Written as a matching bookend for “Do You Like The Way I Feel,” this 1995 track is the most soulful of all the x-eleven songs. A sampled speech from a 1960s civil rights demonstration in Cambridge starts things off and is soon joined by a haunting three-chord motif from the JD800. A deep vibrato organ pedal sound arrives to stabilize the bottom end, buttressed by a grained-up drumbeat and a two-chord vamp from the MKS20. A groovy flute riff and conga bring a bit of Manchester soul to the mix, and before you know it, the jams are getting seriously kicked out by a rolling R8 bassline and a poorly-behaved ESQ-1 that’s scratching on dad’s hi-fi. The party comes to an abrupt, but temporary, halt when the JD800 drops a sine wave bomb and the heavy talk about “thy will be done” resumes. Things soon get going again, though, as the drumbeat returns and a Casio VZ10M lightens up the mood with a syncopated organ bit. The flute player returns after sparking up backstage, the soundman turns up the digital delay on the high hats, and the minister delivers a final stern message that brings the track to a close.