Field Dispatch
Matt Connarton Unleashed: Inverter
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gap and then roll you'll lead us. He's another diaboll. Why not to
ti a lettle that the control and that that's a sall Oh, that's good
stuff. Oh, I didn't mean to talk over the end of it.
There, that's good stuff. That is a devil rock and that is inverter
I think he's on the phone line on the studio line with us. Deek
are you there? Yeah? What's up man? How you doing? Hey
man? I love that track. We have Deeke from Inverter here on the
phone with us, and uh yeah, should I go ahead and disconnect you
from Skype? Is this? Yeah? That's spinning you. I can hear
you. It's weird because these the connections on both isn't so great. I
think I live in some like Berm Triangle, like in Massachusetts. Who knows,
Yeah, you never know. With Skype. It's uh, it's hit
or miss. It's better than it used to be, but it's still will
fail us at times, as technology can often do. But I'm glad to
have you here. Man. I love this I love this band. Inverter
You sent us a few tracks and we're gonna We're gonna play some more a
little bit later. I'll play another one at the end of our discussion.
But great, great stuff, very very catchy but heavy. You know,
it's it's catchy and heavy, which isn't something that everybody can pull off,
but really really good. Thank you, Thank you appreciate that. Yes,
someone recently called us dance metal. I'm like, I don't know if it's
true, but that's cool. And one thing we find is every time we
play, the chicks are always moving up front, which I'll take any day
because we always try to. We always try to kind of have that groove
elements to things as opposed to blast beats and all that stuff, which we
love too, but it's just not what we do. Yeah, I totally
get that dance metal. I like that. I wouldn't have thought of that
term, but that completely makes sense and uh yeah, very cool. Yeah,
you guys are all Are you all from the Boston area, yes,
correct, Yeah, Boston area, And strange that we all, uh,
every single member of the band at once, at one point in time,
was affiliated with the former radio station WBCN out of Boston one oh four one.
Yeah, we were talking about many moons ago. Yeah, yeah,
we were talking about that earlier. And you know, I'm a radio nerd,
and I vividly remember WBCN, although I can't I can't remember the name
of the There's a documentary that came out a few years ago right about WBCN.
Yeah, there is. There was a book that came out. I
made it like four I was like a later guard of BCN. I'm in
like four pages of the book. Maybe, yeah, but it's more about,
like the said, I didn't even grow up in the Boston area,
so it's about like the seventies era of BCN, the heyday. And there
was a documentary, and to be honest, I have not seen it,
even though I worked there for seven years. I'm ashamed to say. No,
I'm with you, I haven't seen it either. That would be on
my list my Netflix rentals or whatever. There you go. No, like
I said, I haven't seen it yet either, and I'm a radio nerd,
so I definitely need to see it. But but I've heard really good
things. You're getting some love in the Facebook live chat. By the way,
Legion of Solace says inverter is a great, high energy live show that
doesn't surprise me, and we love the Legion, so thank you. Oh
very nice, very nice. And Jay Bellow from the band Chasing the Devil
is also in the chat room and said rock with multiple with multiple exclamation points,
so I think he digs what you're doing as well. Yeah, can
you kind of So can you kind of fill us in on the I was
reading your bio, I'd love to hear you kind of take us through the
origin story of the band because it's a little bit unconventional, and plus you
throw in the piece where you've all worked at WBCN once upon a time.
So can you kind of fill us in deep about how the band got started?
Well, yeah, I didn't start out a BC and it just that's
more coincidence. And I guess you know, it's a small in the world
of rock or the scene, be it New England or local in Boston.
It's all it's a small yeah, so you know, like our drummer Jeff
used to be in the band Seventh Rail Crew, which is a pretty big
like metal hardcare band out of Boston area. He later drummed for Genufleck,
which was fronted by Drew from the Van Revley who did odds. This Bill
Bracken's been in five thousand bands. He's our guitarist, Jeff Law and drummer.
I think I mentioned that. So he and I were in a rage
of guessing tribute band called Age against the Machine at one point time. I
played drums for that, So I didn't front that band, okay, And
Jimmy Evangelista was kind of a neck breaker the muscle for the BCN Street Team
at one point in time, and I loosely knew him back then. Just
you know, this linebacker sized doe in the hallway to say hi, I
do, never knowing he played bass, guitar and lo and behold fast forward
many years he's playing bass for us. The dude smokes a great player.
Bill Bracken probably arguably and not in my words, more of the better guitarists
in the New England area maybe beyond. He's got a trophy case of like
Shredder competition trophies. He's incredible nice and Jess killer drummers. So it started
off though, as a studio project. Bill and I hanging out of his
basement drinking whiskey writing songs in the aftermath of another band we were in called
Death Dealer. Thee app like deaf Jam Records, you know, and we
thought it was clever at the time. Yeah, yeah, And that fizzled
out and we started writing our own stuff, and I was drumming for that
old project too, and I started writing a lot of lyrics for our other
vocalists in the span of time. At one point, I'm like, why
am I writing vocals and lyrics for someone else? I should just be the
vocalist, right, And it kind of just happened. So from a studio
project, the first album just me and Bill. I'm playing drums on it
and doing vocals. He's playing bass, guitar and guitar. He started getting
all these gig offers and we decided maybe we'll put a band together. And
now we've just released our fourth album. Wow, congratulations. Now the tracks
that we're hearing today are they all from the fourth album? Yeah, So
this is actually the first time. We've been signed to a label too,
which has been cool. East of the Earth Records. They're based out of
the Connecticut area. It's like, well, you know, Scissor Fight.
I'm sure they're from right around where you're at. Ye. Yeah, Scissor
Fights on that label. Kings and Liars, this other band that's kind of
members of d Snyder, his band The Snyder from Twisted Sister Fame. Yeah.
Uh, Casting Shadows, a bunch of really cool band's hero in the
horror The Salts of the Earth Records put out Our album just came out of
but a month ago, maybe Sonic Vandalism, I think I said that,
And uh yeah, we're we're just doing a lot of shows in support of
that right now, album number four, and we kind of pulled all the
stops on it. I definitely feel I know people will say this, I
think it's our best album so far. We kind of hit our stride.
Corey Glover, we get the thumbs up from him of Living Color Fames one
of the tracks, which was huge. He's one of He's won two Grammys,
so that was just a little surreal to work with him. Yeah,
and uh yeah, I just I think it's a heck of an album in
terms of, you know, being a bit eclectic and hitting our nerdy Stride
thought a bizarre thematic things in there. Has the Has the sound changed over
the years, because obviously, as you talked about, when you first started
out, it was a studio band, uh, with just two of you,
and and then and then it grew from there. Has the sound changed,
I would, I would imagine it. It's evolved in some sense.
I mean, if you go back, if you go back the first album,
which is a self titled we recorded with Jim Foster, who is fandelphic.
Uh, yeah, and the first one is a little angrier and a
little more kind of political. I guess, you know, take whatever message
anyway you want it. But it's a little angrier. Yeah, And uh,
it's funny. I look back, my voice was a lot clearer than
like years and years of doing this has just changed my speaking voice. You
know, it's a lout raspier. Yeah, so I noticed that, but
uh, it's it's funny. When we first started playing, we kept getting
branded as rap rock, you know, like new metal, hip hop metal,
which I never really felt we were. But there are a lot of
trailer that have kind of a hip hop rhyming hayden or delivery, So I
get it at the same point. Sure, I just never like that term,
like damn it, like there's more. You know, we're doing more
than that, but you know when you get pigeonholed on something the kind of
things. But truth be told, I grew up with a lot of crossover
bands like you know, Downset, bio Hazard do all employed hip hop elements,
so I see where that's coming from. Yeah. Yeah, so it
was a fair enough assessment. But are more modern stuff? Sure of some
of the verses and stuff. I still like to to rhyme and all that,
but it's a little more songish than it is verse delivered hip hop.
Do you still play any of the early material live? Did any of those
songs make it into the present iteration of the band? Yeah, well yes
and no. There's a track it's kind of become It was our first track
ever written. It's kind of become a fan favorite for like a heavier song.
It's called back in the Dirt. It's basically about like stopping lazy bump
sitting around doing nothing and whining about it, like get up while you still
have some life. You know, you're complaining while other people out out there
are double amputees fighting cancer. I'd listened to some of my friends whining and
Facebook about their problems, which amounted to basically nothing. It's like stopping a
total whining loser. Get out there and live your life. You know you're
lucky enough to be here, right, And that was our first track.
We still play that one, and it's funny. I told this story to
someone recently. You write these songs never, you know, you never really,
I don't know how to explain this. And radio was the same way
you do your show. You talk, but you kind of never realize that
people are actually listening and taking it all in sometimes because you're just in a
room by yourself, doing your thing. Right, some woman came up to
me at a show and she told me that that song in the chorus chorus
and she played it repeatedly helped her fight and get through cancer. I was
like, what, Wow, Like, I write these songs like this,
never think you're going to reach anyone, especially in some of the emotional level,
but that like hit me too. I was like, oh my god,
Like I never would have thought anyone would have received it or used the
track as sucked, so it was very flat. But that's I think the
only one. We still working to defect a lot of the stuff. I
mean, like in any band you're write new material, you want to play
all the new stuff that it's new, it's fresh, it's fighting. I
mean, we're actually working in an album five already. But you know there's
one song we play that's a no album. But the new album, Sonic
Vandalism, is still very fresh to us. It's fun to play these tracks
to people who haven't heard of them yet to see how they come off.
And it's been the reception has been very good so far, excellent. And
how did that come about you signing with AsSalt of the Earth, Because you
know, the music business has changed so much, and you know you've got
various options in terms of how you want to market and promote your music,
whether you sign with the label, whether you do it on your own and
all that. How did that come about signing with that label? Truth be
total if I was if I had to hand the blame or the credit to
one person. This guy Dwayne Eldridge, Battle Jacket is nickname, this guy
from Connecticut. He was the scene down there is great, and a lot
of the bands around this area Central mass as well. We network and hang
out with all of these bands. This guy reached out to us. They
used to be this club and all places Jewet City, Connecticut, like in
the middle of nowhere. I actually have some family from there. But there
was this hole in the walk club we'd play and the place was awesome,
like people would be so supportive of bands. They would show up, stay
to the end. This guy gave us a chance, brought us onto some
show. It was like a two room festival thing and he's like, listen,
I'll give you guys a chance on the show. But you're going in
the second stage, second room. On first it's like, oh craft,
I'm like, you got to say your dudes, yep. We thought it
was gonna be this. You know, we'll do the show and maybe we'll
give us something better next time. We got there early. There were a
ton of people. We sold so many shirts and CDs. It was incredible.
And through that we playing shows down there. We got to know Scott
Harrington and Christy his wife who runs Salt of the Earth record They saw us
a bunch of times. They were fans. They have kids, like very
young kids were fans too, so we just started getting to know them,
and at first I didn't know it ran a label. Yeah, and it
turns out he runs Salt of the Earth Records. We almost did our last
album with him as well, but he just had too much in his plate.
Doing a release from other friends of ours Dead by Wednesday, who were
playing with Oh Tomorrow in fact in New Bedford with the band tap Roots and
a couple other releases, is a fight being one. So oh, let's
see long short of it. Dead by Wednesday. That's the name I haven't
heard in a while, but very familiar with them. Yeah. Oh that's
cool. Yeah, Oh yeah, they're still around. They put an album
recently. It's awesome. Oh, I'll have to check that out. I'll
have to check that out. I had them years ago when I was booking
shows here in Manchester. I had them up for Oh wow, that was
a geez. I don't even want to think about how long ago that was
now that I'm thinking about it, but right you and me, Yeah,
it was a long time ago. So you guys, I assume you're playing
a lot. You're doing a lot of shows to support the new album.
Yeah, we're pretty I mean, we're a pretty busy band. We got
some and things have been getting better and better, fat good. We played
not that long ago with Living Color in Burlington, Vermont. We're actually gonna
be playing with them on January twenty eighth at the Angel City Music Hall.
Oh right, in Manchester. We're opening for a Living Color, which is
like home, come on, like you know again. They want two Grammy.
They sold like four million albums yeah, their kick Ass Yeah. And
then tomorrow, like I said, the Vault in New Bedford with our friends
and said by Wednesday, and this van Lydia's Castle. It's John Wisaki,
the drummer from Stained, former drummer from Stained, his new band from Nashville,
and a couple others, I believe. So that's the Skiller Club,
the vaulton at Bedford, and we have a big show on the Horizon with
from Scissor Fight in Vermont and then down in Rhode Island. We play all
over New England quite frequently, a couple of times a month. Yeah,
So it's been good. It's being consistent, excellent, excellent, and I
imagine the live show is pretty pretty high energy. How long? How long
do you guys play for do you do I mean, do you do like
a fourpence I mean some of these mega bills you'll get anywhere from like a
thirty minute set to an hour set usually Yeah, and on all these like
if you have twenty bands, then they're all high energy you're allowed and saft
and aggressive, like there's only so much the audience could take, I think
right, which we're usually I don't know how to put this. We're usually
with a lighter bands, let's call it. Because we'll get billed with all
these like blast black metal, death metal bands some of them. Yeah,
I love that stuff. Yeah, but we time and time again we'll get
the comment like, oh, you guys were a welcome pace changer in the
set, you know, just having a very different style. But it's still
heavy. There's still I heard you guys talking about van Halen earlier. There's
all these throwback elements too. Bill Brack and her guitarist, huge van Halen
fan. He owns the the Eddie van Halen with the fifty one to fifty
whatever guitar that signed like an actual model from He's like upset, Oh no
kidding, Yeah, So it's a I don't know what I'm getting at here,
but we're definitely a melting pot of many things in terms of influences and
all of us being kind of slightly different ages too. And what about I'm
curious about your drummer. I've noticed a trend on the show recently when I'm
talking to bands. It seems like everyone's drummer these days is in multiple bands.
So I'm curious if Jeff Lawn l hefe I see his nickname on the
web. Yeah, is he in like ten other bands or is he being
a drummer myself? This is the only band I've ever front that I've played
drums and bands forever kidding, yeah, so, but yeah, drummers,
especially ones that are competent or never mind ones that are really good, are
in high demand. Even more demand are good bass players. So if you're
out there and contemplating playing an instrument, pick up the bass. Every band
needs a good bassis. They're really hard to find. Everyone plays guitar,
Yeah, yeah, a thousand good guitarist. There's a couple of great ones
and there's a ton of lousy ones. But Jeff he does play in another
band called the Grizzly Band band okay, yeah, but in Verter Usuals is
luckily for us, scheduling kind of his priority, even though he makes good
money with that other band because they're more like a like cover band, you
know, they play like bar gigs and stuff. They're really good. Yeah
yeah, but luckily for us as Allegiance seems to be the majority of it
with Inverter excellent. Oh that's good to hear. And yeah, bass players
too, You're right, I tend to be in high demand. I'm a
bass player and h geez, I was playing in multiple bands at once back
when I when I used to play, when I was really you know,
heavy in the in the scene. But yeah, I think I think with
bass players as you're right. You know, everyone wants to play guitar.
You get more glory that way. And and I think with with drummers.
My theory has always been that when you're growing up and you first you're getting
interested in playing a musical instrument, well, you know, because you you
are also a drummer. You know, you got to have that conversation with
your parents at some point about yeah, you know, I want to learn
to play play this or that, and then you got to if you wanted
to play drums. You got to kind of talk them into letting you bring
a drum set into the house. Makes a lot of noise. Yeah,
A favorite kids, not a favorite of parents. When I first started drumming,
my parents basically wouldn't let me until I reached an agreement with them.
I said, listen, if I save up my own money mowing lawns and
all those other craft and shoveling driveways, I buy my own drum set.
They're like, okay, if you do that. Sure I did. I've
been playing forever. But again, bass players the toughest, the toughest to
find. We lucked out big time. Jimmy Jimmy Eaves would call me holds
down the low end very nicely. He's a great presence in the stage.
The dude hilarious. I mean, a total team player. You know.
We feel these bands have played with over the year, some of them just
be falling apart because they don't get along, argue over scoopid things, some
one of the bands got a drug problem or whatever. Luckily, knock on
Wood we've had like no problems and we've been together like seven or so years.
Oh that's good, that's excellent. And by the way, I was
reading in your bios, so you not only did you work at WBCN,
but you were also an HGTV host. Yeah I was. I did a
show called Tiny House Builders over Seas. Oh wow. Yeah, it was
an it was an interesting experience, kind of a nightmare, to be honest,
But what was it really? I'm curious. It was so like tolling
physically and like they didn't know what they were doing. And I told them
we need more people, we need more time to build all these things,
and they, you know, it just it was tough, but it was
fun because we have to do some traveling and spend a ton of their money.
And yeah, and I still build a lot of the treehouses and crazy
structures, custom build them for people and design them for a living. Each
workshops about building, construction and kind of alternative design all around the US,
even in a couple of me, my brother and I in Australia, tas
Mania. I go all over the place doing that stuff. I'm looking back
from my I've authored several books for a publisher, and one of them right
now that's doing about a month is based on treehouses. Oh no, kidding,
Oh it all comes kind of full circle. If only I could combine
metal in free houses or whatever, I'd be a happy man. More.
If I could extend the twenty four hour a day to forty eight, I
could get more done. Yeah, I think we all have that problem.
I can relate to that. Oh yeah, no, that's uh, that's
really cool though. So you've written now the books that you've written about this,
I assume it's under the name Derek Didrickson or I don't know if you
Yeah. I go by yeah Deep, you know, like even in the
building design scene, I go by Deep. I have a couple of YouTube
channels, one of which is you know, fairly Large. I got about
two hundred and thirty thousand subscribers. And so I do like ten or eleven
things that I'll culminate as a job and a half for a living. But
they're all all life hobby jobs. Let's call them stuff I love doing.
Anyway. I do a lot of custom artwork and design. I have an
Instagram page which is just Deep Dejos and art I just started for all my
like graffiti and artwork stuff like that. When we play live, we get
a couple of stage props we use that are kind of street art. I've
done these big stand up creature things. Oh wow. Yeah, some people
have compared to White Zombie. That's another one. They're talking about dance metal
and groove and all that and truth be told. When Las s Extasy So
from White Zombie came out, I ate that album up. I just loved
it. So even the artwork tie and I'm like, okay, it's fair
enough. You know Static x White Zombie. Those are frequent comparisons. Yeah,
yeah, that's those are you know, you'll take those right, I
mean those are that puts you in good com Yeah, that puts you in
very good company. We're both bands again, to use the term over and
over. They both have groove. They have that you know, that locker
like you know, band like Pantera wasn't just about thrash beat Minnie Paul and
drums really had. They grew the thing and that's why I loved them.
I think they did well with big beats and Jeff brings that every time,
so it works out nicely. And by the way, so what did you
What did you do at WBCN Were you an on air personality or yeah?
So I was from seven to midnight I was just an on air DJ for
about seven years. Yeah, yeah, and it was it was fun.
I mean I didn't grow up in the area, so it's one of those
like, oh my god, you worked at WBCN. I named fewer remember
now since they're gone. Sure, but it's like having not grown up here,
it wasn't as big a thing to me, but you know, later
I quickly realized how important that safety was the Boston, how legendary it was.
It broke you too, they broke the cars. You know, quite
a few big bands that really helped at the drop Kick Murphy's and on and
on. And it was fun. I mean I got to interview everyone from
like James Hatfield to you know, the guys in Green Day to you know
you and that era from the late nineties to about two thousand and six.
Any band that came out then, I probably interviewed, Oh wow, okay
and Tapros who are playing with It's funny, Oh you interviewed them about three
or four times. No kidding, I know, at least ahead of time.
We haven't played with them yet. I know they're at least very nice
guys. Oh that's cool, that's cool, very good, very good.
Uh, wow, you got a lot going on. That's uh, that's
fantastic, but really really glad to see. Like I said, I love
the tunes. I think what you're doing is amazing and definitely want to thank
you. Definitely want to catch you, catch you live in the future and
oh by that, let us know, man, let us know. Yeah,
definitely. By the way, what does the name mean? Is there
any meaning behind the name Inverter? No, A lot of people ask that,
and uh, I could give you stories among stories upon the song with
the name. Uh. Anytime you're in a band, and you've been in
band like to come up with a name. It just sometimes comes down to
something that sounds cool. Yeah, I want something that had a little bit
of a technical, nerdy almost industrial edge, you know, inverter being like
a solar, you know inverter you know, in electronics, wiring stuff like
that. Yeah, and uh, it's just easy enough to remember. And
it was the only and I mean the only name that all four of us
didn't hate. Oh no kidding, Yeah, there were a lot. I
can't remember somebody had names now, there was so many, actually just two
of us. It was Bill and I excuse me because at the time.
There really was no band the First Sea. He was just two of us.
Oh yeah, but him and I had completely different ideas and song names,
and it came down to inverter. It's kind of that hard continent edge.
Yeah, you know, uh it almost sounds German, sharp edged word.
Yeah, that's basically. I wish there was some Really I should make
up some cooler story, but that's all it is. Yeah, yeah,
No, it's cool. I like it. It's uh, it's definitely a
good name. Well, Deek, We're gonna let you go in a minute,
and I'm gonna play uh uh after we let you go, I'm gonna
play next Stone Cold Shocker. That's my personal favorite of the ones that you
sent us. And then we'll we'll play a third track of course, at
the end of the show today. But yeah, I love it. Oh
sorry, go ahead. Sorry, not that bands released so to speak singles
anymore, but that's kind of the song we're going to work in a video
for soon and all that. It's kind of like the single, you know,
if a label were to send it out out the one song. Yeah,
and it's the song that everybody when we played it live before the album
was out everybody caught on to that chorus really quickly. Yeah, and that's
how we kind of kne like, oh, this is the song. Those
are my fact dogs don't mind that. I was gonna say, are you
all right? It sounded like something sounded like something just tried to devour you.
Yeah, someone's arriving at the house, and I got a couple of
dogs who are quite loud. Oh I see, yeah, no worries.
Yeah, I do love this track. So we're gonna play this in a
second. And then so do you want to just remind us too about the
show that you've got coming up? The show with Taproot is that this weekend?
Yeah? It it's tomorrow. Actually it's a Thursday show. Tatoo's playing
at the Vault in New Bedford. Oh yeah yeah with dead By Wednesday and
Lydia's Castle, and I think that same tour of the next night's coming up
to Walls in New Hampshire near you guys, but anyone who's in between come
down to the Vault. One yeah, we're going out. It's once like
weekday shows, so it starts on the earlier side. I think one seven
we're like the maybe the second band on earlier, but we'll be doing our
thing and going full throttle. And the Vault in the Bedford's an amazing club.
It's it's a former like back in the days of fancy banks with the
big ball from marble floors and chandeliers. They took a huge city bank and
converted it into a club. Oh that's cool. One of my favorite venues.
We haven't played in a while. And tap Root's awesome. So yeah,
that's tomorrow. I believe doors at seven and we're we're on like shortly
or doors at six thirty one or like seven fifteen or something. Okay,
okay, very good. And also too before you go deek, just so
our listeners know where's the best place to go to find you online in terms
of a website or social media so everybody can keep up with you at verterband
dot com the website in verter Boston. On Facebook, we have TikTok stuff
you know, you name it. Facebook. I mentioned Facebook already, but
if there's any social media format for music on it. We got YouTube videos,
a lot of like official music videos we filmed cool and yeah, just
about every everywhere, thank me, where fine recordings are found. Yes,
yes, all right, very good. Well, Deeke, thank you so
much. I have a great show tomorrow night. I love the tracks.
We're going to play Stone Cold Shocker in a second, but we'll let you
get going. But thank you so much for joining us today. Man,
this has been great and I'm sure we'll talk again soon. Thank you,
man, I appreciate it so much. Take care now, all right,
you got to take care bye bye. All right, very nice. That
was a Deeke from the band in Verter. And yeah he mentioned Wally's You're
you're very familiar with with Wally's there. That's right. All right. Well
let's like I said, this is my favorite track, and apparently from what
Dike was saying, uh, this is everybody's favorite track. So let's give
this a listen and then we'll come back with some more show. Uh.
This is the track is called Stone Cold Shocker. The band is Inverter.
Check this out. That woman's not gonna some back nails for the mail.
She's not gonna take babies, not break a man. You can't tell she'll
do yo all up my down packing, how the tail. She's not gonna
bowa it stumping in your closet. Once you over with the dog. You
just get bad snow cold shock up. You better go kill doctor. Been
to get the biggest past up, spiding for head and bother don the cot
shock us. Better can kill doctors and show me whatever for your sake calling
just hang out to them all that that must have been some scratch of rags.
She never came out me for cushion sat conscussions. Don't con cushions like
a game out. I see open up my field. She's explosive. Co
Ro said, don't cam, I you feel that before. Woman, she's
got your car. She'll no man your drown while your game card. You
can be out. Bast dudes, go get juice and the blues many worth
a dollar. She spak snow coat shock up. Better go kill doctor.
You better get the piet past us find they bayhead and ball the donda do
shut up, but they call your doctor the story what they want gonna say
call it. Just back out all that. She's not gonna think. Y'all
gots a leader, y'all out and y'all in God. Yeah, come then
go around. They let you think you got that out. It's as gay
boy got a fucking yes. You ast go socco I'm gonna call your dot.
We're gonna get a bad fit doctor babing bowhead and bothering doctor got Sago's
gonna call your DOTTO, show me what at yours and call it. Just
back out to look about it and raise the top. That a talk show
and you want it listen
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