Digital Animal Lyrics

Lyric discussion by Fastest Baptist 

Cover art for Digital Animal lyrics by Honey Claws

It's not drivel as clymaxn ignorantly stated. It's wisdom from a person's perspective of this intricate world in which we live. It actually describes the fallen world we live in to a T. And initiates that point from it's very first line. "Paid a fee, door let me in free" tells us that nothing is free in this world. While it might be "free" for you, rest assured someone else has paid for it. For a reason. It also represents the illusion of exclusivity. If you paid the fee, that door opening is not free. You bought your way in. Not monetarily, but through some other fashion. Trials, tribulations, etc. But for the wealthy, famous, and upper class, that door opening is free. Or is it? But the next lyric let's you know just exactly how the world works. "Some of us pro and don't need I D." Now we're getting to the point. Do you think Labron James pays a cover charge? Not at all. They get in free. But they worked hard, trained hard, played hard, spent hours and hours and hours perfecting their "skill" and, after becoming famous, now things are easier for him then they are for most of the rest of the world. But he sacrificed allot of his time to do it. Quoting Paul aka Monoxide Child of TWIZTID, "Without sacrifice, there is nothing worthy." You have to give to get. It takes money to make money. It takes time to make time. And the sooner you realize that truthful element of life in this world, the better off we'll all be.

@Fastest Baptist I just made an account for replying to this. It seems like your comment is full of capitalist propaganda and you talk about stuff not even related to the song. Sports like basketball is full of overpaying the underskilled. We all made sacrifices but none of us were born the same so some of us had to work twice as hard to get the same amount of skill, money and experience. Also unmeaningful commentary on the paying services part. Lyrics are not wisdom, they are merely put together to create a melody of repetition and fast reading. They are...