One of the dopest beats youâll ever hear.Â
I'd rather be in outer space đž
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@gissellybelle
One of the dopest beats youâll ever hear.Â
I know thereâs lots of love in your heart But who you gonna give it to?
I didnât start this blog series with an act beginning with A so Iâm certainly not going to let it finish at the letter Z. At the end of my collection were those CD singles made up of multiple artists that didnât comfortably sit anywhere else. I had mine filed roughly in chronological order, starting with the Help EP from 1995.Â
Recorded in 24 hours and released within a week to raise money for the charity Warchild, the Help album was the high watermark of Britpop (especially set against the misery of Blur vs Oasis). It was released the day I moved out of my parentsâ house, originally for higher education but, as it turned out, for good. I bought the album en route to my new lodgings, listening to it for the first time as I unpacked what was then a rather meagre CD collection.Â
The quality of material is still overwhelmingly high 17 years on, but its release was poignant to me as it featured the first new recording of Manic Street Preachers since the disappearance of Richey Edwards, as well as brand new tracks by Blur, Suede and Radiohead. Itâs the latterâs Lucky (Warchild) that featured on the Help EP. Despite also including new versions of tracks by PJ Harvey and Guru, as well an exclusive instrumental from Portishead, Iâm still appalled by how few copies of this CD single were actually bought.
The Monks - I Hate You, 1966
Paperhouse by Can
Vitamin C by Can
Billie Holiday - Â Iâm a Fool to Want YouÂ
I want you and you want something  more beautiful
MONDO GROSSO - ă©ăăȘăłăč (Album Mix) (Vocal: æșćł¶ăČăă/Mitsushima Hikari)
What do you imagine a Cardi B song called âBe Carefulâ is about? I thought it would be a warning shot; one of those braggadocios songs rappers sometimes make where they tell you to âbe careful of me or I will fuck you upâ. However, Cardiâs song is actually the opposite.
Over a gentle beat, Cardi raps aspirationally (âI wanna get married like the Curryâs, Steph and Ayesha shitâ) and with a trademark directness (âPoured my whole heart out to a piece of shitâ). Itâs all good â albeit standard â stuff until we reach the chorus, which is uncharacteristically vulnerable.
It turns out that âBe Carefulâ is meant as a warning, but a different type of one. She is not warning you to be careful of her, but to be careful with her. âMy heart is a package with a fragile label on itâ. I didnât think that Cardi â whose voice is a force of nature â could sound this tender. By doing so she showcases a side to her artistry many people didnât think existed.
As great as the chorus is though, the most affecting parts of the song for me are Cardiâs âyeahâs. In hip-hop, âyeahâ is normally used by rappers to announce their arrival. To alert the listener that they are about to go off. The âyeahâs in âBe Carefulâ are entirely different. Cardi says them in a hushed tone, as if she is trying to psych herself up. These âyeahâs are emotional ones, out of step with any Iâve heard in rap. More than any of the great one-liners, this my favourite moment from the album.
That Cardiâs album is good seems to be a shock to the general public. The reaction of the (white and male) hiphopheads subreddit to good reviews saw them struggling to comprehend that a popular, sex-positive, female rapper could be critically acclaimed (at the same time, many of them defend domestic abuser XXXTentacion). This sexism is sad. Cardiâs rise over the last year has been a dreamlike story of hard work and taking advantage of every opportunity. To those hating, who does your response say more about, her or you?
Thoughts.
âIce and my boys and my wrist this flex. I donât need nobody tryna give me shitâ
// for line drawings requests send me a private message // for more, poeticamenteflor on instagram.
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