Love Don't Live Here Remix - Bastille feat. Rory Andrew, Jonas Jalhay & F. Stokes
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Love Don't Live Here Remix - Bastille feat. Rory Andrew, Jonas Jalhay & F. Stokes
Mark onstage playing guitar with F.Stokes
Sell dope but go to school to be a barber The ghetto's like a prison, you locked but you still living
Basement | Bastille (ft. F*U*G*Z & F. Stokes)
My home is comprised of many elements. Granddaddy was a junkie and found home in a needle filled with daily medicine. Home is far less based on physicality but embracing the mentality that you could turn even the harshest conditions into an optimistic galaxy.
Come home daddy, it's okay now. All the tears have dried and momma's in a better place now. No guns unless they video games, and there's a darker side to sex, rock and roll, and cocaine.
Come home.
F. Stokes (eff dot stokes) is one smart dude. Both in the way he thinks, and the way he dresses.
F. Stokes rapping about falling in love with a prostitute at age 10, over a dark and slinky Paper Tiger beat. It sits well within the tellingly slim canon of rap songs that empathize with women of the night, detailing the strangeness of his sexual coming-of-age surrounded by a pimp father and all that entails. Stokes is especially strong with these tales of his early life, and he's definitely had a storied past. I'm so glad Stokes hooked up with the Doomtree crew; his dark but bouncy and reflective flow was made for a beat like this.
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Toki used to drop these weekly "Best Week Ever" freestyles on his myspace. I have all of them somewhere, I'd love to see him bring this back again someday. Mike's verse on this one later made it onto Blessings from F. Stokes Death of a Handsome Bride.