fakest. (ball road)

from sultan response. by dylan mills.

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(i flipped the meaning of the acapella and constructed into my interpetation to get my point across so don't get mad)

the acapella says "stunnin like my daddy" detailing that we should aim to achieve and do the same things as the men that came before us (most often the negatives). i feel that in a sense we should aim to try to be bigger men than those who have come before us have been. instead of trying to be even better than the men in our lives, we (my generation of young kids) aim to be replicas. "fathers" can represent anyone that you look up to as well, not just the typical male father figure.

that time in which the beat abruptly changes represents the way i contradict myself and the rules that i live by.

1) the beat is more of a "banger" beat contradicting my more preferred "sample based" beat style

2) we should aim to be better than our fathers who partake in "sinful" activities such as drugs, extortion, sex, and etc....but yet this song in the switch-up part makes all of these acts seem so fun and natural making it appealing and easily acceptable in the eyes of the youth. is it wrong?


you then hear a cutscene from the television show "The Jeffersons" for a split second say "you have a lot of common sense". we as a collective generation are very intellegent but we sometimes may lack common sense. she is saying "YOU have a lot of common sense" she is talking to the listener of this song, infering that anyone listening to this song has common sense and a lot of it at that. we should apply common sense to these actions we think are "fun"....we can have fun but not careless fun. think about the consequences of your actions

the beat then goes back to it's regular beat (the regular flow of the day)

credits

from sultan response., released February 28, 2015

license

all rights reserved

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