The Source

Album: Resist The Divide (2024)
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Songfacts®:

  • "The Source" is a driving track from the Michigan progressive metal band Black Note Graffiti. Their lead singer, Gabby (Gabrielle-Gloria), told Songfacts the meaning behind the lyric:

    "These lyrics really resonate with me because they capture that heavy, almost suffocating feeling of being caught in a cycle of dependence. It's like trying so hard to break free, but somehow, no matter what you do, you find yourself crawling back to whatever you were trying to escape. The repetition of 'You kill your subsidence, you crawl back to the source' hits hard because it's this relentless pattern - whether it's a person, a habit, or a situation. You think you've let go, but deep down, you're still tethered. I can relate to that sense of feeling stuck, of being patient, but not knowing when or if you'll ever break free.

    The line, 'Enough if not enough to heal,' is such a gut punch because it's about wanting to be okay but realizing healing isn't a straight line. You think you've reached your limit, that it's enough to move forward, but it still doesn't feel like it's enough to truly heal. The idea of waking up to 'nothing real' someday adds another layer - like what happens when everything you've clung to or fought against finally dissolves? I think we all have moments where we wonder what's left if the things we've built our lives around just disappear. It's a frightening but deeply human reflection on what it means to confront those cycles and dependencies."
  • The song was released as a single from Black Note Graffiti's fourth album, Resist The Divide. The album was produced by Josh Schroeder, who has also worked with Dayseeker, The Plot In You and Ghost Bath.

    "I had a blast working with Black Note Graffiti," he said. Every member brings their own passion and personality to the record, and one of the many things I love about my job as a producer is to make sure those creative voices all work in tandem in the final mix."
  • "The Source" has a lot of the hallmarks of Black Note Graffiti's music, which is often emotionally charged and challenges us to face up to our past traumas and dependencies. They cite Nirvana, Deftones and Bob Marley as influences.

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