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#1 (permalink) | |
The Big Dog
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Scotland
Posts: 1,989
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I will never understand this forum's complete misunderstanding and misinterpretation of Drake. Why on earth would Drake want to send like this generic whiteboy rapper. The guy is nauseating and woefully bland. 'Oh, it was hard. Just trying to make a better life' Boring. Heard it all before, plus this guy, David Dallas, just mumbles. No charisma, no intrigue, no distinguishable characteristics. Verses are bland and uninteresting. In fact this guy embodies everything Drake and more specifically Nothing Was the Same is not. Anteater you said 'Drake was disappointing this year' despite releasing his best record to date, not to mention many, many good to great guest spots. There's no way any logical person can put Nothing was the Same below David Dallas or whatever his name and album are called. Nothing was the Same was more diverse, had better production, verses, production and songs that are versatile enough to play in almost any social setting. If I played David Dallas to any of my friends, they'd skip the track. I know I was painfully tempted to. In terms of hip-hop, Nothing was the Same finds itself only behind Acid Rap in regards to AOTY. |
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#2 (permalink) | |||
Certified H00d Classic
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Bernie Sanders's yacht
Posts: 6,129
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Now as for Dallas: he's a DIY guy whose last record The Rose Tint caught my attention back in 2011 (and it didn't need 50 different producers lulz), so when his new one hit and I spun it a few times, I realized it worked for me where others didn't quite click. End of story. If you actually go and check out what reviews there are out there on Falling Into Place, you'll notice they're all pretty positive. If he was just some "nauseating" white rapper who wasn't doing something right, you'd be seeing a different sort of response on the whole. Let's be perfectly clear though: nothing I said in my review was insane, and Dallas isn't bland just because he isn't topping charts or marching in with your favorite producers (your comment on "better verses, production, etc." is subjective anyway, so I'm leaving it at that). This isn't NPR or Hip-Hop Nation or Pitchfork or wherever else you go for validation on rap, which is where he's going to be topping lists because...well, exposure is everything. And Acid Rap? Lol: Chance sounds so nasal that the acclaim he's getting is a bit baffling TBH. Kudos on the production though... Anyway, If you want to expouse the fantasticality of Drake and others, I would suggest making a list of your own. You'll give everyone who never spent any time with him this year an excuse to go spin the album and the rest of us who heard it already an incentive to enjoy it all over again. Thanks for your response by the way. ![]()
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Anteater's 21 Fav Albums Of 2020 Anteater's Daily Tune Roulette Quote:
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Last edited by Anteater; 12-18-2013 at 10:40 PM. |
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#3 (permalink) | ||
Certified H00d Classic
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Bernie Sanders's yacht
Posts: 6,129
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![]() 14. Justin Timberlake - The 20/20 Experience (The Complete Experience) ![]() Genre: Neo-soul, Funk, Electro-Pop, Experimental, R&B, Art Pop Sounds Like: Michael Jackson, Prince, modern R&B In a curious turn of events that not even Nostradamus could have seen coming, Justin Timberlake went full prog n' B this year with his 20/20 Experience duology of albums, complete with many songs coming close to the 10 minute mark and enough ideas between three songs to fill complete LPs of many an artiste on his level of exposure. But instead of slipping on the big banana of commercial ruin-via-alienating-core-audience, the former N'Sync crooner danced his way right up to enough $$$ and #1 chart topping to make his career all over again and then some. For those of you who didn't experience either Part 1 nor Part 2 this year though, I suppose the big question is: what's the big deal? Well, that's the funny thing: as the year went on and on, I began to realize that Justin's affluent & indulgent creative relationship with producer Timbaland and their seemingly ill-thought tendency to give the majority of the songs a lot of running time has ended up rubbing off on me with repeat listens: like the progressive rock I call my musical foundation, deeper cuts like 'Don't Hold The Wall', 'True Blood' and 'Spaceship Coupe' weren't really built to capture your attention in any sort of immediate fashion: they're classic highly polished longplayers, tailored for a different audience than Yes or Genesis but accomplishing the goal of bleeding into you over time like runny paints on a vast canvas. But as the big singles like 'Suit & Tie' and 'Take Back The Night' illustrate, Timberlake is still a master fisherman who knows just where to drop the lure. As I've mentioned offhand before, 2013 is going to be remembered as the year where R&B peaked at a creative zenith we haven't seen since the early 80's...and albums like the 20/20 Experience are a big part of why it happened.
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Anteater's 21 Fav Albums Of 2020 Anteater's Daily Tune Roulette Quote:
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Last edited by Anteater; 12-19-2013 at 08:15 AM. |
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