Cage my head, lock me away.
Strap me in this jacket, throw away the key.
Leave me to rot, wither and die.
Four white padded walls didn't work the fucking first time.
I need help, someone help me.
I need help, someone help me.
I need help, someone help me.
I need help!
There's a disease embedded in me and I can't seem to tear it out of my bloodstream.
Fuck!
Diseased, unrooted.
There is no essence of human
Coursing through my veins,
The taste is quite destained.
A toxicity that burns through the earth.
Doomed forever, a jackal, a curse.
Burn me at the stake, tear off my limbs, feed me to the fucking wolves. Bleed me dry, bleed me dry.
Burn me at the stake, tear off my limbs, feed me to the fucking wolves. I would rather die than live this life doomed forever.
I Can't wait to die, slit my wrist and throw me.
I can't wait to die, cut my throat and throw me
To the fucking wolves.
(They said I did it! Oh, they said I did it!)
(They said I did it! Oh, they said I did it!)
They said I killed them all,
Burnt my name in all their heads.
Then sat down in their blood
Laughing ‘The jackal isn't dead”.
Cage my head, lock me away.
Strap me in this jacket, throw away the key.
Leave me to rot, wither and die.
Four white padded walls didn't work the fucking first time.
credits
from Spit You Out,
released August 25, 2017
Written and Performed by Apate
Quite possibly the most full-on album I've ever listened to. Intense, and then some. 'Digital Tarpit' could describe both the track and the whole album: high-pitched guitar squeals that make your fillings itch coupled with merciless, suffocating heaviness. The Avenell-esque vocals top it off perfectly.
Brilliant - punishing, but brilliant. jim_fuego
Chicago deathcore outfit Into the Silo torch everything in sight on this searing new LP with riffs that will leave bruises. Bandcamp New & Notable Aug 21, 2022
What a refreshing, heavy metalcore album this is. The 6/8 tracks are intense as all get out, lyrics are dark and personal and haunting, production is excellently fitting, and musicianship all around is great. The features, especially Frankie Palmeri's, listen so well and so heavily. Mark Benton