See, in our story, a lot of people think it's that the little Japan
ese girl just fights the robot
and that's kind of the story. we have,
part of the story goes
that the robot is one of these technically advanced,
you know, futuristic machines
and it falls in love with Yoshimi
and instead of Yoshimi killing the robot,
the robot actually kills himself.
So the story has this strange little twist.
So I don't want you to feel too good
about her beating the robot
or the robot losing because it's all, again, it's convoluted,
I'm sorry. Oh, test. Okay.
So we're doing
these a little out of order
as the way that they would work
on the record.
So a lot of people think, and rightly so,
I mean, we built the record in such a way
that you could listen to it and think that there's
a story that sort of comes out of it.
We start out with this song.
It's called Fight Test,
and it's about a sort of stance
that someone can take.
Not a moral stance,
but just a human stance
on how you can deal with your own reason for
fighting and stuff like that.
And then it goes on to the other parts of it.
So this song I've seen written about,
and correctly so resembles, in some ways,
a Cat Stevens song
called Father and Son.
Maybe some of you guys know that song,
right? And it's a beautiful, wonderful, great, great tune.
And I agree that it does,
in some ways,
resemble that song.
I was listening to that song
when I sort of discovered the sort of storytelling,
here we are, storytelling thing.
It's a storytelling element
of the way the chord progression
goes.
Maybe you could show them Steven.
Yeah