deadken posted:dubstep is f*ckin awesome
i know a guy whose taste i usually respect a lot but he said that skrillex was the greatest artist of our generation with the same amount of irony that people use when they say "literally"
c_man posted:deadken posted:dubstep is f*ckin awesome
i know a guy whose taste i usually respect a lot but he said that skrillex was the greatest artist of our generation with the same amount of irony that people use when they say "literally"
*gurns repulsively* skrillex aint even dubstep mate i'm talking old school shit bruv i was at fwd in 2004 fam underground shit you get me
tpaine posted:i bet deadken made that up and just owned you.
nah dubstep was around for a while before making mortal kombat songs for frat parties could get you paid
deadken posted:it was a secret santa thing and they sent a shitload of illegal drugs through the mail lmao
lol
tpaine posted:here's something you might like ken
this has some real cachet
i know u like this song clarence. how could you not
https://soundcloud.com/ayanami-reid/voiceover-post-mk-ii-return-to
that is a racist thing to say
but, in reasearching this post, i found weird knowledge online
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/As_Nasty_As_They_Wanna_Be#As_Clean_As_They_Wanna_Be
As Clean As They Wanna Be is the clean version of 2 Live Crew's third album. The album contains a disclaimer that '"This album does not contain explicit lyrics." The album had notably worse sales than the explicit version. However, it does contain "Pretty Woman", which is not on the explicit version. The song – a parody of the Roy Orbison hit "Oh, Pretty Woman" – resulted in a Supreme Court case, Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., which established that a commercial parody can qualify as fair use.
swampman posted:re: "rap is misogynist"
that is a racist thing to say
but, in reasearching this post, i found weird knowledge online
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/As_Nasty_As_They_Wanna_Be#As_Clean_As_They_Wanna_BeAs Clean As They Wanna Be is the clean version of 2 Live Crew's third album. The album contains a disclaimer that '"This album does not contain explicit lyrics." The album had notably worse sales than the explicit version. However, it does contain "Pretty Woman", which is not on the explicit version. The song – a parody of the Roy Orbison hit "Oh, Pretty Woman" – resulted in a Supreme Court case, Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., which established that a commercial parody can qualify as fair use.
hahahaha
ilmdge posted:tpaine posted:
the parody picture of rap i have in my mind is still a more compelling thing that horrible non-song. what the fuck? this is grimes-level bad. what are you fucking idiots getting into?
grimes is good
Grimes is bad.
anyone else remember luther campbell running for mayor of miami?
im rappin
im rap rap rappin
im rappin all day + im rappin all nite
im rappin in the dark + im rappin in the lite
im rappin
im rappin
im rap rap rappin