Junkyard God Front Cover

Lyric

Junkyard God

G500

Sworn to justice, made of rust

No one's saved, just turned to dust

Truth is twisted, sold and bought

Echoes scream but change is not

Midnight headlines blur the lines

Concern comes cheap in pixel signs

Oh, Junkyard God, won’t you see

This broken world that prays to greed

Righteous words won't hold the weight

Give me rage before it's too late

Facts and fiction, both decay

No one's listening anyway

Silence louder than the cries

Drowned beneath a thousand lies

Close your eyes, cut the sound

Truth is poison underground

Everyone's a prophet now

Bleeding logic, screaming loud

Hey, Junkyard God, take this prayer

Crushed beneath the smug despair

I don’t need to be redeemed

Just let me burn and never dream

  • Lyricist

    G500

  • Composer

    G500

  • Producer

    G500

  • Synthesizer

    G500

Junkyard God Front Cover

Listen to Junkyard God by G500

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    Junkyard God

    G500

In a world beyond collapse, who remains seated on the throne of rust?
"Junkyard God" is a post-apocalyptic metal release that merges sharp-edged thrash riffs with industrial textures and modern emotional heaviness. It serves as a soundtrack for an age where justice has failed and faith has corroded.

Inspired by bands such as Metallica and Megadeth, the album delivers aggressive guitar work combined with a contemporary groove-driven sound. The lyrics explore themes like social disconnection, systemic hypocrisy, and silent despair.

The title track, "Junkyard God", questions the emptiness of digital morality and performative outrage. It gives voice to those who feel powerless in a society obsessed with being right. From beginning to end, the record is filled with heavy riffs, dark atmospheres, and raw emotional intensity.

The cover art reflects the tone of the album: a silver-haired woman sits silently on a massive, worn-down throne in the middle of a futuristic junkyard under a grey, clouded sky. She symbolizes the remnants of a broken world, divine but forgotten.

This album is suitable for listeners who enjoy thrash, groove, and industrial metal with dystopian and emotional themes. It may also resonate with fans of Gojira, Lamb of God, Tool, and Nine Inch Nails.

"Junkyard God" is not a promise of salvation. It is a reminder of everything that has already fallen apart.

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