The album might not be as transcendental as The Forever Story, but almost every track is a standout on account of JID exploring different sounds and styles. This one in particular just has some crazy catchy flows over a lowkey eerie beat. Some very pointed social commentary in the lyrics as well.
If you ban a thing people need or really really want, you don't get less of that thing. You just get the same amount of that thing but unregulated and more dangerous-nya
I've shared this band before, but their music surprises me every time with how much soul it has. It's hard to explain. Just something about their instrumental choices, emo-pop-punk riff vocabulary, raw and amateurish vocals, and massive crescendos just reaches out to me. Very little like it, even in the emo scene.
My takes for the day:
1. I like graffiti. I want it in more places. In fact, I want it almost everywhere. You can even graffiti the walls of my house. I don't care. Just make it good or spray so much of it that it kinda feels overwhelming in a way
2. Constantinople sounds so much cooler than Istanbul (sorry to my Turkish fans)
3. stop vocaloid music. just stop. until we figure out what's going on
The quality of a Naruto song is determined based on whether or not I feel nostalgic about it. By that metric, this is the best Naruto song. Immaculate kind-hearted Japanese rap vibes. Like a warm kotatsu that you take shelter under when it gets too cold outside. Even the group's name is so very tender, a homemade family.
I don't know if it's because I didn't play the game on Death March, but I lowkey went through the entirety of The Witcher 3 while almost completely ignoring the crafting and potion brewing mechanics. Just brute-forced the combat while chugging water
Choose Life. Choose a job. Choose a career. Choose a family. Choose a fucking big television, choose washing machines, cars, compact disc players and electrical tin openers.
I've watched 1 (one) rugby game. I had no idea what was going on, but the home team lost.