"Animal I Have Become" is the first single from Three Days Grace's second studio album, One-X. About Animal I Have Become "Animal I Have Become" is the first single from Three Days Grace's second studio album, One-X. Unlike most singles, it was not released in stores, and only had one track.
It ends with his meeting a woman in a bar, only to find her looking just like the monster. It was written by then lead singer and songwriter Adam Gontier, during his stay at a rehabilitation center. Bass tablature for Animal I Have Become by Three Days Grace. The song is featured in the video games WWE SmackDown vs. This 2000s rock song-related article is a stub. So, I think the lyricism and metaphors used in the song are really well thought out and make you think “oh, it sounds like he wants to find his way out of the addiction or the nightmare as it is referred to in the song” and it kind of makes me feel a bit guilty for tapping my feet to it and to bob my head to without thinking “should I, really because it is quite a heavy song because of the lyrical content.And we believe it’s not the real me Have become. He recognises that his addiction has took over his life and he has no self-control when it comes to his addiction and he refers it to a “nightmare” throughout the song and that he knows that the anger and aggression he felt when the drugs were in his system is not the “real him” and that the drugs had brought out this crazy and unhinged side, almost animalistic. In the first few seconds of the song, there is this ominous bassline which when I first listened to it… I was thinking like “wow, this is really building up to the intensity before the vocals enter.” I will describe the vocals of Gontier’s in the verses as being rather quiet and almost sounding as if they’re being sung through a walkie talkie or an old radio, and then in the chorus his vocals switch to this rather scratchy and raspy kind of style which I found really interesting because it adds a layer of pain, anger and desperation which ties into the lyrics very well. I believe he wrote this song whilst in a drug rehabilitation centre and also the majority of the album that this song is from was written when he was there. I must say that the song is rather intense, in part due to the lyrical content relating to Gontier’s addiction to the painkiller Oxycodone/Ox圜ontin, and how he felt that it changed his attitude when the drug was in his system and how it affected him. With that out of the way then let’s go and launch into this review! Hailing from the city of Toronto, but formed in the small town of Asphodel-Norwood in the province of Ontario is the post grunge/rock band Three Days Grace, who… I guess now have a new lead singer called Matt Walst whom I can’t say I am all that familiar with, so this particular song has been recorded with their ex-lead vocalist/guitarist Adam Gontier he quit the band in 2013 for reasons related to internal creative differences and other personal reasons. (CONTENT WARNING: THE SONG ITSELF DICUSSES ISSUES RELATING TO SUBSTANCE ABUSE/MISUSE, IF YOU OR ANYONE YOU KNOW IS STRUGGLING WITH THE ISSUES ADDRESSED IN THE SONG, SEEK SUPPORT AND TELL WHOEVER IS CLOSE TO YOU.)