Part of “XO Tour Llif3” succeeding is the incredible work of producer TM88, one of the earliest people to recognize Lil Uzi’s talents and boost him to a higher platform. Coyote moment of the ground falling out from the floor beneath someone.
Maxwell Cavaseno: “Harambe” with the Wile E. Thomas Inskeep: TM88 has largely built a discography of producing southern rappers I don’t much care for, but I love the simplicity of this beat for Uzi, which allows Uzi room to do whatever he wants, and when Uzi does whatever Uzi wants, he’s at his best. Be it the just-too-emphasised chill or the whirlwind of emotion it gives way to, it’s an intense experience. Iain Mew: It’s too slippery to perfectly stick, but even the most flattened-out version still sets up its own world for its duration. Like my linked example, TM88’s production is at once playful and forlorn, making it the proper foundation for Lil Uzi Vert’s (often difficult to listen to) narrative of a fraught relationship. Will Adams: I’ve become so drawn to sparse, lo-fi synthwork over the past year that “XO Tour Llif3” had me from the start. It might have been beautiful once, but that beauty is gone now, forever irretrievable and just as a withered, broken structure exudes a desolate kind of perfection, so does this song. The song is rusted, dulled, just enough sharp bits left to hurt but not enough nerves left to completely feel the pain. It delivers the opening line “I don’t really care if you cry” with the disinterest and impersonality of a mail clerk calling forward the next customer in line, and maintains that dreariness until the sudden crescendo of “She say I’m insane, yeah! I might blow my brain, yeah! Xanny help the pain, yeah! Please, Xanny make it go away!” Lil Uzi Vert embodies his chorus’ mantra of “push me to the edge,” but it’s clear Uzi isn’t just being pushed to the edge here he’s been there for so long that the edge has started to corrode. It is at once dead-eyed, manic, caustic and terrified, its nihilistic lyrics striking repeated blows to the solar plexus through the oppressive haze of a beat from which you can almost physically smell weed smoke. “XO Tour Llif3” is not like that “XO Tour Llif3” is devastating. Will Rivitz: Lil Uzi Vert’s music typically doesn’t have too much emotional depth: his flat delivery, repetitive flow, and often fairly generic lyrics land with about the sticking power of old porridge. 1 and/or a meme, if there’s a difference…
She say, "You're the worst you're the worst"ĭisclaimer: Blog ini tidak menyediakan link Download Lagu XO TOUR Llif3 - Lil Uzi Vert mp3. I was countin' that and these all twenties, that's a G-roll Lookin' at you stackin’ all your money, it all green though In the club, ain't got no ones, then we would becomeĬlothes from overseas, got the racks and they all C-Notes That is not your swag, I swear you fake hard I'm committed, not addicted, but it keep control of meĪll the pain, now I can't feel it, I swear that it's slowin' me, yeah I like the way that she treat me, gon' leave you, won't leave me, I call it that Casanova Stackin' my bands all the way to the top, all the way 'til my bands fallin' overĮvery time that you leave your spot, your girlfriend call me like, "Come on over" My Brittany got mad, I'm barely her man nowĮverybody got the same swag now, watch the way that I tear it down Like something you ride a sled down, I just want that head Should've saw the way she looked me in my eyes Lil Uzi VertĬountin' them bands all way to the top, 'til they be fallin' overĬountin' them bands, on my way to the top, 'til we fallin' over Songwriter(s): Symere Woods Bryan SimmonsĪlso read: Bad and Boujee – Migos feat.