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I thought the same thing. Then again, I also understand why Redbone and Posthumous Forgiveness sound similar. I feel like Donald Glover is a fan of Tame Impala. Some of their music styles seem very similar.
Wouldn't it be Kevin Parker being a fan of Donald Glover would result in the new Tame track sounding like a song from 2016?
This makes the most sense. I remember at Coachella, when taking about Donald glovers performance the night before, Parker said something along the lines of “I have never been so inspired by someone and so jealous of someone at the same time”
Post by Nathan Fieldcяab on Dec 6, 2019 12:00:50 GMT -5
"New Person Same Old Mistakes" was in some of the tv spots they did advertising S2 of Atlanta... that may have been the FX marketing team though without Donald's involvement
Post by Jizz, Like Cumshot on Dec 6, 2019 13:01:18 GMT -5
I cried at my first show ever this year. Anderson .Paak when he did Dang, and I had just gone to my mom's funeral that morning. Definitely one of the most emotionally cathartic experiences I've ever had.
I cried at my first show ever this year. Anderson .Paak when he did Dang, and I had just gone to my mom's funeral that morning. Definitely one of the most emotionally cathartic experiences I've ever had.
Damn I’m sorry. Music does have a way of helping us work things out.
I cried at my first show ever this year. Anderson .Paak when he did Dang, and I had just gone to my mom's funeral that morning. Definitely one of the most emotionally cathartic experiences I've ever had.
Damn I’m sorry. Music does have a way of helping us work things out.
Its ok, it was tough but it definitely helped.
The crazy part is I was at Hulaween, left, drove to Jacksonville, flew to Ohio Friday night, woke up Saturday morning, went to the funeral, flew back to Jacksonville, sped back to Suwannee park, and made it to catch .Paak. I was in so much of a whirlwind that I didn't even really settle back in until the end of the set, and when the first few notes of Dang came on, I was done.
Cause his songs are full of nostalgia and melancholia whereas I just can't imagine someone tearing up from roaring guitarpassages, rattling drumbursts with a constant feel of intensity, power and loudness. Idk.
Cause his songs are full of nostalgia and melancholia whereas I just can't imagine someone tearing up from roaring guitarpassages, rattling drumbursts with a constant feel of intensity, power and loudness. Idk.
right there's nothing nostalgic and melancholic about a 30 year old band with roughly a 3rd of the songs being about death in some way.
Cause his songs are full of nostalgia and melancholia whereas I just can't imagine someone tearing up from roaring guitarpassages, rattling drumbursts with a constant feel of intensity, power and loudness. Idk.
right there's nothing nostalgic and melancholic about a 30 year old band with roughly a 3rd of the songs being about death in some way.
Cause his songs are full of nostalgia and melancholia whereas I just can't imagine someone tearing up from roaring guitarpassages, rattling drumbursts with a constant feel of intensity, power and loudness. Idk.
right there's nothing nostalgic and melancholic about a 30 year old band with roughly a 3rd of the songs being about death in some way.
And that's what I wanted to hear, thanks. There are some metal releases that can move me very deeply, even might make me cry from time to time but those are mostly slow burning records. I feel like Tool is very intensive, high energy you know? That's why I made that (first) comment in the first place. I wasn't joking I was seriously wondering.
Cause his songs are full of nostalgia and melancholia whereas I just can't imagine someone tearing up from roaring guitarpassages, rattling drumbursts with a constant feel of intensity, power and loudness. Idk.
i've gotten teary-eyed every time I've heard Metallica play "Battery" live. Maybe because it's like a perfect thrash metal song, very indicative of a genre that has been a huge part of my life.
in general i've found that the songs that make me cry aren't necessarily the emotional ones, it's the ones that are just so fucking good. the fact that some person or group of people created this little piece of art that has such an impact on the people listening to it, even if that impact is just characterized by energy or anger or joy as opposed to sadness, it just gets to me.
even if a song isn't "great" objectively, sometimes just the choice an artist made to create it can stir up feelings within me. Phish has this song "What's The Use" that has no lyrics and essential just starts with a reverberating guitar chord and then just a few carefully chosen notes and some weird looping sounds for however long they play it. EVERY time i hear those opening notes to the song it completely destroys me. because like why did they record this? why did they put it on a record? why do they play it live? why did trey choose NOW in the set to go into this song? what does the song even mean? it's mind-boggling and confusing and something about not knowing what the hell is going on and accepting that powerlessness over my own understanding of the situation shakes me to my core.
Cause his songs are full of nostalgia and melancholia whereas I just can't imagine someone tearing up from roaring guitarpassages, rattling drumbursts with a constant feel of intensity, power and loudness. Idk.
Listen to the lyrics of Schism, my dude. Tears for days.
Cause his songs are full of nostalgia and melancholia whereas I just can't imagine someone tearing up from roaring guitarpassages, rattling drumbursts with a constant feel of intensity, power and loudness. Idk.
Listen to the lyrics of Schism, my dude. Tears for days.