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Mt Shasta Lyrics

Produced Arranged Composed & Performed by Beau Phillips Copyright 2023 All Rights Reserved

Lyrics

Point me in the direction
Follow the ley lines
Sedona through the canyon
And past Rachel Nevada
Pyramid honey eagles lakes
Then stones landing and we have arrived

To Shasta last time I felt the past
A whisper of tartariatic catacombs
And volcanic fortresses erupting with
A fluid that has trapped us in our minds
One day we will find peace but not on this earth

Point Arena to Booneville mountain view drive
3:33 in the morning and I am still alive
Navigate cirques and hanging valleys
Nature's alleys are contrived
To show us the way

To Shasta last time I felt the past
A whisper of tartariatic catacombs
And volcanic fortresses erupting with
A fluid that has trapped us in our minds
One day we will find peace but not on this earth
Song Info
Copyright
Lyrics © O/b/o Distrokid
Writer
Beau Phillips
Duration
6:01
Submitted by
davidbeauy On Aug 29, 2025
1 Meaning

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Cover art for Mt Shasta lyrics by Juxxtaposed

The lyrics to juxxtaposed's "Mt Shasta" are a meditative, esoteric journey that blends geographic pilgrimage with themes of ancient mystery, spiritual entrapment, and a search for transcendence. The song focuses on the idea that the answers to life's mysteries are encoded in specific, sacred locations. Journey and Esoteric Geography 🗺️ The song is structured as a literal and symbolic road trip, guiding the listener along a path of known spiritual or mythical sites.

  • The Path of Power: The opening lines, "Point me in the direction / Follow the ley lines," immediately establish an esoteric framework. Ley lines are imaginary alignments thought to connect ancient sites and spiritual energy points. The journey moves through real, myth-laden locations:
    • Sedona: Famous for its vortexes and New Age spiritual draw.
    • Rachel, Nevada: Near Area 51, linking the journey to UFOs and conspiracy theories.
    • Mt Shasta: The ultimate destination, a real volcano in California associated with legends of hidden cities (like Telos) and various mystical entities.
  • The Symbolic Road: References like "Point Arena to Booneville mountain view drive" and "3:33 in the morning" ground the journey in a specific, almost hallucinatory reality. The number 3:33 is significant in numerology, often symbolizing spiritual guidance, alignment, and awakening, reinforcing the quest's higher purpose.
  • Nature's Design: The phrase "Nature's alleys are contrived / To show us the way" suggests that the seemingly random paths of the natural world (cirques and hanging valleys) are actually deliberately laid out to guide the seeking traveler. The Weight of the Past and Mystery ⛰️ The recurring chorus reveals the true nature of the destination: Mt Shasta is not just a mountain, but a locus of profound, possibly dangerous, historical energy.
  • Tartaria and Catacombs: The "whisper of tartariatic catacombs" references the conspiracy theory of Tartaria, an alleged lost civilization believed to have been erased from history. This suggests the speaker feels connected to a vast, suppressed past at this site. The catacombs imply hidden structures and buried secrets.
  • Volcanic Fortress: The "volcanic fortresses erupting" gives the setting a sense of immense, contained power that is barely stable. The past is not peaceful; it's a volatile, active force.
  • The Fluid of Entrapment: The key image is a "fluid that has trapped us in our minds." This is a powerful metaphor for inherited trauma, historical lies, or collective ignorance—a pervasive, invisible substance that prevents true spiritual or intellectual freedom. The journey to Mt Shasta makes this mental prison feel physically real. The Quest for Transcendence 🕊️ The final, conclusive line of the chorus expresses a deep, spiritual longing that will only be fulfilled outside of earthly existence.
  • The Ultimate Peace: "One day we will find peace but not on this earth" is a resignation to the fact that the profound historical baggage and mental limits ("the fluid") that bind humanity cannot be overcome in this life. Even arriving at a place of immense spiritual power like Mt Shasta does not offer instant salvation.
  • The Nature of the Quest: The journey, therefore, is not about finding an answer or a place to settle, but about gaining the realization that ultimate peace lies in transcendence. The spiritual sites merely serve as catalysts to recognize this truth.
Positive
Subjective
Enjoyment
Spirituality
Geography
Mystery
Transcendence
History
 
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