![]() "They ONLY ASSUME because HE TOLD them!" Pusha-T said, comparing it to another instance of what he says represents the same kind of moves. I might even buy a home out in MississaugaĮarly Tuesday, Pusha-T responded to Thugger's criticism, saying that "nobody knew what the verse was about," including the label bosses who halted its release. Only to hide the blade flyin' back through LaGuardia Let 'em rush the stage when you made like Sinatra It's like Marked for Death Screwface, without the choppa If the patois is not followed by a Blocka Those empty threats only sound good on your records He also mentioned Mississauga, a Canadian city in the Ontario providence that neighbors Toronto, as well as Drake's song-based adoptions of different accents: You know reality bites, it's chess, not checkers In it, Pusha-T seemingly references a 2018 incident in which multiple people rushed the stage during his show in Toronto. Bro! Basically, who’s going to pick up the spiders and deal with all the other stuff that's scary in life? This person I'm singing to is gone.Noah ’40′ Shebib Says Pusha-T Crossed the Line With MS Lyrics: ‘That Was Something Different Than a Bar in a Song’ We wanted to conclude the tape and be like, ‘Look, despite all this grand imagery and metaphors of celebrity and the world being all fucked up, really on a day-to-day basis, I'm just sort of going through shit stuff in a personal relationship, way closer to home than these huge grand ideas.’ I grew up on a farm and I'm down for any animal-large, small, creepy crawlies in general, snakes, whatever. ![]() “I always like to leave a mixtape or an EP on a very real and fairly depressing note. Usually we produce our vocal really dry and really upfront.” The lyrics combined with the melody and produced with all the reverb gives it a dreamy sort of spacious feel, which isn't usually a feel we go for. “For me, the bridge is one of my favorite parts of the song because it gives it that lift into a different world. I think it’s the pinnacle of everything I despise about celebrity culture.” Me and Rob were like, ‘What is the fucking obsession with dead celebrities around here? What is celebrity anyway, and why are people obsessed with it?’ We then got onto these cemeteries full of plastic and just how people just throw away everything. “We were driving from our hotel to the studio in LA and went past this museum called the Museum of the Dearly Departed. But when I listen to the tone of the verses, I definitely do sound a little upset, but I think it's a good thing.” ‘LS6’ has a beautiful positive spin in the chorus. I was partying a lot and doing a lot of pharmaceutical drugs. I happened to spend so much time in the LS6 area, and one of those times we wrote this song. Growing up, my brother was, still is, an anchor and a spiritual guide and all the other things a young man needs in his life. J.Clancy Young King had to grind his whole life (true dat) Could of been a victim where Im from oh my (oh my) Whole vibe issa issa whole vibe (yeah yeah yeah. My brother has lived there for nine years now. LS6 is an area of Leeds called Hyde Park Corner. I was like, ‘Oh, do you want to come to the studio tomorrow to record this properly?’” Literally that same day, she sent me her verse back, recorded on a shitty mic in her bedroom. I felt like it was missing a verse and needed some fresh vibes, so I sent it to Arlo to see what she thought. ‘Nice Guys’ is loads of fun to play because myself and Sam, we make up this horn section of Easy Life and then start jamming on our trumpets. We were amazed that we'd actually written something with that energy. “It’s the most upbeat song we’ve ever written. And I think if you trace that love of dialect, it goes back to nursery rhymes.” Around here, the way people speak and the words they use are just so magical. We're from Leicester, which is in the Midlands. I’m actually a little obsessed with old English idioms and dialects and the way people use them. We saw a magpie and I kind of got obsessed with it and put it in a song. “I was in Wales or something with my girlfriend. “A nodding of the head to how fucked up things are getting.” Join him on an immersive track-by-track guide. “It’s all about the culture of throwing stuff away,” Matravers says. Junk Food is a collage of hip-hop swings, jazz flourishes, Vine samples, breezy vocals, and effortless melodies strewn across songs which tell darker stories. I think this mixtape, or EP or whatever you want to call it, does exactly that.” He’s right. “The whole idea of putting two things that don't belong together-our music and the aesthetic is kind of uplifting, but then I love to have a platform to speak about sad or concerning, troubling things. “Our whole vibe is sort of happy/sad, realistic/dreamlike,” Easy Life frontman Murray Matravers tells Apple Music.
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