This is a song about performing euphoria while feeling completely numb. The speaker issues commands to go higher and drop tops for the radio star, but the intro already told you they don't feel anything and might not make it out alive. Every escalating repetition of 'higher' is someone trying to convince themselves they're escaping when they're actually just deeper inside the same loop.
It's the year of the dragon / I don't feel nothing personal / I might kill myself, but still / I'll die saying way to go, ayo
The narrator frames their suicidal ideation as almost sportsmanlike, like they'll cheer for their own death. That 'way to go' cuts two ways: encouragement or resignation, and the 'ayo' drop into the party command makes it impossible to tell which one won.
Drop that top for the radio star / Pop that down for the radio star
These commands have no object. Drop what top? Pop what down? The vagueness makes the repetition feel compulsive rather than instructive. The speaker is barking orders that don't actually mean anything concrete, just movement for movement's sake.
With some friends, I crack / Good things have been said / With some things in need / Things we often see
Every line starts with 'with some' but never completes a full thought. The syntax is broken, like someone trying to catalogue what's supposed to make a good time but unable to land on anything solid. That limousine at the end might be the only concrete noun in the whole section.
Come, come turn the radio on / I'm so far in the radio, I'm home
The speaker claims to be home inside the radio, but also needs someone to turn it on. They're simultaneously inside and outside their supposed refuge. Being 'so far in' the radio could mean deep immersion or lost beyond return. I'm not sure the narrator knows which one they mean either.
The year of the dragon is supposed to mean transformation and power, but this narrator is just issuing the same command on repeat, going higher into a space that might be freedom or might be disappearing entirely. That final 'I'm home' lands like someone convincing themselves they meant to end up here.