Eyecon
@eyecon
1Following
1Follower
Milwaukee, WI USA
Joined Aug 8, 2011
My Music
2 songs ·
2 artists
Aug 12, 2011
Who killed the music?
Aug 12, 2011
1
Who killed the music? Round up the usual suspects. No I'm not going to go down the list and call out names. But someone should be held accountable. They should be tried by a jury of MY peers, then banned from making music forever. They should be silenced for what they've done. But then that would violate the whole "Freedom of Speech" thing that doesn't really exist anyway. Music used to be a collection of elements coming together to create harmony. It could extract emotion, and also teach. The creation of music was a tool. Now, it has gotten so unbearable that whenever you tell somebody that you rap or sing, they give you that look. You know like, "oh yeah? Hmm!". It's no longer a big deal. Now people throw the word "Talent" around so much that it became common phrase. Talent means you're exceptionally better at something than most people. How many people can actually make that claim? Not many. In fact, it's just the opposite. If you get your hands on a mic, and a computer, then you're a rapper. Congrats, you did it. Just like the stars on TV. Oh, there's just one thing, you kinda suck. And you're making things worse than they already are. You sound like everybody you know who does music. And they're all trying to imitate a watered down industry. This is not the way it's supposed to be. If you want to do music, then pay closer attention to what you're listening to. Make music with substance. Stop chanting about stuff you don't have and will probably never get. Work on your timing, and your flow. Choose better beats so that the song has progression. Because you might be a suspect. So who killed the music? It can probably be answered a hundred different ways. And it would probably take Gil Grissom, Jethro Gibbs, Elliot Stabler and Olivia Benson to crack this case