Apex Predator - Easy Meat

Album: Apex Predator - Easy Meat (2015)
Play Video
  • A stampede to rush forward,
    yet I'm in retreat
    Far horizon greedily
    sucks in the keen
    Descend down the scale
    on drooping stumps
    I've wished to shear
    Come, the predatory to luckless
    Spread-eagled, I am easy meat

    A mound for a quarrel,
    none more austere
    A lebensraum in landfill
    I had once pieced (together)
    Tail the higher caste and shovel
    whatever foulness they excrete
    Come, the predatory to luckless Razed to the ground, I am easy meat

    Tenderise chunks of a weakling
    Claim on bare bones for bleaching
    Thousand-yard stares
    for the meeting

    Apex predator, easy meat Writer/s: Adam Russell, Mark Greenway, Shane Embury
    Publisher: Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Experience Nirvana with Sub Pop Founder Bruce Pavitt

Experience Nirvana with Sub Pop Founder Bruce PavittSong Writing

The man who ran Nirvana's first label gets beyond the sensationalism (drugs, Courtney) to discuss their musical and cultural triumphs in the years before Nevermind.

Alan Merrill of The Arrows

Alan Merrill of The ArrowsSongwriter Interviews

In her days with The Runaways, Joan Jett saw The Arrows perform "I Love Rock And Roll," which Alan Merrill co-wrote - that story and much more from this glam rock pioneer.

Five Rockers Who Rolled With The Devil

Five Rockers Who Rolled With The DevilSong Writing

Just how much did these monsters of rock dabble in the occult?

Michelle Branch

Michelle BranchSongwriter Interviews

Michelle Branch talks about "Everywhere," "The Game Of Love," and her run-in with a Christian broadcasting network.

Gary LeVox

Gary LeVoxSongwriter Interviews

On "Life Is A Highway," his burgeoning solo career, and the Rascal Flatts song he most connects with.

Marc Campbell - "88 Lines About 44 Women"

Marc Campbell - "88 Lines About 44 Women"They're Playing My Song

The Nails lead singer Marc Campbell talks about those 44 women he sings about over a stock Casio keyboard track. He's married to one of them now - you might be surprised which.