like temperature, concentration, surface chemistry, and whether any forces (like electric charge) are acting on them. Here’s what can occur:

Possible Outcomes of Colloid Collision:

  1. They Bounce Off Each Other (Stable Colloid):

    • Why: If the particles have like charges or are stabilized by surfactants or polymers, they repel each other.

    • Example: Milk stays mixed because fat droplets repel one another.

  2. They Stick Together (Flocculation or Aggregation):

    • Why: If repulsive forces are weak or removed (e.g., by adding salt), van der Waals forces or hydrophobic interactions pull them together.

    • Result: Formation of clumps called flocs.

    • Example: Muddy water treated with alum to clarify it—particles stick and settle.

  3. They Coalesce (in Emulsions):

    • This happens mostly in liquid-in-liquid colloids (like oil droplets in water).

    • The droplets fuse into larger droplets, which can eventually separate into two phases.

    • Example: Old salad dressing where oil separates from vinegar.

  4. They Break Apart (Rare but Possible):

    • Under high shear forces (like in a blender or high-speed stirring), colloidal particles can break into smaller ones.

    • Often used to stabilize a colloid by making particles smaller and more uniform.

Why This Matters

  • The stability of colloids is crucial in food, medicine, cosmetics, and industrial applications.

  • Colloid science uses tools like the DLVO theory (Derjaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek) to model the balance of forces during collisions.

From the album “States of Matter

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Phase Change

Phase-Change.mp3
Phase-Change.mp4
Phase-Change-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Phase-Change-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Phase-Change-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Transitional states of matter
Neither here nor there
Additional fates that matter
Are we even aware

[Chorus]
Melting point
(Boiling point)
Sublimation
(And deposition)

[Bridge]
(Fa, fa, fa) Phase change
(Feelin’ kinda strange)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(Fa, fa, fa) Phase change
(Change) change (change)
Ohhhh (so strange)

[Verse 2]
Transitional states of matter
Neither here nor there
Additional fates that matter
Are we even aware

[Chorus]
Melting point
(Boiling point)
Sublimation
(And deposition)

[Bridge]
(Fa, fa, fa) Phase change
(Feelin’ kinda strange)
(Fa, fa, fa) Phase change
(Change) change (change)
Ohhhh (so strange)

[Chorus]
Melting point
(Boiling point)
Sublimation
(And deposition)

[Outro]
(Fa, fa, fa) Phase change
(Feelin’ kinda strange)

A SCIENCE NOTE

here There are “in-between” or transitional states of matter—these often occur during phase changes or under extreme or unusual conditions. Here are some key examples:

Transitional or Intermediate States

  1. Supercritical Fluid

    • Happens when a substance is above its critical temperature and pressure.

    • In between liquid and gas: it flows like a gas but dissolves substances like a liquid.

    • Example: Supercritical CO₂ used for decaffeinating coffee.

  2. Mesophases (Liquid Crystals)

    • Found in substances that exhibit properties of both liquids and solids.

    • Molecules flow like a liquid but have some ordered structure like a solid.

    • Example: LCD screens (Liquid Crystal Displays).

  3. Amorphous Solids

    • Technically solids, but their internal structure is disordered—between a solid and a liquid.

    • Example: Glass, obsidian, some plastics.

  4. Colloids and Gels

    • Mixtures where one state is suspended in another (solid in liquid, gas in solid, etc.).

    • Not pure states but can behave in-between two states.

    • Example: Jello (solid-liquid), fog (liquid-gas).

Phase Change States

These are fleeting but physically real moments during transitions:

  • Melting Point – Solid → Liquid (particles gaining enough energy to break rigid bonds).

  • Boiling Point – Liquid → Gas (particles escape surface tension).

  • Sublimation – Solid → Gas (skipping liquid, like dry ice).

  • Deposition – Gas → Solid (like frost forming).

Exotic and Hypothetical In-Between States

  • Rydberg Matter – Excited atoms loosely bound, between gas and plasma.

  • Supersolids – Predicted state with properties of both superfluids and crystalline solids.

  • Time Crystals – A quantum state that appears to oscillate in time without using energy.

From the album “States of Matter

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Fact of the Matter

Fact-of-the-Matter.mp3
Fact-of-the-Matter.mp4
Fact-of-the-Matter-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp3
Fact-of-the-Matter-Unplugged-Underground-XX.mp4
Fact-of-the-Matter-intro.mp3″

[Verse 1]
Spreading the rule of bull
Discrediting science
He’s filled up – full
Of dissonance

[Chorus]
As a matter of fact
The fact of the matter
A much madder act
Than the Mad Hatter

[Bridge]
What’s the deal?
(For real)
Get real
(Speak what’s true)
… or can you?

[Verse 2]
Speaking with forked tongue
Bringing harm to the old
No future for the young
All the lies have been told

[Chorus]
As a matter of fact
The fact of the matter
A much madder act
Than the Mad Hatter

[Bridge]
What’s the deal?
(For real)
Get real
(Speak what’s true)
… or can you?

[Chorus]
As a matter of fact
The fact of the matter
A much madder act
Than the Mad Hatter

[Outro]
(Spiel the deal)
Get real

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Fact of the Matter” serves as a pointed critique of Donald Trump’s anti-science stance and reliance on conspiracy theories, using metaphor and satire to expose the chaos, dishonesty, and societal harm caused by his rhetoric and leadership. Here’s a close interpretation through that lens:

[Verse 1]

“Spreading the rule of bull / Discrediting science”
These lines directly call out Trump’s frequent lies (“bull”) and his hostility toward science, especially in key areas like climate change, public health (e.g., COVID-19), and environmental protection. His undermining of scientific institutions fits squarely with this accusation.

“He’s filled up – full / Of dissonance”
This reflects cognitive dissonance — holding contradictory beliefs and making inconsistent statements — a defining trait of Trump’s public communication, where truth is often twisted or reversed depending on political convenience.

[Chorus]

“As a matter of fact / The fact of the matter”
A play on words that highlights the erosion of objective truth. Under Trump, what should be “a matter of fact” became constantly disputed — from crowd sizes to climate science to election results.

“A much madder act / Than the Mad Hatter”
This metaphor likens Trump’s behavior to the Mad Hatter, a symbol of nonsense and irrationality from Alice in Wonderland. The line suggests that Trump’s actions are more dangerously unhinged than even that surreal figure — not just absurd, but consequentially harmful.

[Bridge]

“What’s the deal? (For real) / Get real (Speak what’s true) … or can you?”
These lines capture the public’s confusion and disbelief, as well as a direct challenge to truthfulness. The “… or can you?” is accusatory — implying that Trump either can’t or won’t tell the truth, possibly because doing so would expose the lies his politics rely on.

[Verse 2]

“Speaking with forked tongue”
This phrase traditionally refers to deceit or duplicity — a clear accusation that Trump says one thing and means another, often flipping positions or manipulating narratives.

“Bringing harm to the old / No future for the young”
This suggests tangible harm caused by his policies and misinformation:

  • To the old: mishandling of COVID-19, cuts to healthcare.

  • To the young: climate inaction, rising inequality, misinformation that undermines education and science literacy.

“All the lies have been told”
A sense of exhaustion and disillusionment — referencing the thousands of documented falsehoods Trump told while in office, creating an environment where truth is devalued.

[Final Chorus and Outro]

“Spiel the deal / Get real”
A twist on “seal the deal,” this line satirizes Trump’s salesman-like approach to politics — focused on optics and slogans, not substance or truth. The call to “get real” is a plea for authenticity and a return to reality, away from conspiracy and manipulation.

Interpretation Summary:

“Fact of the Matter” critiques Trump as a figure who distorts truth, undermines science, and harms society through deception and irrationality. It points to:

  • Truth erosion through lies and conspiracies

  • Damage to science and the future

  • Maddening inconsistency and gaslighting

  • A public grappling with disbelief, frustration, and the need for truth

Ultimately, the song challenges listeners to see past the spectacle, demand accountability, and reclaim reality from the confusion sown by conspiracy-driven leadership.

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “States of Matter

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State of Confusion

State-of-Confusion-Best-Of.mp3
State-of-Confusion-Best-Of.mp4
State-of-Confusion.mp3
State-of-Confusion.mp4
State-of-Confusion-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Uncertainty over certainty
Totally distorted reality
No clue of what to do
He’s just putting it to you

[Chorus]
Are you in a state of confusion
(Over the state of the nation)
Shredded Constitution
(Science under destruction)

[Bridge]
(Oh, oh, oh) What a wacko

[Verse 2]
Certainly uncertain
Rationality is hurtin’
No clue what he does
Turning is to was

[Chorus]
Are you in a state of confusion
(Over the state of the nation)
Shredded Constitution
(Science under destruction)

[Bridge]
(Oh, oh, oh) What a wacko
He’s gotta go
(Go, go, go)
Woe, oh, oh
(No know, know no)

[Chorus]
Are you in a state of confusion
(Over the state of the nation)
Shredded Constitution
(Science under destruction)

[Outro]
(Oh, oh, oh) What a wacko

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “State of Confusion” is a sharp critique of Donald Trump’s embrace of anti-science rhetoric, conspiracy theories, and erosion of democratic norms. Here’s a breakdown of how the lyrics relate to these themes:

[Verse 1]

“Uncertainty over certainty / Totally distorted reality”
This likely refers to Trump’s constant promotion of misinformation and conspiracy theories, from climate denial and anti-vaccine rhetoric to election fraud claims. His actions and statements often replaced scientific consensus with ideological confusion.

“No clue of what to do / He’s just putting it to you”
This could reflect the chaotic nature of his leadership — acting on impulse or manipulating public opinion rather than following coherent policy or science-based decision-making.

[Chorus]

“Are you in a state of confusion (Over the state of the nation)”
A direct callout to the national disorientation under Trump — a time when truth was under attack, and many felt destabilized by constant upheaval in leadership, norms, and truth.

“Shredded Constitution (Science under destruction)”
This is a powerful line — suggesting:

  • The Constitution was undermined, possibly referencing authoritarian tendencies, the Capitol insurrection, and refusal to accept electoral outcomes.

  • The attack on science — climate denial, suppression of CDC guidelines, withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, and sidelining of scientific experts during COVID — is central to this criticism.

[Bridge]

“What a wacko”
This blunt line conveys disbelief and frustration at the behavior of someone seen as unhinged or irrational — possibly referencing Trump’s erratic tweets, pseudoscientific statements, and promotion of fringe ideas.

[Verse 2]

“Certainly uncertain / Rationality is hurtin'”
Trump’s contradictions and emotional, reactive communication style made it difficult for the public or even his own staff to predict or understand his actions. Logic and reason were often replaced by gut instinct or spectacle.

“Turning is to was”
Suggests that progress (turning) is being reversed (turned to ‘was’) — symbolic of how scientific advancement and civil norms were rolled back.

[Bridge and Outro]

“He’s gotta go / Woe… No know, know no”
This echoes a plea for removal or accountability, while the closing wordplay — “no know, know no” — might reflect a society that no longer knows what’s true or has lost its grasp on knowledge itself.

Interpretation Summary:

State of Confusion” expresses a profound disillusionment with the chaotic, anti-intellectual climate that emerged during Trump’s presidency. It criticizes:

  • The spread of misinformation and disdain for science

  • Authoritarian behavior and constitutional erosion

  • The manipulation of truth, logic, and public trust

The song functions both as a lament and a call to action, asking listeners to recognize the confusion and reject leadership that thrives on distortion and division.

Song inspired by Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “States of Matter

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Plasma

Plasma-Best-Of.mp3
Plasma-Best-Of.mp4
Plasma.mp3
Plasma.mp4
Plasma-Pt-2.mp3
Plasma-Pt-2.mp4
Plasma-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Going past
(Liquid, solid, and gas)
Sure does impress
(In a new light cast)

[Chorus]
Hey, Mama
(How’s your plasma)
After the Big Bang
(How do you hang?)

[Bridge]
So, does your plasma flow

[Verse 2]
Ionized gas
(Free electrons pass)
How about that neon glow
(Did you even know)

[Chorus]
Hey, Mama
(How’s your plasma)
After the Big Bang
(How do you hang?)

[Bridge]
So, does your plasma flow
[Instrumental, Synth Solo, Bass]
Lightning
(So exciting)
High energy density
(Comes to reality)

[Chorus]
Hey, Mama
(How’s your plasma)
After the Big Bang
(How do you hang?)

[Outro]
Oh, does your plasma flow
(Go, go, go)

A SCIENCE NOTE

There are more states of matter than liquid, solid, and gas:

  1. Plasma – An ionized gas with free electrons and ions. Found in stars, lightning, and neon signs.

  2. Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) – A state at temperatures near absolute zero where atoms behave as a single quantum entity.

  3. Fermionic Condensate – Similar to BEC but made of fermions (rather than bosons).

  4. Quark-Gluon Plasma – Exists at extremely high energy densities, such as just after the Big Bang.

From the album “States of Matter

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Solid

Solid.mp3
Solid.mp4
Solid-Pt-2.mp3
Solid-Pt-2.mp4
Solid-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Hard, hard, hard
You’re so hard
I know you don’t flow
And can’t pass as gas

[Chorus]
Solid (as a rock)
Oh, yes, you did
(Move me)
Solid (as a rock)
Oh, so tight
(I see)

[Bridge]
See (the light)
Packin’ particles so tight
(They just might)
Put up a fight
(If you try to pull them apart)
Best not to start

[Verse 2]
Hard, hard, hard
Oh, oh, so hard
Play my best card
Ante up n’ bid

[Chorus]
Solid (as a rock)
Oh, yes, you did
(Move me)
Solid (as a rock)
Oh, so tight
(I see)

[Bridge]
See (the light)
Packin’ particles so tight
(They just might)
Put up a fight
(If you try to pull them apart)
Best not to start

[Outro]
See (the light)
Light up in sight
(Light up insight)

From the album “States of Matter

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Liquid

Liquid.mp3
Liquid.mp4
Liquid-Pt-2.mp3
Liquid-Pt-2.mp4
Liquid-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
(Nice!) Getta load of what ice…
(Did.)
Solid to liquid
(That’s what he did)

[Bridge]
Liquid (id, id, id)

[Chorus]
Liquid did what liquids do
(Flow… ya know, flow)
Felt the melt and drip, too
(Flow… ya gotta go!)

[Bridge]
(oh, oh, oh)

[Verse 2]
Vapor (now condensing)
Used to pass as gas…
Pass to liquid
(That’s what she did)

[Bridge]
Liquid (id, id, id)

[Chorus]
Liquid did what liquids do
(Flow… ya know, flow)
Felt the melt and drip, too
(Flow, girl, flow!)

[Bridge]
Liquid (id, id, id)
Ice was nice
(Thawed in awe)
And the vapor caper
(Condensed years to tears)

[Chorus]
Liquid did what liquids do
(Flow… ya know, flow)
Felt the melt and drip, too
(Flow, girl, flow!)

[Outro]
Liquid did what liquids do
(You, too?)

From the album “States of Matter

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