Irônico meu canal é focado em God of War mas meu video mais visto é sobre uma das musicas do álbum "everywhere at the end of time" translation Ironic my channel is focused on God of War but my most viewed video is about one of the songs from the album "everywhere at the end of time"
The fact that this section of stage 4 isn’t marked as “hell sirens” or anything makes it so much worse. It’s like Kirby didn’t want us to know about this until it was too late.
That's kinda the case with alzheimer. Once it's diagnosed, it's too late. The thing has been marinating in your brain for at least a decade. The second it starts showing the symptoms, your fate is already written.
When I first listened to this I immediately related the loud snares to the patient trying to remember something. Progressively getting louder and thinking harder but still failing to remember as the snares fade. Until the loud siren indicates the patient finally realizes he just legit can't remember anything anymore. He has no idea who he is and what is going on and no matter how hard he tries he will never truly remember.
Fun fact: I know I’m like 5 years late to this but do not start this album then fall asleep because it doesn’t matter how heavy of a sleeper you are these sirens will wake you up. And it won’t be something you can just laugh off either, that is real fear.
I see this as the patient getting a brief moment of realisation of what is happening to their brain, one final clutch of humanity before a nose dive straight down to hell
It’s a representation of Sundowning, a condition most dementia patients experience and/or develop buring the mid or late stages of dementia that causes increased confusion, may become slightly disoriented, and an increase in loss of coherence during night.
@@Quacktivate funnily enough, both our interpretations are correct. According to Wikipedia, sirens in Greek tradition were depicted as women with bird wings and sometimes bird bodies, or just bird legs; in Middle Ages tradition, sirens have been slowly transformed into half human, half fish creatures, up until they have separated into mermaids.
Fortunately I woke up before this. Still a trippy experience sleeping to this album since I was also dreaming about it while periodically stirring awake
This has happened every fucking time, without fail, I will always wake up too Hell sirens and the few seconds when I hear the song and am just waking up is horrifying
Bad thing about this I was in stage 3 when I fell asleep. I woke up and had sleep paralysis with this playing. Worst fucking thing I experienced in life.
The fact that it took me a while to realise that these are essentially moments of a dementia patient internally screaming at the fact they suddendly realize what is happening in a mix of rage, terror, and confusion os utterly horrifying to me.
Holy fucking SHIT that final siren gave me the shivers of a lifetime This sounds like it'd play in the background while you walk through a haunted house for Halloween or something
I know a lot of people agreed this is sundown syndrome. But to me, this audio feels like the patient, who has already forgotten that he/she has dementia, suddenly remembers they have dementia. That sudden flow of painful emotions caused a spiral, but only for a short amount of time before they start forgetting things again...
Scattered, dissonant tones representing the final fragmentation before the clear, personal alarm pierces through. You remember that you need to remember; before you forget why you needed to remember. A hauntingly accurate musical representation.
The reality that hits is immense, inevitable, and unavoidable. This segment always, always make me feel as if I am careening back and forth against a ship lost at sea, water hitting me left and right, just barely able to hold on, and right when the notes build up is when I see an enormous wall of water about to crash down, and I already know that my fate is sealed, and there is literally nothing I can do to change it. It's truly horrific, and beautiful.
I had a dream where I was watching a Christopher Nolan film about cannibals and at the end a dude's blood was put into some cupcakes, and when a woman bit into them and realised what was in them, the end credits suddenly started playing with this music, specifically the first few seconds. Weird dream and I always get reminded of it when I hear this part start playing
That last siren drop is by far the most terrifying music I've ever heard. I am largely unphased by horror, but this... This gives me chills every time I listen to it.
I agree with the interpretation that this is the sound of the subject remembering clearly - possibly for the final time - that they have dementia. The complete lack of any disparate ballroom notes like in previous segments, the heavy intermittent crackling, like a car engine trying to turn over. It says to me this is a broken mind actually trying to think. it isn’t wandering or lost in some sort of fugue state like in the previous phrases. They know something is wrong, they don’t feel right. They know there’s something very important that they need to remember, but they can’t think. Why can’t they think? Then the thought they were looking for finally coalesces. The fuzz and crackling dissipates as they finally reach a crescendo of realisation “I have dementia” 1:16
This is without a doubt my favorite section from these albums. A sound that reverberates dreadfully lucid fear throughout the body, loud and unavoidable crashing sirens of a fragmented mind. *These trumpets sound the end times, and they sound for you alone.*
This is auditory shell shock I'm pretty sure this is meant to make you feel like a tired,starving soldier getting ready to climb out of the trench and charge across the no man's land,littered with the corpses of men you used to know as everyone around you is blasted with artillery and mowed down by relentless machine gun fire...
@@oliverparis3361 unfortunately not anymore due to the bottom speaker on my phone blowing out, however I used it all the time up until then. I’d use a plug in alarm clock for my actual sleep at night and would use this for naps since I took them all the time because of my work schedule. No way in hell I would want to start my workday with this lmao.
I remember when hearing this for the first time the music was so badly distorted that I was like "yessss this sounds amazing!!! finally somthing that sounded better than everything else in stage 4" but now I am surprised I liked it just hearing it gave me tiny tears
I feel like this could work so well in a zombie apocalypse movie or just a post apocalyptic film in general. The feeling of such immense loneliness and dread, the thought that you could most likely be the only person alive in a barren wasteland once full of people is terrifying especially when this song is put over it.
i fell asleep listening to this and was awoken by the most hellish and loud noise ive ever heard in my entire life i was on the verge of pissing my self while my eyes darted across the room
listening to this in a pitchblack room with headphones and no other sounds… i shit you not, i felt primal terror squeezing my heart and i was actually crying. ive never had music cause this reaction in me ever, or any media at all come to think of it. this really is a work of art.
To me, every 'wave' is the patient thinking the tought that they have dementia, and the subconsious knowledge that something is terribly wrong, but failing to remember what dementia is. The silence in between is the patient losing awareness again, only to barely remember what is happening the next time it rolls around. And as the words 'dementia' roams through the patients head again and again, with the background noice (which to me is the unconsious mind starting to realise) becoming more and more alarmed, until the final time, where the siren is already heard in the background, symbolising the patient thinking: Dementia... Oh, thats what it means to have that! Wait... I have that. And then, for a moment all too long yet forever too short, the patient just looks all around, realising their memories are blurry at best, gone at worst, and that there is nothing they can ever do in this world to save themselves. But, in all the confusion and horror, the patient forgets to focus on staying mentally coherent, and the realisation fades away along with any knowlegde that anything ever happened. I also think that as the sirens get weaker and weaker throughout stages 5 and 6, its not because the patient realises again, but because they randomly get played the memory of understanding what is happening, but this time they dont even have the capacity to fathm the concept fully anyways, so it fades as quickly as it appears, getting weaker every time.
Listening to this out of the album is scary but when you listen to it in the album where you hear it go from jumbled up mess and then stopping and turning into this and when you know what sound is coming it’s a lot more terrifying
Sure, this may be a musical representation of sundown syndrome in dementia, but I think it speaks for all sorts of other mental health disorders, such as what it feels like to have a BPD episode or a psychotic episode. It perfectly encapsulates that sudden *realisation* of the psychological turmoil that you're currently in / have been in the past and the truck of dread that hits you. It's horrifyingly universal.
It also reminds me of what it's like to undergo a meltdown (typically experienced by people on the autistic spectrum), where you feel swarmed by stimuli and stress factors and all you can do in that moment (if you don't know how to deal with it or you don't have someone that can aid you in this regard) is to simply wail in the face of the hell sirens sounding their victory over your overwhelmed psyche, so to speak. Not to mention that segments of the whole EATEOT project bring to mind mental states that I had during my recent depressive episode, with "It's Just a Burning Memory" being a prime example (i.e. reminiscing about those halcyon where depression seemed like a far away thundercloud, feeling like I've lost what I loved and cherished about myself etc.).
I feel as if the hell sirens are WW1 crank sirens. There are gaps between each siren, which leads me to believe it’s a hand crank. Since many of his childhood memories are from the early 1900’s, it’s completely realistic that he remembers WW1 here.
Imagine enduring the horrors of your mind quite literally unraveling at the seams for years on end, experiencing, in real time, your ability to perceive the world around you sloughing off and melting away without the possibility of stopping it or slowing it down. And then your PTSD kicks in and you have a war flashback.
This seems like a part when the patient has experienced the start of stage 4 and can’t take it, they want to scream, they want to let it all out, they want to be free, but the horrible disease denies. And the patient then realizes this is the start of a long period of horror, fear, and being chained by this prison of the mind, that they have to endure for the rest of their lives until this horrible journey ends.
I think hell sirens represents that at this stage the hallucinations have started. The caretaker begins to see the most horrifying memories manifesting into reality and further terrifying him. Ive also heard people say this is a representation of sundowning which is also really scary
Hallucinations in dementia are so horrifying. I used to work at a nursing home a while ago and there was a woman with severe dementia who kept seeing her deceased brother. It was honestly heartbreaking. Plus, (sorry for editing) the worst part is how you always have to play along with their hallucinations/beliefs to not upset them. (unless their beliefs are something bad ofc, hard to explain)
i probably shouldnt listen to this as i had a lucid nightmare last night which was the most horrifying experience of my entire life and this brings back that exact feeling holy crap
I could obviously be wrong but I personally see this as the Caretaker desperately trying to cling onto his fading memories. It isn’t until the siren sounds that he remembers one of his clearest memories that he has but is repressed, being a traumatic memory of war. It serves as the final only clear memory he still has at this stage until all goes fully downhill quickly
Theres a couple theories as to what the sirens represent. Some people think its meant to be Sundown Syndrome, and others think its meant to be literal sirens from WW2 (PTSD)
@@dissonantharmonicI guess it could be both. I have also heard some people say that, since the sample is "Granada" (a traditional Spanish song), he might have participated in the Spanish Civil War.
I once went to bed listening to EATEOT, but couldn’t sleep so I turned it off right around the end of stage 3 God if I only knew how much I saved myself that night
I think this shows either the Dementias massive blow to ensure the patient dies. Or the patient going so long and hard to remember something that it hurts like never before. They try to recover the memory but they can't take it anymore and have to let go.
Some dementia patients who survived the Holocaust forget that they are old and have dementia and remember all the trauma they went through and think that they are in the moment because they are so confused
Irônico meu canal é focado em God of War mas meu video mais visto é sobre uma das musicas do álbum "everywhere at the end of time"
translation
Ironic my channel is focused on God of War but my most viewed video is about one of the songs from the album "everywhere at the end of time"
Muito foda
AKAKAKA o pessoal tem um carinho por esse álbum, obrigado por proporcionar essa parte pra gente ❤
Nunca ouvi esse álbum, numa escala de Imagine Dragons a Sambô, o quão revolucionário ele é?
@@jpnkrtn Nunca joguei esse jogo mas é muito foda!
@@OLOMULORA que jogo doidão, o da minha pp?
The fact that this section of stage 4 isn’t marked as “hell sirens” or anything makes it so much worse. It’s like Kirby didn’t want us to know about this until it was too late.
Kirby KNEW what he was doing fr,,
That's kinda the case with alzheimer. Once it's diagnosed, it's too late. The thing has been marinating in your brain for at least a decade. The second it starts showing the symptoms, your fate is already written.
@@skullsNhorror and vCJD
Thought you were talking about Nintendo Kirby for a second
@@LooneyNukeI was so confused.
Certified hell classic.
yes
certified nursing home classic🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣🗣🗣
we making out of temporary bliss state@@creepermangaming7912
"why didn't you say hi to me at the ballroom??"
what I saw at the ballroom:
When I first listened to this I immediately related the loud snares to the patient trying to remember something. Progressively getting louder and thinking harder but still failing to remember as the snares fade. Until the loud siren indicates the patient finally realizes he just legit can't remember anything anymore. He has no idea who he is and what is going on and no matter how hard he tries he will never truly remember.
It's actually representative of sundown syndrome, if you know what that is.
@@knatkniht what is it?
@@greentoesbstatus4325 Something that dementia patients can experience at sundown where they feel irrationally anxious, irritable, or restless.
Y do you have to hurt me like this my guy
Are you talking about the loud bangs because those are cymbals
Fun fact:
I know I’m like 5 years late to this but do not start this album then fall asleep because it doesn’t matter how heavy of a sleeper you are these sirens will wake you up. And it won’t be something you can just laugh off either, that is real fear.
thanks i wasn't planning
JOKES ON YOU!!! I DIDN’T WAKE UP TO IT!!
This comment gave me a massive chill upon really thinking about it....
Not really that bad. It feels like you’re in a dream state if you still wake up so you easily go back to sleep
I slept through it haha
1:17 Genuinely the most fear inducing part of the hell sirens
It definitely is
The Horn of a train that leads you to death, a trip you'll never return from
yeah.
@VerySimpleExplanationsYou cheated
Someone is coming
It sounds like a horrible realization
I see this as the patient getting a brief moment of realisation of what is happening to their brain, one final clutch of humanity before a nose dive straight down to hell
To me, this reminds me of an old veteran with dementia forgetting happy memories and starting remember memories of war instead.
ok beanman
#reletable@waltermemes123
i feel this represents the terror that those who suffer from dementia when they realize that they need to remember, before they forget how.
It’s a representation of Sundowning, a condition most dementia patients experience and/or develop buring the mid or late stages of dementia that causes increased confusion, may become slightly disoriented, and an increase in loss of coherence during night.
O1 - A Confusion so Thick You Forget You’re Forgetting
no autotune 🔥🔥🔥
Certified Dementia Classic🔥🔥🔥
@@MJStno What's Dementia?
@@Naitsirch Well, dementia is...
Damn, how the fuck did I forget what dementia means? I don't know, I'll remember one day.
@@MJStno What's Dementia?
@@Naitsirch Well, dementia is...
Damn, how he fuck did I forget what dementia means? I don't know, I'll remember one day.
Only now, relistening to this, do I realize the Hell sirens aren't mythical half-woman, half-bird hybrids, but alarm speakers. I kinda feel silly.
It's actually a slowed down violin.
@@NefosG Okay why are violins so beautiful but make for some of the scariest sound effects? This, Gojira roar
not only that but im pretty sure sirens im mythology are half-women half-fish hybrids.
half-women half-bird hybrids ae called harpies.
@@Quacktivate funnily enough, both our interpretations are correct. According to Wikipedia, sirens in Greek tradition were depicted as women with bird wings and sometimes bird bodies, or just bird legs; in Middle Ages tradition, sirens have been slowly transformed into half human, half fish creatures, up until they have separated into mermaids.
@@JeanMarceaux interesting
If you fell asleep listening to this album, this is gonna be the thing to wake you up.
Fortunately I woke up before this. Still a trippy experience sleeping to this album since I was also dreaming about it while periodically stirring awake
This has happened every fucking time, without fail, I will always wake up too Hell sirens and the few seconds when I hear the song and am just waking up is horrifying
Bad thing about this I was in stage 3 when I fell asleep. I woke up and had sleep paralysis with this playing. Worst fucking thing I experienced in life.
@@RipXIIIJesus dude that must of been horrible, especially with the constant "BOOM" going off, hopefully you woke up before the the screech happened.
Oh hell no, I would literally die of a heart attack. 😭
The fact that it took me a while to realise that these are essentially moments of a dementia patient internally screaming at the fact they suddendly realize what is happening in a mix of rage, terror, and confusion os utterly horrifying to me.
aka sundown syndrome
That's a genuinely new idea, I've always heard it's something like war sirens, I like this idea
Holy fuck that is a horrifying fact
And it makes sense, because this song is called “Post Awareness Confusions”
Holy fucking SHIT that final siren gave me the shivers of a lifetime
This sounds like it'd play in the background while you walk through a haunted house for Halloween or something
It's all you would need to make a haunted house scarier than ever before
Good thing, to me that sounds like something I'd touch in hell...
This is what german HLS sirens sounded back in the 60’s
I know a lot of people agreed this is sundown syndrome. But to me, this audio feels like the patient, who has already forgotten that he/she has dementia, suddenly remembers they have dementia. That sudden flow of painful emotions caused a spiral, but only for a short amount of time before they start forgetting things again...
Scattered, dissonant tones representing the final fragmentation before the clear, personal alarm pierces through. You remember that you need to remember; before you forget why you needed to remember. A hauntingly accurate musical representation.
when i wake up: music alarm
what it feels like: 1:17
Bro same I started to scream at my alarm in the morning until I finally decided I couldn’t deal with a music alarm
BOOOEEOOOOOOWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWWWWWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
1:17 keeps making me imagine a huge army of planes flying overhead coming from the enemy side during World War 2
These days, we can only imagine the hell and carnage Poland faced during those times
Allied soldier: "Surely I'm making it home in one piece!"
The Ju-87 about to dive-bomb him to oblivion:
I came back to this video today (a month later) and you can imagine my surprise when I already liked the vid and already replied to a comment
@@sneed2600 oh no oh no oh no oh no
@@aoni8254 it happened again.
0% drugs
0% women
0% profanity
I...I forgot...
100% forgetting 🔥
@@mrboxcutter why am i here again?
The reality that hits is immense, inevitable, and unavoidable. This segment always, always make me feel as if I am careening back and forth against a ship lost at sea, water hitting me left and right, just barely able to hold on, and right when the notes build up is when I see an enormous wall of water about to crash down, and I already know that my fate is sealed, and there is literally nothing I can do to change it. It's truly horrific, and beautiful.
i love this interpretation
This reminds me of figthing a war in the Mountain while enemy planes fly and bomb cities
This was the first part in my EATEOT listening experience where I felt genuinely scared.
For me it was the stage 2 song "Glimpses of hope in trying times". To me that song was the moment where we really realize something's wrong.
I had a dream where I was watching a Christopher Nolan film about cannibals and at the end a dude's blood was put into some cupcakes, and when a woman bit into them and realised what was in them, the end credits suddenly started playing with this music, specifically the first few seconds. Weird dream and I always get reminded of it when I hear this part start playing
thats so cool
I like that you knew it was Nolan
Bro that's weird you weird little weirdo
"It's here, The Darkness Devil"
Don't see many people mentioning that
@@thisaccountisaigeneratedsame
“P-P-P-P….Permission to kill myself…?”
That last siren drop is by far the most terrifying music I've ever heard. I am largely unphased by horror, but this... This gives me chills every time I listen to it.
Petition for the Bible to confirm that this is indeed how hell sounds
I agree with the interpretation that this is the sound of the subject remembering clearly - possibly for the final time - that they have dementia.
The complete lack of any disparate ballroom notes like in previous segments, the heavy intermittent crackling, like a car engine trying to turn over. It says to me this is a broken mind actually trying to think. it isn’t wandering or lost in some sort of fugue state like in the previous phrases.
They know something is wrong, they don’t feel right. They know there’s something very important that they need to remember, but they can’t think. Why can’t they think?
Then the thought they were looking for finally coalesces. The fuzz and crackling dissipates as they finally reach a crescendo of realisation
“I have dementia”
1:16
That makes a lot of sense!
i'll request them to play this at my funeral
theyll all die too
Christ alive calm down satan.
You’re family, 💀
On the same boat now
You wanna traumatise your family 💀
Old people be getting down to this jam
I snorted at this omg
@@kat3217 same
yep.
BUST IT DOWN GRAMS
certified nursing home classic🔥🔥🔥🗣🗣🗣🗣
Probably the greatest dark ambient track I have ever heard and I have heard a lot 👌👌
Out of context this goes insanely hard.
This is without a doubt my favorite section from these albums. A sound that reverberates dreadfully lucid fear throughout the body, loud and unavoidable crashing sirens of a fragmented mind. *These trumpets sound the end times, and they sound for you alone.*
This is auditory shell shock
I'm pretty sure this is meant to make you feel like a tired,starving soldier getting ready to climb out of the trench and charge across the no man's land,littered with the corpses of men you used to know as everyone around you is blasted with artillery and mowed down by relentless machine gun fire...
1:17 when you pull on a friends exposed nerve
when you use the femur breaker
When You Are Siren Head
the only piece of music that genuinely gave me chills.
Sounds like something that should have been in Chernobyl HBO when he looks into the reactor
For real
made this into an iphone alarm. never have woken up with such terror and panic before, i loved it.
You still use it?
@@oliverparis3361 unfortunately not anymore due to the bottom speaker on my phone blowing out, however I used it all the time up until then. I’d use a plug in alarm clock for my actual sleep at night and would use this for naps since I took them all the time because of my work schedule. No way in hell I would want to start my workday with this lmao.
Mano eu lembro de ouvir esse album á 2 anos atrás e quando chegou nessa parte eu assustei d+ slk
yes
o tempo voa.
I remember when hearing this for the first time the music was so badly distorted that I was like "yessss this sounds amazing!!! finally somthing that sounded better than everything else in stage 4" but now I am surprised I liked it just hearing it gave me tiny tears
i get why this was in a darkness devil video. listening to this invokes in me primal fear
That final siren - and what it could be interpreted to mean - is the scariest sound I have heard in my life.
I feel like this could work so well in a zombie apocalypse movie or just a post apocalyptic film in general. The feeling of such immense loneliness and dread, the thought that you could most likely be the only person alive in a barren wasteland once full of people is terrifying especially when this song is put over it.
“We are being watched by a dangerous devil, devils with the names of primal fears are looking at us right now!”
i fell asleep listening to this and was awoken by the most hellish and loud noise ive ever heard in my entire life i was on the verge of pissing my self while my eyes darted across the room
listening to this in a pitchblack room with headphones and no other sounds… i shit you not, i felt primal terror squeezing my heart and i was actually crying. ive never had music cause this reaction in me ever, or any media at all come to think of it. this really is a work of art.
To me, every 'wave' is the patient thinking the tought that they have dementia, and the subconsious knowledge that something is terribly wrong, but failing to remember what dementia is. The silence in between is the patient losing awareness again, only to barely remember what is happening the next time it rolls around. And as the words 'dementia' roams through the patients head again and again, with the background noice (which to me is the unconsious mind starting to realise) becoming more and more alarmed, until the final time, where the siren is already heard in the background, symbolising the patient thinking: Dementia... Oh, thats what it means to have that! Wait... I have that.
And then, for a moment all too long yet forever too short, the patient just looks all around, realising their memories are blurry at best, gone at worst, and that there is nothing they can ever do in this world to save themselves. But, in all the confusion and horror, the patient forgets to focus on staying mentally coherent, and the realisation fades away along with any knowlegde that anything ever happened.
I also think that as the sirens get weaker and weaker throughout stages 5 and 6, its not because the patient realises again, but because they randomly get played the memory of understanding what is happening, but this time they dont even have the capacity to fathm the concept fully anyways, so it fades as quickly as it appears, getting weaker every time.
Anyone who came here from the Chainsaw Man Motion Manga of The Darkness Devil?
The scariest track in the stage of the album.
Certified American Caligula Moment
Listening to this out of the album is scary but when you listen to it in the album where you hear it go from jumbled up mess and then stopping and turning into this and when you know what sound is coming it’s a lot more terrifying
Honestly i think this part has less to do with dementia than it does just an actual auditory depiction of hell
Sure, this may be a musical representation of sundown syndrome in dementia, but I think it speaks for all sorts of other mental health disorders, such as what it feels like to have a BPD episode or a psychotic episode. It perfectly encapsulates that sudden *realisation* of the psychological turmoil that you're currently in / have been in the past and the truck of dread that hits you. It's horrifyingly universal.
It also reminds me of what it's like to undergo a meltdown (typically experienced by people on the autistic spectrum), where you feel swarmed by stimuli and stress factors and all you can do in that moment (if you don't know how to deal with it or you don't have someone that can aid you in this regard) is to simply wail in the face of the hell sirens sounding their victory over your overwhelmed psyche, so to speak. Not to mention that segments of the whole EATEOT project bring to mind mental states that I had during my recent depressive episode, with "It's Just a Burning Memory" being a prime example (i.e. reminiscing about those halcyon where depression seemed like a far away thundercloud, feeling like I've lost what I loved and cherished about myself etc.).
It really makes me feel beyond uncomfortable, just an overwhelming amount of mixed negative emotions
I feel as if the hell sirens are WW1 crank sirens. There are gaps between each siren, which leads me to believe it’s a hand crank. Since many of his childhood memories are from the early 1900’s, it’s completely realistic that he remembers WW1 here.
Original song found th-cam.com/video/u_0whBkVCic/w-d-xo.html
I was thinking D day for WW2 due to the waves
Imagine enduring the horrors of your mind quite literally unraveling at the seams for years on end, experiencing, in real time, your ability to perceive the world around you sloughing off and melting away without the possibility of stopping it or slowing it down.
And then your PTSD kicks in and you have a war flashback.
The darkness devil...
Thanks, i was free-styling at school using this beat.
thank you kratos drip for horror beyond the human psyche
NO AUTOTUNE, NO SLURS, JUST STRAIGHT BARS 🗣️🔥🔥🔥🔥
this is horrorific, i like it
Fun fact: The sample used in hell sirens is the same sample of memory nine of TPAA
Darkness devil moment
€¥#%> (no arms)
This is what it sounds like in your head when you hear a familiar song but fail to remember it.
WE AREN'T GOING TO SLEEP AT NIGHT WITH THIS ONE 🔥🔥🔥
This seems like a part when the patient has experienced the start of stage 4 and can’t take it, they want to scream, they want to let it all out, they want to be free, but the horrible disease denies. And the patient then realizes this is the start of a long period of horror, fear, and being chained by this prison of the mind, that they have to endure for the rest of their lives until this horrible journey ends.
My interpretation is:
The patient is forgetting every memory slowly, one by one. In this song its the turn of his war traumas.
This is the kind of song that plays in the room right before the final boss
I’ll put it on my alarm. Wish me good luck
Are you still alive?
@@davoid96 Probably yes, but I’m not sure
1:20 After listening to this part I felt a very strange sensation in my chest that later passed to my extremities.
I'm imagining war images while listening to this. At 1:17, i suggest you dont try to.
Hell yeah this is the perfect thing to listen to at 12:30 AM while the rest of my family is asleep
Me on stage 4:💀💀💀
Its stage 4
@@hello_1005 ye but it also plays on stage 5 (and stage 6 too)
@@mysticmemer4887 yeah but its way more clear and scary on stage 4. Plus the video is playing the stage 4 version, which i assume hes talking about
@@mysticmemer4887 also i don't think hell sirens are on stage 6
@@hello_1005 I thought he was laughing at how weak the hell sirens were in stage five compared to this
NO AUTOTUNE JUST STRAIGHT NIGHTMARES
imagine pausing the video and you still hear it
Kid named American Caligula: 1:16
"There, where I have passed, the grass will never grow gain." -Attila
Joe Biden... wake up...
I feel like this part represents the horror aspect of this stage. Just a little bit
for a really unsettling thought, imagine this at the end of stage 6. No final disjointed gleam of clarity. No heavenly choir. Just this.
Don t even know what worse
It wouldn't fit in: the patient's mind- no, the patient themself- is gone by the time Stage 6 rolls around
This gives me a feeling of pure fear just hearing it
I'd love to see a horror movie made out of this song. It would have a huge David Lynch vibe, that would be awesome !
I think hell sirens represents that at this stage the hallucinations have started. The caretaker begins to see the most horrifying memories manifesting into reality and further terrifying him. Ive also heard people say this is a representation of sundowning which is also really scary
Hallucinations in dementia are so horrifying. I used to work at a nursing home a while ago and there was a woman with severe dementia who kept seeing her deceased brother. It was honestly heartbreaking.
Plus, (sorry for editing) the worst part is how you always have to play along with their hallucinations/beliefs to not upset them. (unless their beliefs are something bad ofc, hard to explain)
1:17 when you drop your violin in a cathedral
Sounds like the feeling of an oncoming panic attack!
Let them hate, as long as they fear
The final siren sends genuine chills throughout my body it’s so terrifying
No matter who listens to this, this will always evoke your deepest fears and phobias
They need to use this in a movie bro
At what minute of the album can you hear the hell sirens?
2:45:26
This genuinely sounds like Colin Stetson’s music or something from The Shining, I absolutely dig it
i probably shouldnt listen to this as i had a lucid nightmare last night which was the most horrifying experience of my entire life and this brings back that exact feeling holy crap
I could obviously be wrong but I personally see this as the Caretaker desperately trying to cling onto his fading memories. It isn’t until the siren sounds that he remembers one of his clearest memories that he has but is repressed, being a traumatic memory of war. It serves as the final only clear memory he still has at this stage until all goes fully downhill quickly
Theres a couple theories as to what the sirens represent. Some people think its meant to be Sundown Syndrome, and others think its meant to be literal sirens from WW2 (PTSD)
@@dissonantharmonicI guess it could be both. I have also heard some people say that, since the sample is "Granada" (a traditional Spanish song), he might have participated in the Spanish Civil War.
i swear if siivagunner turns this into funky town (0:01 sounds like the beginning of funky town)
I once went to bed listening to EATEOT, but couldn’t sleep so I turned it off right around the end of stage 3
God if I only knew how much I saved myself that night
1:05 to 1:30 is my favorite part,imagine a roar in exactly 1:16 before the horn.
the buildup is just as scary as the sirens tbh
This got me banned from the aux
why did i decide to watch this at 12:19 AM? im genuinely terrified here
I see this as hell calling for the caretaker as their Alzheimer's worsens to the point that death and hell itself is patiently waiting for him
do you know how fvcking scary would this masterpiece be if it was at the end of "Temporary Bliss Moment"
"Press shift to run"
Chainsaw man edit bring me here
I think this shows either the Dementias massive blow to ensure the patient dies. Or the patient going so long and hard to remember something that it hurts like never before. They try to recover the memory but they can't take it anymore and have to let go.
Some dementia patients who survived the Holocaust forget that they are old and have dementia and remember all the trauma they went through and think that they are in the moment because they are so confused