The "lets try to appeal to everyone" thing never pans out
exactly what i was thinking. that and also "I suppose will.i.am as the bird he played in Rio could have made something that sounds and is topically very similar"
i'm sticking with my man psy
DocMcCoy"Go and laugh in your own country!" 5,917 Posts
I like it, although for a minute there I kept thinking "Black Eyed Peas..?"
People will cry "sellout", but I'm not mad. I guess he figures it's worth a shot in an election year.
I've only really heard the first three albums by The Coup so i'm not sure if this is a big departure musically from what they've been doing since then.. but i'm guessing that yes it is.
Lyrically i thought it was ok. If i'm not giving Boots too much credit, is the message of the song that when 'the people' are unified in demanding what they want that its a powerful thing? Eg. if you imagine a crowd at a concert clapping for the artist to come back out to perform an encore there's an undeniable feeling of strength and unity?
Maybe i'm reading too much into it. Musically it is pretty weak.
DocMcCoy"Go and laugh in your own country!" 5,917 Posts
Spacecho said:
I've only really heard the first three albums by The Coup so i'm not sure if this is a big departure musically from what they've been doing since then.. but i'm guessing that yes it is.
Lyrically i thought it was ok. If i'm not giving Boots too much credit, is the message of the song that when 'the people' are unified in demanding what they want that its a powerful thing? Eg. if you imagine a crowd at a concert clapping for the artist to come back out to perform an encore there's an undeniable feeling of strength and unity?
Maybe i'm reading too much into it. Musically it is pretty weak.
I think it's just different, rather than weak. It ain't a hip-hop record as most people would know it, but as a sort of "Outkast meets early Stooges" kind of thing, it works really well.
The kind of hip-hop Boots makes has been largely disregarded by hip-hop's core audience for such a long time that I can't really blame him for trying to take his message to another audience via a different method. I understand the scepticism and the suggestion that this is just a blatant attempt to reach a more mainstream audience, but dude isn't really compromising himself that much. This is a guy who was in the New York Times a few weeks ago describing himself as a communist - there's only so far someone like that can ever hope to cross over.
Couldn't get past the 1:20 mark. This song is poison to my ears.
Sorry,
parallax
damn i couldnt make it past the 50 second mark..
JectWon said:
This would kill in an Aerobics for Toddlers DVD.
^^ there is some serious truth to this, when you play the track and watch this kid there is a lot of WOW! going on... love that cyborg t-shirt hes sportin' also.
I suspect I'm not alone in (a) considering their first 2 albums classics, (b) having a lot of love for Boots and Pam as people/artists, and (c) quietly cringing at much of their output over the last few years.
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Check your PMs btw
Sounds a lot like what they do live these days. Not hating it, but at this point I listen to The Coup more for good lyricism than their music.
exactly what i was thinking. that and also "I suppose will.i.am as the bird he played in Rio could have made something that sounds and is topically very similar"
i'm sticking with my man psy
People will cry "sellout", but I'm not mad. I guess he figures it's worth a shot in an election year.
Remember Everlast?
Sorry,
parallax
this thraed has potential
peace, stein. . .
Also, I say more Outkast or Gnarls Barkley than Will.N.Em.
Lyrically i thought it was ok. If i'm not giving Boots too much credit, is the message of the song that when 'the people' are unified in demanding what they want that its a powerful thing? Eg. if you imagine a crowd at a concert clapping for the artist to come back out to perform an encore there's an undeniable feeling of strength and unity?
Maybe i'm reading too much into it. Musically it is pretty weak.
I think it's just different, rather than weak. It ain't a hip-hop record as most people would know it, but as a sort of "Outkast meets early Stooges" kind of thing, it works really well.
The kind of hip-hop Boots makes has been largely disregarded by hip-hop's core audience for such a long time that I can't really blame him for trying to take his message to another audience via a different method. I understand the scepticism and the suggestion that this is just a blatant attempt to reach a more mainstream audience, but dude isn't really compromising himself that much. This is a guy who was in the New York Times a few weeks ago describing himself as a communist - there's only so far someone like that can ever hope to cross over.
Yes, probably the wrong choice of words. I just meant musically its not my thing.
damn i couldnt make it past the 50 second mark..
^^ there is some serious truth to this, when you play the track and watch this kid there is a lot of WOW! going on... love that cyborg t-shirt hes sportin' also.