>Album has 234.48:4 in the title
>Lasts 239:31
What music does /mu/ listen to when they want to zone out?
Pic related, I mostly listen to things influenced by ambient / drone or post-rock, but I'll try anything especially if there's a continuous mix between songs.
>lol this chart
if you think this incomplete chart is shit, then recommend something better instead of trying to be edgy.
Waiting some idiot making jokes about nu males.
You seem a little bit defensive OP.
I just listen to Jazz or space Rock.
>>74038340
This.
do i love this?
>(c)rap music
RAP IS CRAP
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-riL5A4eiWQ
>>74038308
Under what criteria?
One of mine: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hG9C0VwruXE
I liked Mask Off by Future but got tired of it after a few minutes
why is it that all these lost/unfinished albums are/were considered to be the artists best work?
Are there any bad lost albums? Or albums that are lost/unfinished because they were so bad?
>implying any of those are good
>The best living or dead, hands down
Was he wrong?
picasso is dead
>i don't need your pussy bitch i'm on my own dick
what?
>>74038181
That's the realest bar Kanye's ever written
>gentleman that's going round, turning the joint upside down
>>74038128
one of the catchy parts of the album imo
Are there any other mainstream top 40 pop songs that are actually good like this one?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kp7eSUU9oy8
>In the 1970s
...an underground urban movement known as "hip hop" began to develop in the South Bronx in New York City. It focused on Jamaican emceeing (or MCing) over "breakbeats", house parties and neighbourhood block party events, held outdoors, a powerful medium for protesting the impact of legal institutions on minorities, particularly police and prisons.
>in the 1980s
hip hop was further defined in 1982, when Afrika Bambaataa and the Soulsonic Force released the electro-funk track "Planet Rock". Instead of simply rapping over disco beats, Bambaataa with producer Arthur Baker created an electronic sound, taking advantage of the rapidly improving drum machine Roland TR-808 synthesizer technology. Planet Rock is widely regarded as a turning point; fusing electro with hip hop, was "like a light being switched on," resulting in a new genre
>in the 1990s
...with the commercial success of gangsta rap in the early 1990s, the emphasis in lyrics shifted to drugs, violence, and misogyny. Gangsta rap also played an important part in hip hop becoming a mainstream commodity. Meanwhile turntablism and trip hop along with instrumental hip hop became their own independent art movements.
>in the 2000s
...the years from 2001 to 2006 were defined by collaborations against type and regional stars finally reaching the mainstream. Kanye West led the charge, rapping about both social issues and material success with a flow that redeemed the oft-maligned Mason Betha, and doing so with the co-sign of Jay-Z and Common. It’s easy to see his wide range of customers and collaborators as a result of his hunger
>in the 2010s
...literal retards started mumbling over EDM loops and white Americans gobbled it up in guilt
>>74038033
>...literal retards started mumbling over EDM loops and white Americans gobbled it up in guilt
you just said it
WHITE AMERICANS got more involved
>>74038033
>...literal retards started mumbling over EDM loops and white Americans gobbled it up in guilt
Cherry picking at it's finest.
>>74038033
The same thing that happened to damn near every other genre in music.
Probably that the internet has so fractured both popular music and poisoned underground sub-scenes and genres, by destroying the listener base of the former and making it that much easier for the latter to find their 15 minutes of fame.
So popular music is going down the toilet by chasing the ever lower lowest common denominator that still listens to radio/buys albums/pays for tidal, Apple music, etc or has the best corporate tie-ins, while the smaller, underground/obscure scenes and genres are all sanitizing and homogenizing their sounds in the hopes that they, too, can get a song into a commercial/memed on Twitter/Reddit/onto a late-night talk show, or make it into the smaller stages at yet another unimaginative, redundant music festival.
>artist makes a cover of remix that was a remix of cover made a different artist who made the original song
>>74037928
>>artist makes a cover of remix
no one does that
>>74037928
Name one
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eWHu2aAofI
>>74037900
She's Leaving Home
And it used to be my favorite song too.
Anyone have a leak link or torrent?
Lana a cute
320kbps is on RuTracker
>>74037896
giv lipfu plz
Serious question:
What the fuck is this XXL Freshman class shit? I admittedly have not followed music as closely as I used to in the past couple of years, but I have literally never heard of this until a few months ago and now every music journalism outlet seems to be cashing in on these XXL rappers. Also all the uber-ironic white girls I know who appropriate black culture 24/7 won't shut the fuck up about all of the rappers involved in it.
I am in the same boat as you. Even from what I mildly understand, I don't get why it's so popular.
Don't bother with it, it's been hot garbled ass garbage for years
something something new wave of trappers
its just a marketing hype, they will die down by the end of the year
Does /mu/ like the best hip hop album of all time?