RE: Post the songs you hate here. Yes, right here!
August 8, 2016 at 8:18 am
(This post was last modified: August 8, 2016 at 8:19 am by Regina.)
Too many to list
- Anything before 1980, with very few exceptions.
- Anything screaming death shit
- I also hate when American male indie singers have that really stupid whiny voice (they all sound the same when they do it), like this song;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fn1jEjX5PA
It's painful to listen to. And that was already a horrible song in the original form, so very apt.
-And finally, when rappers either have no flow and/or just shout instead of rapping. Eminem has been very guilty of this the last few years.
- Anything before 1980, with very few exceptions.
- Anything screaming death shit
- I also hate when American male indie singers have that really stupid whiny voice (they all sound the same when they do it), like this song;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fn1jEjX5PA
It's painful to listen to. And that was already a horrible song in the original form, so very apt.
-And finally, when rappers either have no flow and/or just shout instead of rapping. Eminem has been very guilty of this the last few years.
"Adulthood is like looking both ways before you cross the road, and then getting hit by an airplane" - sarcasm_only
"Ironically like the nativist far-Right, which despises multiculturalism, but benefits from its ideas of difference to scapegoat the other and to promote its own white identity politics; these postmodernists, leftists, feminists and liberals also use multiculturalism, to side with the oppressor, by demanding respect and tolerance for oppression characterised as 'difference', no matter how intolerable." - Maryam Namazie
"Ironically like the nativist far-Right, which despises multiculturalism, but benefits from its ideas of difference to scapegoat the other and to promote its own white identity politics; these postmodernists, leftists, feminists and liberals also use multiculturalism, to side with the oppressor, by demanding respect and tolerance for oppression characterised as 'difference', no matter how intolerable." - Maryam Namazie