I've heard that song a few times. It's rather monotonous, the way I see it. There's a constant rhythm, but I can't seem to hear any sort of tune or melody.
Wow Ernie. You just said exactly what I was thinking.
This whole techno genre really rubs me the wrong way. It's trash, it takes no skill to talk to a beat, anyone of the street can talk to a beat, and that is what they classify as "music" Really? This is your idea of music? Whatever happened to actual bands instead of these one hit wonders I see a lot of today? I mean stuff like Nirvana, or Greenday from the 80's and 90's? Stuff like that, where the song had singing, where it took TALENT to make music. Not like today, nope, just insert machine to make strange beats and ignore all talent of "singer".
Both of the bands you mention are indie. Not mainstream. Quite the opposite. Green Dy is punk and Nirvana is grunge. Grunge hates mainstream and punk, is in favour of anarchy, I think.
Both of the bands you mention are indie. Not mainstream. Quite the opposite. Green Dy is punk and Nirvana is grunge. Grunge hates mainstream and punk, is in favour of anarchy, I think.
Punk is just the anger without the action. Both may not want to be mainstream, but they did become mainstream. And this should be in the entertainment section.
I'm a big fan of most types of music... and allthough I have to say this song might strike some people as monotonous, it's actually well within the lines of the basics of music: rythem!
And with that said, it's at the same time the only thing that stands for this song... rythem... since the text is rather (extremely) poor, this being one of the other terms in music basics...
I can understand when people hear this song too often, they get agitated pretty quickly, but when you listen to it at a certain time in a certain place, say for example while you're in a discotheque, you might like it at that particular moment!
When I first heard this song I pretty much wanted to throw the radio out the window. I personally hate songs that repeat the same 3 lines over and over again, and then resort to making up words to rhyme (slizzered). Chalk this up to another major label pushing a lame song with a catchy beat to an overplayed status on the radio, trying to land on the Top 40 charts.