draw. tgis guy. poppy brothers senior
Hereee!!! ;P

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draw. tgis guy. poppy brothers senior
Hereee!!! ;P
pov you’re kirby
@raffles0sr0tt
what id yiu drew this very specific photo of poppy bros sr…..
Here it is!! :D
also if ur not busy pls can u draw. poppy bros sr
u don’t have to he’s just cute and I love him lately…….
I agree he is really cute ;P
Things happened at the purgatory today and...
Context:
PBSR - VOLCANO
[5.17]
From Andrew, a sonic eruption of sorts...
Andrew Waddell: If you're a literalist like me, you might struggle to reconcile the first impression of "Volcano" with its namesake. The sparse piano, Fennesz-esque guitar, and its blend of processed vocals and synth washes feel more unearthly, or even aquatic, than our mercurial perception of an erupting volcano. But as "Volcano" progresses and those previously separate musical elements blur into one, its purpose begins to make sense -- volcanoes are more than spectacles; those rains of ash, burbling lava flows, and tectonic changes are the results of years of change and transition culminating into action. "Volcano" takes that and condenses it into a song, its slow accumulation of depth seemingly building to a release. But "Volcano" is more anthropomorphic than the real thing, and that's where the similarities diverge for the last time -- "Volcano" abruptly ends by retreating into itself, in the same way we handle the stresses of the day every single night. [9]
Alfred Soto: If this is a volcano, it erupts hundreds of miles below the sea, its activity registered by the faintest of bubbles rippling the surface. [4]
Tim de Reuse: A sonic commitment to sounding pleasant above all else: two chords, tinkly piano, distant guitar, ethereal reverb, all corners viciously sanded down. Without the indecipherable moaning vocals, it'd just be the music that they play on an airplane before the informational safety video starts: specially engineered to be un-dislikable and barely registering in the conscious mind. [3]
Katherine St Asaph: After putting on this perfectly pleasant James Blake/How to Dress Well track, a 22-year-old dude (you will also have regressed to age 20) will appear, cut the lights, hit on you, then ghost you the next day. [5]
Ian Mathers: It's not that weird that this feels to me like a hybrid of later-period Bon Iver and that one Bruce Hornsby song that gets played on the radio sometimes; it is weird that I kind of love it, though? [7]
Joshua Minsoo Kim: Pablo Serrano knows how to create a mood, but it's also a very familiar one that has been done to death throughout the entirety of the 2010s. It's also one that is accomplished through the most obvious methods: post-Bon Iver vocals buried low in the mix, loosely hip hop-indebted percussion, huge washes of synths, noodly guitar melodies, buckets of reverb. Not sure we need any more music like this. [3]
[Read, comment and vote on The Singles Jukebox]
London X Murcia artist and composer PBSR (Pablo Serrano) conjures up a soulful soundscape laced with pianos and luminous vocals with debut Volcano. The sound is immersive and will transport you straight to another plane (watch the treatment here!).
The track is the cornerstone of his upcoming 6 track extended play titled ...and dusky doors via Yucatan Records on the 27th of April. Enjoy the tune above and catch Pablo playing a show on the 24th of February at Birthdays where he shall be supporting Indian Wells!