Crow Front Cover
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This track is a biting folk-blues song that directs intense irony and anger toward Nagatacho, the center of Japanese politics, which has become completely disconnected from the lives of ordinary citizens.

Driven by rhythmic acoustic guitar strumming, the lyrics paint a ridiculous picture of politicians who claim to "stand by the people" while wearing suits worth a year's salary and having no idea what a cup of noodles costs. It poses a sharp question from those "crawling on the ground" to the elites who live behind bulletproof glass, never knowing the struggle of crowded trains or waiting for half-price stickers at the supermarket.

The chorus phrase, "The crows of Nagatacho know the world better than you do," serves as a stinging piece of humor, suggesting that even birds looking down from above can see through the political deception. The song covers modern grievances such as tax hikes, slush fund scandals, and "checkbook diplomacy," dismissing their behavior as a cheap theatrical performance staged only during election season.

The clever outro, where the crow's cawing overlaps with the word "aho" (fool), expresses a sense of ridicule that goes beyond mere anger. This is a stirring protest song that speaks for the "voiceless voices" and demands that the powerful, who have forgotten the weight of their office, take off their badges and face reality.