May The Fire Endure

ENDUR3 — 2026, jan.

May The Fire Endure is a lyric-driven descent into the mechanics of collapse—political, social, and intimate. It opens with a direct call to torch the structures that package war, launder violence, and sell obedience as order. From there, the record shifts into motion: maps burn, compasses lie, and the narrator chooses a path carved through ash rather than permission.

As the journey turns inward, the album explores unmapped states of mind and perception, then the cost of modern life’s pace: dissociation, polite performance, and the moment a person “vanishes” while still walking and smiling among others. The critique widens again into media complicity and engineered narratives—rage blurred, reasons erased, power hosed clean—before the most uncomfortable pivot: the recognition that outrage can also be avoidance, and that responsibility starts inside the one who sees.

The closing stretch treats apocalypse as arithmetic: everything ignored, excused, or normalized accumulates until the world “comes due”. The record ends not on comfort but on exposure—what was buried learns to breathe, and the collective blind spot breaks loose.

Core identity

  • Anti-power / anti-exploitation anger, explicitly aimed at war-for-profit, manufactured fear, and systems that monetize lives (“They sell us war… Blood for profit…”, “Burn the throne…”).
  • Self-emancipation through fire: burning maps, refusing “safe return,” choosing a self-made route (“When the map is burning, I cut a new way…”).
  • Altered-perception / inner frontier: the mind as unmapped territory (“No maps for the mind…”).
  • Dissociation and quiet erasure: a person “present on paper” but emptied by pace, noise, and social scripting (“One day I vanished…”).
  • Media/propaganda as an engine of rage and compliance (“They call it ‘informing’, I call it collaboration… They don’t want us alive. They just want us standing.”).
  • The inward turn: rage as a mirror—the narrator admits complicity, avoidance, and responsibility (“Am I my own injustice… I’m responsible.”).
  • Apocalyptic accountability: the “end” is framed as consequence, not divine punishment (“It was born right here… In our stacked renunciations.” / “When the world comes due… There is no after.”).
  • Acceleration/collapse culture: dopamine loops, algorithmic conditioning, identity-as-product (“Buy. Post. Swipe. Obey.” / “TOO LATE TO BRAKE!”).
  • Final thesis: what’s denied returns as a collective rupture—“the blind spot apocalypse”.

Discover the first titles of the album below :

01. Burn The Throne :

02. The Drones Are Coming… :

03. When The Map Is Burning :

04. No Mpas For The Mind :

05. The Night Changed Its Name :

Album titles :

  • 01 – Burn The Throne
  • 02 – The Drones Are Coming
  • 03 – When The Map Is Burning
  • 04 – No Maps For The Mind
  • 05 – The Night Changed Its Name
  • 06 – What Angers Knows
  • 07 – Who Stays
  • 08 – One Day I Vanished
  • 09 – They Manufactured The Rage
  • 10 – Control By Design
  • 11 – My Own Injustice
  • 12 – Until The Day Comes
  • 13 – Blind Spot
  • 14 – When The World Comes Due
  • 15 – Too Late To Brake
  • 16 – Bre4thing t1m3 (new version) x My Own Injustice (Mashup)
  • 17 – Blind Spot Apocalypse