[Silence]
[Instrumental, Guitar, Piano, Organ, Synth, Bass, Percussion, Drums]
[Intro]
[Instrumental Intro: Pulsing Bass, Organ Swell, Muted Guitar Chops, Rising Synth Filter]
[Minimal Beat, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
Rapid (destabilization)
Rabid (denial nation)
[Instrumental]
[Bass Solo]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]
[Verse 1]
Physical
(Subsystem)
Environmental
(Vacuum)
[Chorus]
Rapid (destabilization)
Rabid (denial nation)
Self-sustaining
(Who’s remaining)
[Bridge – Breakdown]
[Percussion, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
Speed of interaction
(Read: acceleration)
[Instrumental – Extended Jam]
[Guitar Solo — sharper, angular]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]
[Verse 2]
Economic
(Subsystem)
Moving quick
(Momentum)
[Chorus]
Rapid (destabilization)
Rabid (denial nation)
Self-sustaining
(Who’s remaining)
[Bridge – Breakdown]
[Percussion, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
Speed of interaction
(Read: acceleration)
[Instrumental – Extended Jam]
[Guitar Solo — sharper, angular]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]
[Outro]
Rapid (destabilization)
Rabid (denial nation)
Self-sustaining
(Who’s remaining)
ABOUT THE SONG
Tipping Points Igniting a Domino Effect
We long suspected that tipping points would eventually trigger self-sustaining feedback loops.
Now they have.
What even seasoned systems analysts did not fully anticipate was the speed of interaction — how rapidly destabilized systems would begin reinforcing one another.
Economic, physical, and ecological subsystems are no longer evolving independently. They are synchronizing.
Abstract models are becoming measurable reality.
Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is toppled and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.
From the album “Joules“