Monday, May 25, 2020
Analysis Of The Movie How Father Time A Deadbeat
Saba - ââ¬Å"ComfortZoneâ⬠ââ¬Å"How father time a deadbeat Maybe I m adopted That ll explain why all of my shit been so timelessâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ When I woke up on the sunny morning of May 2, 2013 I had no clue that hip-hop, in my eyes, would change forever. But thatââ¬â¢s exactly what happened when I hopped in my car, plugged in my iPod, rolled the windows down and turned the volume just past blaring as ââ¬Å"Even better than I was the last timeâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ poured through my speakers. For a lot of reasonââ¬â¢s Chance the Rapperââ¬â¢s critically acclaimed mixtape Acid Rap morphed the rap genre for me: No longer do rhymes have to be structured and/or neat. Beats donââ¬â¢t have to bang. And it really is okay for hip-hop, which has long been a ââ¬Å"tough guysâ⬠genre, to be eccentric. Plainly put, Acid Rap was outside the box. Out of my comfort zone. Plus it acted as a flood gate ââ¬â opening wide and unleashing a unending hoard of pent-up talent from Chicago into the realms of legitimacy on the national scene. The movement couldnââ¬â¢t have happened at a better time, either, as the popular ââ¬Å"drill movementâ⬠had seemingly taken a strangle hold on the bloody streets of Chi-raq. One of those talents ââ¬â A barely 19-year-old Tahj Chandler, aka Saba from the West-Side collective PivotGang, has had my attention ever since he spit the multifaceted lines above. Saba easily had one of the standout feature verses on Acid Rap, and closed out out of my favorite tracks ââ¬Å"Everybodyââ¬â¢s Somethingâ⬠with a self-fulfilling prophecy ââ¬â his music really is
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