★★★★★
Every generation gets the rock anthem it deserves. Ours, it turns out, gets Billy Mac the Poetry Wizard — and we should consider ourselves extraordinarily lucky.
"Rock N Roll Anthem" is a thunderclap of a poem-song, arriving fully formed like a power chord struck by a man who has something urgent to say and the sonic imagination to say it unforgettably. From the very first lines — a rebel rising from ashes, bass guitar in hand, heart beating like thunder — Macris plants his flag: this is not background music. This is a declaration.
What separates Billy Mac from the ordinary protest poet is his weaponry. Where others reach for anger, he reaches for love. The repeated insistence that he carries "no spite" is radical in the best sense — a rock warrior whose ammunition is peace, unity, and poetry itself. It is both disarming and electrifying.
The chorus is an absolute monster — in the finest tradition of arena rock, it is anthemic, fist-raising, and impossible to shake loose from the memory. "Electric souls, unbreakable and wild" is the kind of line that deserves to be painted on the side of a tour bus.
The bridge is where Macris ascends to full Wizard status. The imagery of bass and guitars as lightning, drums as thunder, pulling the world up from the depths — it reads like a man who genuinely believes music is a force of nature. And after reading this, so do we.
The outro seals the deal with characteristic Billy Mac flair — self-aware, warm, and just a little gloriously cheeky. "The masses at my feet shouting, 'Wow Billy, Wow'!" Only a poet completely at ease with his own mythology can write a line like that and make you cheer rather than cringe. That is a rare gift.
In the end, Billy Mac the Poetry Wizard stands tall — God, family, friends, and a roaring amplifier at his back — and delivers a closing statement that echoes long after the last note fades!
"Rock N Roll Anthem" is not merely a song. It is a manifesto, a prayer, and a party — all at once. Billy Mac has written his magnum opus, and the world would do well to listen."
★★★★★
Every generation gets the rock anthem it deserves. Ours, it turns out, gets Billy Mac the Poetry Wizard — and we should consider ourselves extraordinarily lucky.
"Rock N Roll Anthem" is a thunderclap of a poem-song, arriving fully formed like a power chord struck by a man who has something urgent to say and the sonic imagination to say it unforgettably. From the very first lines — a rebel rising from ashes, bass guitar in hand, heart beating like thunder — Macris plants his flag: this is not background music. This is a declaration.
What separates Billy Mac from the ordinary protest poet is his weaponry. Where others reach for anger, he reaches for love. The repeated insistence that he carries "no spite" is radical in the best sense — a rock warrior whose ammunition is peace, unity, and poetry itself. It is both disarming and electrifying.
The chorus is an absolute monster — in the finest tradition of arena rock, it is anthemic, fist-raising, and impossible to shake loose from the memory. "Electric souls, unbreakable and wild" is the kind of line that deserves to be painted on the side of a tour bus.
The bridge is where Macris ascends to full Wizard status. The imagery of bass and guitars as lightning, drums as thunder, pulling the world up from the depths — it reads like a man who genuinely believes music is a force of nature. And after reading this, so do we.
The outro seals the deal with characteristic Billy Mac flair — self-aware, warm, and just a little gloriously cheeky. "The masses at my feet shouting, 'Wow Billy, Wow'!" Only a poet completely at ease with his own mythology can write a line like that and make you cheer rather than cringe. That is a rare gift.
In the end, Billy Mac the Poetry Wizard stands tall — God, family, friends, and a roaring amplifier at his back — and delivers a closing statement that echoes long after the last note fades!
"Rock N Roll Anthem" is not merely a song. It is a manifesto, a prayer, and a party — all at once. Billy Mac has written his magnum opus, and the world would do well to listen."