Thanks @museofwar for the tag game tag! Post was getting long so I'm gonna continue it here ^^
My music taste is so all over the place 💀
@13thsinnr @clown-college-honor-roll @flowwochair @gaming-instead-of-living @fridaywashere @koresephone66 @mintypsii @distantsobbingnoises + anyone who wants to join!
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What music do we have in common?
Thank you @pluttskutt for tagging me!
I'm tagging: @i-can-even-burn-salad, @isherwoodj, @prettygirlmeri, @perasperaadastrawriting, @talesofsorrowandofruin, @ellierenae, @silverliningsheep, @autie-auden-writes, @toribookworm22 and anyone else who wants to join in!
I expected us to have more in common but I only really recognized two from this list. I should really check some of these out though, any song recommendations?
Here is mine!
And here is a blank for those who want to participate!
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Doing this from @death2toby’s post!
Showing my matches with theirs and then my choices.
But now I gotta make a playlist of her stuff because I am always looking for more to listen to!! 💖
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Music Similarities
What music do you have in common with:
Lovely @boldnightmarishreverbs! Thanks for tagging me in this, Essie!!! 🥰 Results: quite a bit in common though I have some new music.
No pressure tagging: @minutiaewriter @honeysoiair @hyuccubus @mschvs
& leaving an open tag for anyone else!!!
Pretty good actually!!
And here's mine:
I had a really hard time picking out of the plethora of artists that I quite love.
Here's a blank for anyone who'd like one:
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Thanks Mims! I think we won at the Music Bingo. So I was obviously by tagged by @mimi-mindless . Again I know it took me a week, but here we go!
Again my sheet was curated by my "Soundtrack to my Biography"-Playlist and hitting the shuffle button, like Gee hits it on stage.
Anyhow I'm tagging: @mimi-mindless (obv), @lolalovesu , @pommy-granite , @asstraightasau-turn , @lilolilyr & everyone who is not tagged, but wants to join!
If you're tagged and don't feel like participating no hurt feelings on my side, but it kinda would be fun.
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I keep seeing this one floating around, so let's do it. Music, 3, 2, 1, go!
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Hello, everybody, my name is Markiplier
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People are wild lol rap does actually take a certain level of skill to both perform and understand, it takes five seconds of research to see that theres decent lyricism going on there. Lots of rappers are actually great at english, they dont all know the official terms for the things they practice but rapping is like a form of poetry really.
ofc there are subgenres that i personally do not like such as mumble rap (a conversation for another time i digress) but if you take for example kendrick's latest diss tracks to drake, its something that has to literally be studied and broken down by a bunch of people lol and once you break it down and understand the refrences you see that its not just a bunch of words and a beat. of course white people will think something they dont understand is ghetto trash what else is new lol they're the kings of ostricizing and devaluing what they dont understand. They did it to jazz they did it to metal and alternative music and they do it to rap.
At the end of the day, culture is a thing that will be understood by those who are meant to understand it. You dont have to like rap to acknowledge that its an art, but calling it trash and refusing to see it from any point of view but your own speaks for itself.
And for the record, im not a rap fan lol its a genre i hardly listen to in fact, but what i am is an artist, and i can acknowledge art when i see it.
i'll be honest, i don't think lack of understanding is solely what comes into it, if at all. the genres that get the most aggressive pushback are also ones that threaten a cultural hegdemony in their respective societies (white, male, christian etc) and that's not a coincidence. rap gets the worst of this and ultimately i don't think it has ever boiled down to not knowing what GOAT means and a lot more to do with overt and tacit hostility towards black people making outspoken art on their own terms in a deeply racist society.
but otherwise i completely agree with you! the lyrical complexity, rhyming schemes and dexterity at play in a good rap song is second to none and you could absolutely teach a literature class on it. it is as much a poetic medium as anything else while also encompassing its own deeply layered, complex and distinct sensibilities--just like, literally, every other art form on earth! to pretend otherwise is just ludicrous at this point.
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