
“Rescue The Dying” carries its message through three scenes. The first two move through the wild: elephants on an African savanna at dusk — “gentle giants with their little ones” — and great apes in the jungle, “a species that resembles humankind,” both followed by those who would kill them and both running out of time. The third shifts to a Bronx street corner at morning rush, and a young woman whose “unborn son won’t leave with her today.”
By setting them side by side, the song makes a quiet, consistent appeal for every life that cannot defend itself. Its chorus is the heart of the matter, and its wording shifts with care as the song turns from the creatures to the child — “Speak for those that have no voice” over the animals, “Speak for those who have no voice” over her unborn son. And there is mercy in the measure of its plea: “choose for them when you can make a choice.” The song doesn’t ask anyone to become an activist or a justice warrior — only not to shirk the responsibility for life when it is ours to bear. There is a time to speak and a time to choose; through it all, the call is simply not to neglect, but to “do the good that can be done.”
The recording you hear uses AI-generated vocals, but Dan Parks is quick to call that only a means to an end. “I used AI vocals to create a polished version that communicates the message powerfully,” he says, “but the heart of this song is meant to be sung by real people — in churches, at marches, in living rooms. That’s why we’re offering the performance tracks free. Your voice matters more than mine.” Free backing tracks — one with choir vocals, one fully instrumental — are there for anyone who wants to lift this plea in their own voice.