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  • Blue Light Mountains – Josh Montague

    A song of slow erosion, distant conflict, and nature echoing back

    This song came to me slowly, but quickly— hazy, soft-edged, backlit by something glowing just out of reach. I decided to call it Blue Light Mountains.

    The image that accompanies it shows a pale blue sun-like light hovering above a distant grey mountain. It feels cold, ancient, almost like it’s watching. And in a way, that’s what the song is too: a watcher’s song. One that observes the slow crumble, the quiet cutting-down, the deep toll of what people do to each other — and to the world they move through.


    The tree becomes the witness

    Lyrically, this one draws into the ers of mankind — our errors, our ego, our unravelings — as if a tree were singing, personified, not in anger, but in weary recognition. Cut down not just by literal axes, but by the weight of human carelessness. Not always violent on the surface — but hollowing, weakening, draining.

    The rhythm is cyclical. It repeats. Like regret. Like seasons. Like memory.


    Lyrics – Blue Light Mountains

    blue rays cliff line
    perched in sand
    oh so nere to hit with land
    shifting bolds of ers and quell
    burdens in the window shame in the fell

    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains

    (guitar interlude)

    dripping droops of axe and stoop
    yews of windows lax and loop
    fallen trees of cut and breeze
    ne’re in the window ne’re in the freeze

    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains
    blue light mountains


    🪵 Wax and wane, cut and breeze

    In many ways, this song lives in the same atmosphere as my recent pieces — poetic fragments that build a landscape rather than tell a story. But Blue Light Mountains is maybe more mournful than most. There’s a feeling of entropy beneath the repetition. The sense that something has already fallen, or is about to — and no one stopped it. Maybe no one even noticed.

    The line “fallen trees of cut and breeze” sits at the center of that feeling. The tree doesn’t fall in a thunderous crash. It just gives way — softly, finally — and the breeze keeps moving as if nothing happened.


    A world we all move through

    This isn’t a protest song. It’s more like a moment of still awareness — the kind that sometimes finds you when you’re looking at distant mountains in a fading light, wondering what’s holding it all together.

    Maybe the blue light is a kind of soul.
    Maybe it’s a warning.
    Maybe it’s just reflection — of our impact, our patterns, and the quiet way nature keeps speaking back.

    Thanks for listening, for feeling, and for sitting with these echoes.
    —Josh


    Listen to Blue Light Mountains: [YouTube link here]
    Explore more songs & writing: thejoshworld.com
    X/Twitter: @thejoshworld
    TikTok: @thejoshworldme
    NFTs + visual works: opensea.io/joshmontague

  • Flys* will Pharaoh – Josh Montague

    A drifting song about fading forces, fragile fate, and quiet defiance

    (Studio Version Link)

    New song, this one is called Flys* will Pharaoh.
    It runs about 1 minute and 30 seconds—

    The lyrics came in pairs, as shown below:

    the weather’s fading
    the sun is shading
    the sand is falling
    the tides are calling

    fate is speaking
    roads are creaking
    barrows narrow
    tarrows sarrow

    now

    where you go for what you dare
    sate will narrow
    flys will pharaoh

    There’s something ancient but soft in it—somewhere between ruin and memory.

    The Pharaoh reference isn’t historical; it’s emotional. Or is it?
    It’s not about the crown—but the weight.

    The inheritance of control, of prophecy, of being bound to cycles older than yourself.

    The weight of gold.
    The cost of man’s actions.
    The burden of consequence passed down like truth & myth, like currency, like sand through generations.

    A song about shift and strain

    The tones are spare, like the others I’ve shared recently (Middle of the Roadway, Flight Lanes of Morphed Names)—but this one feels more like a slow spin, eyes closed. The sentiment isn’t hopeless, but it does lean toward stillness. Something is fading. Something else is beginning, maybe. Or resisting.

    What Flys*, What Follows

    The title carries an asterisk—not as a correction, but as a flicker.
    “Flys” could be wings in motion, could be swarms, could be the small weightless forces that gather in quiet rebellion. There’s a picture with the piece—look close enough and you’ll see something perched, maybe watching. Maybe waiting.

    I didn’t write this to name names, but there’s an undercurrent in this one—fighting against the malice of mankind, not with power, but with presence. With witness. The smallest flight against the largest shadow.

    A fragment in the same world

    Flys will Pharaoh ties into the last few songs—each of them reflecting pieces of a larger emotional weather system. Erosion. Movement. Quiet persistence. The strange stillness of being halfway between ruin and rebirth.

    Thanks, as always, for listening, watching, it means a lot.
    —Josh


    🎥 YouTube: @thejoshworldme
    🖼️ NFTs / Visual works: opensea.io/joshmontague
    📝 Read more posts like this: thejoshworld.com

  • Middle of the Roadway – Josh Montague

    A lyrical sketch about fracture, direction, and the quiet pull forward

    (Here’s the Link to the Studio Version)

    This piece started as a stark image: a road with its guidance gone. The language came quickly—short lines, hard consonants, lots of white space—like reflective paint scuffed off the asphalt. I leaned into the eerie at first: narrow intervals, airless reverb, and a pulse that felt like holding your breath.

    Then I softened it—just a little. I wanted the strangeness to remain, but with a hint of invitation. The result is still uneasy, yet more neutral in color: the edges rounded, a soft light at the end of the lane. Not “major-key happy,” more optimistically intriguing—as if the road might bend toward somewhere worth going.

    Lyrics (highlight)

    in the middle of the roadway
    theres a broken mast
    in the middle of the roadway
    rud less to the task
    painting in the roadway
    grassless in the past
    fault no lines of roadway
    quake filled seismograph

    From eerie to “strange-neutral”

    • Harmony: I kept the minor contours but swapped a few cold clusters for open voicings; a small lift in the final cadence nudges the ear forward.
    • Rhythm: The pulse still staggers (on purpose), but the syncopations breathe more—less claustrophobic, more curious.
    • Tone/space: The early version had a glassy chill; the current take adds a slight warmth in the midrange, so the voice sits closer, human, imperfect.

    Companion piece

    Right after writing this, I tracked an instrumental echo of the idea—“Flight Lanes of Morphed Names.” It follows the same weather system but speaks without words. I’ll be posting that alongside this, so you can hear how the feeling translates from lyric to guitar figure and back.

    Thanks for listening and for spending time in these liminal places with me.
    —Josh

    If you’d like alt text for the artwork, or a stripped, unlyrical version to compare, tell me how you plan to share and I’ll format links accordingly.

    (Here’s the link to the original posted edition on Youtube)

    More music & moments: @thejoshworldme
    NFTs + visuals: opensea.io/joshmontague
    Writing, process, fragments: 👉 thejoshworld.com

  • Flight Lanes of Morphed Names – Josh Montague


    A short guitar piece born from an eerie roadside thought

    This new guitar sketch—fragment, really—is called Flight Lanes of Morphed Names. It came together right after I wrote a short lyrical piece called Middle of the Roadway. This one’s about 20 seconds long, but it holds some strange weight.The other, a little eerie. A few of the lyrical highlights from that one:

    “In the middle of the roadway / there’s a broken mast”
    “Fault no lines of roadway / quake-filled seismograph”

    The idea of fractured direction and ghostlike structure carried straight into the guitar piece that followed. Flight Lanes picks up the thread, but in a more abstract, instrumental way. Think flickers of syncopation, breath-like pauses, tension that never lands fully. Not a melody so much as a shape moving through static.

    About Middle of the Roadway

    I’ll be posting Middle of the Roadway soon— it plays with dynamic elements even in that tight space, although a bit longer than this one. It’s lyrical, but minimal. Kind of like a single verse left behind on a roadside wall. Once that was written, I felt something else still needed to speak—so this guitar piece came out right after, like its shadow or echo.

    Why the title?

    Flight Lanes of Morphed Names felt right because it suggests motion that doesn’t follow its original plan. Something renamed mid-flight. It captures that unsettled feeling I had after writing Middle of the Roadway—that sense of continuing on, but not quite sure under what name or shape.

    Listen & wait for the companion piece

    If this one resonates, Middle of the Roadway is its sister song—short, sharp, and coming soon.

    Thanks for listening and walking with me through these weird sonic paths.

    —Josh

    More music & moments: @thejoshworldme
    NFTs + visuals: opensea.io/joshmontague
    Writing, process, fragments: 👉 thejoshworld.com

  • New Song: The Stone of Rome (Lyrical and Unlyrical Versions)

    The Stone of Rome – Josh Montague

    (Studio version link)


    On writing a cold symphony about roads, ruin, and what’s left after the fire

    “the road marking nothing—nothing but stone.”

    That’s where this song begins. The Stone of Rome is my attempt to sing from inside the ruin—where history isn’t a chapter heading but dust in your lungs, marble under your feet, and the echo of legions in an empty forum. It’s the lyrical version of a piece I first heard as shapes and shadows—sharp intervals, restrained melody, and a pulse that felt like marching feet disappearing into ash. (There will be a link below to a purely instrumental, unlyrical version if you want the ashes without the breath.)

    A cold symphony

    The arrangement is intentionally spare: voice, guitar, and a low, almost-bell-like drone that keeps returning like a winter wind. I wanted the production to feel cold—not lifeless, but precise, unblinking. Reverbs ring like stone halls; consonants hit like chisels. Every silence is another column fallen.

    Rome, the fall, the ash

    The lyrics circle three images: stone (endurance, weight), ash (afterburn, memory), and road (movement, empire, direction). Rome isn’t just a place here; it’s the pattern of building something so monumental it forgets its own edges. It’s also the pattern of watching that monument fracture, then living among the fragments.

    A short lyric glimpse

    (excerpt)

    the road is marked with nothing, nothing but stone
    the coal in homes the fromes in romes
    nothing nothing but stone
    in rome
    but then you stare back at me
    like a cold symphony
    just to see the way to be
    is not of you nor of me
    of rome
    of the fall
    they will last
    the ruin lash
    the time of mast, the very last
    the ruin lash
    oh the ash

    Two versions, two temperatures

    • Lyrical (this post): vocals pull the narrative forward, giving the imagery a spine.
    • Instrumental (linked below): a stripped, “unlyrical” mirror. No words, just the cold architecture—the harmonic ruins themselves. If you want to hear the fall without the witness, that’s the door.

    Compositional bones

    • Meter & feel: a steady, processional pulse—almost ritualistic—juxtaposed with syncopated guitar accents that crack the marble surface.
    • Harmony: modal minor with deliberate tension notes—intervals that refuse easy resolution, like history that never quite closes.
    • Dynamics: it never explodes; it tightens. The song shrinks the listener into the corridors, rather than blasting them with spectacle.

    Why Rome?

    Because Rome is the universal shorthand for rise, rule, ruin, residue. You don’t need a map to understand it. You just need to feel the weight of something massive that eventually can’t hold itself up. That’s not just empire-talk—that’s personal, creative, digital, social. Things swell, ossify, fall, and leave us with artifacts. This song is one of those artifacts.

    Listen, compare, decide

    If you’re drawn to lyrical narrative, take this version first. If you want the bones without the voice, hit the instrumental. Or do both, in either order, and notice which one makes the other colder—or warmer.

    Thanks for listening, for reading, and for walking these old roads with me.

    —Josh

    P.S.
    This is the first version—unedited, unproduced. Just the core idea as it came. Someday I might shape it into a fuller production, or maybe add layers and polish. But for now, it lives in this early form—bare and honest.

  • Sync in the Static – NFT Guitar Etude No. 9

    Resonant Flat Lines Sharp – Josh Montague

    This latest piece, “Sync in the Static – NFT Guitar Etude No. 9” (Resonant Flat Lines Sharp), is a tight, syncopated burst of melodic precision—crafted in my usual way: raw improvisation meeting structured groove. It dances along flat lines and jagged edges, with rhythm leading the way. The tones hang in space like neon signs in fog—sharp, clean, and intentionally unsettled.

    As always, the process starts loose and instinctual. This one just happened to lock into something that felt surgical and alive—kind of like drawing a perfect circle freehand. You can check out the full performance soon on my YouTube: @thejoshworldme.

    This piece will also be minted as part of my ongoing NFT art/music fusion. Explore this and other unique digital works over on opensea.io/joshmontague.


    —Josh

  • New: “Eyeing Lines of Zones of Modus” — A Spontaneous Piece with Quiet Intention

    This is another one that came out entirely in the moment — a purely spontaneous guitar sketch. No prewriting, no edits, no production — just a raw take, as it happened. I also created a visual piece to accompany it, continuing my ongoing practice of blending sound and image in real time.

    The title, “Eyeing Lines of Zones of Modus,” has been sitting with me in a personal way. It reflects something deeper — my own quiet search for new directions or different “modes” back into something resembling a career… but not necessarily the kind built around content creation or social media.

    Sometimes the act of creating is its own kind of navigation.

    Thanks for listening and for being here.

    🎧 youtube.com/@thejoshworldme
    🎨 opensea.io/joshmontague

  • “T Onic Toss of Oh’s” — Morning Harmonics in Motion

    I recorded this one within minutes of waking up.

    As is my usual style, there was no planning — just a quiet reach for the guitar and seeing what sound wanted to happen.

    “T Onic Toss of Oh’s” is a mix of harmonics and open strings — soft tension, circular phrases, and that in-between space where your brain is still dreaming.

    I like these pieces best when I don’t fully understand them yet.

    You can listen, watch, or even collect the paired visual on Youtube & OpenSea (NFTs/art on OpenSea).

  • Hovercrafts Don’t Craft Planes – Josh Montague

    New NFT/art creation with guitar portion on Youtube @thejoshworldme. As mentioned, you can view all my NFTs/collections at opensea.io/joshmontague.

  • Nominal Nuisance of Ant ics of Nom Non? – Josh Montague

    Second post of the evening, again you can view guitar on my Youtube @thejoshworldme, and also view my NFTs on opensea.io/joshmontague.

    I really enjoyed making this one!