Music Downloads & Lyrics
Heha. He Hey everyone, it's your guy Guy
here, Anthony Fantano, the internet's
busiest music nerd, and we're driving.
We're Yeah, we're leaving Let's Argue
City and we're going to Let's Agree
Town, a cozy little place along the
coast where everyone agrees with each
other. We're leaving that place in the
dust bit of history. In fact, I've
loaded that son of a bee up with enough
plastic explosives to blow up a really
big place.
Yeah, we're done arguing. I want to hear
your most agreeable takes, your coldest
takes, the stuff that everyone likes to
hear for positive vibes only in America.
Thank you. So, yeah, I went on social
media and I asked for exactly that.
Let's see.
the results. Kanye West lost the chance
to revive his career. Yeah, this is a
let's agree video and I agree with that.
Honestly, and I know it hasn't been that
long since I've talked about Kanye on
this channel. I feel like I have been
and and this has been to a great
improvement in my mental health. I feel
like I've been less and less plugged
into whatever sort of like positive or
supportive or gaslighty type discourse
there is happening around Kanye West
right now. I do think partially it is
because there is less and less of it
happening currently. A lot of people saw
that cousins tweet that was just a
bridge too far. I feel like you have to
have some serious problems if like
anything over the past year wasn't what
did it for you. Like if it took the
tweets about his cousin or the other
various tweets about him being a cuck
and making cuck music, like if if that's
what did it for you, there's something
weird going on with you. You have you
have problems. Or maybe you're not
experienced enough in the world. I have
no idea. You should talk to a therapist
about whether or not you were raised
right or whether or not you were
susceptible to things like cults. I
actually watched some of these Kanye
West fans who have been riding with him
hard for the past like six or seven
months. If they do actually fall out of
grace with Kanye, there is a high
likelihood that they end up joining a
cult somewhere shortly after. The Kanye
West 2 Scientology pipeline will be
real. Look out for it. But yeah, after
this most recent string of tweets, I I
don't know if there's anybody out there
who is still really truly supporting
Kanye West and I I feel like as as I've
been saying in the multiple pieces of
content I've been making about his
downfall as of late, clicking light,
this is kind of the cycle that Kanye is
always in. He is embedded into a certain
culture or community of people. And
because he is a contrarian by nature, he
just has to adhere to the thoughts and
feelings and statements that will piss
off the people around him the most. And
now that he is fully like jettisoned
anything and everything that was once
connected to early years Kanye or middle
years Kanye and so on and so forth, he's
now sort of like in this weird
right-wing sphere. And now he has to
once again find a way to make those
people he is now surrounded by and and
beloved by hate him. And the fastest way
to do that is to say he's a cuck and say
he's into cuck stuff and tweet this
other too. It's just this constant
never-ending boom and bust cycle of all
the people who love me, find a way to
make them hate me while also
ingratiating myself to another group of
people transition into that group. And
then once I've done that, I need to find
a way to get them to hate me, too. And
then move on from there. And we're just
going to do that over and over and over
and over and and getting worse each time
mentally and emotionally as we do it to
the point where I think Kanye is just
going to have nobody around him
whatsoever. And it's just really sad to
sort of like see it going down that way.
Putting your friends on to new music and
then finding out later that they got
really into it and started listening to
more music on their own that you turned
them on to is one of the best parts of
being a music fan. That my friend is
called connection and music culture. As
great as the internet has been as a tool
for that very thing through message
boards and through eras of social media
that uh were less divisive and actually
fostered community around particular
things in an organic fashion. It has
more recently shifted into a place that
is just
algorithmically homogenized, needlessly
confrontational around the dumbest
things. And then in addition to that,
the amount of music you're being exposed
to that's actually made by real
humans on some of these music streaming
platforms like Spotify, for example, is
just becoming less and less and less and
less. Just more AI slop than
than ever in these places. Like the
beauty of being able to come together
and celebrate and enjoy art collectively
as a community, that's culture. And I'm
not saying right now that the internet
is inherently bad for that. But the
people who run the internet are bad for
that. And things need to happen for that
not to be so bad anymore. You know,
changes and all that. Agreeable things.
Cuz this is an agree video. Chance the
rapper is definitely a rapper who took a
chance. You know, I'm going to disagree
on this one. I'm disagreeing. I'm
arguing in fact because Chance the
Rapper right now is ultimately refusing
to uh take the biggest chance and that
is come out with a goddamn album. Come
out with a mixtape. Come out with
something. Come out with something other
than a bunch of random ass singles. Come
out with a thing. What are you doing?
Your career opportunities are just
evaporating before your very eyes.
There's no possible way you could drop
an album that is worse than the big day.
It can only go up from here. drop a
thing. NPR Tiny Desk concerts are great.
I mean, yes, I agree. The performances
are good and cool and neat and
interesting and shed a different light
on artists that you don't usually see in
a certain context, be it a Megan the
Stallion or a Ta Payne, so on and so
forth. But I cannot sit through one of
these things because they refuse to
specify whether or not it is a tiny
concert at a desk or it is a concert at
a desk that is tiny. And I refuse to
donate to NPR ever again until they tell
me what it is. When I was young, I
thought Tyler the Creator were separated
artists and Tyler was featuring the
creator in every song. You're telling me
that's not not not the case? Hold on.
Hold on a second. I thought Tyler was
the rapper and the creator was the guy
making all the beats. You're telling me
they're not like a duo? You're joking
here. Here's Tyler. Okay, this is Tyler.
This is clearly Tyler. Here's the
creator. Okay, here's the creator.
Here's Tyler. Here's the creator. Here's
Tyler. Here's the creator. Clearly two
different guys doing two different
things making music together as one of
the greatest duos hip hop has ever
known. Right up there with Gangar, right
up there with Outcast. Best hip-hop duo
ever of the modern era. Just like, you
know, my other favorite hip-hop duo,
Kendrick and Lamar. Kendrick is the one
doing all the raps. Lamar is the one
doing all the beats. Don't come in my
comments if you're not going to know
your hip-hop like me. I know my hip-hop.
Misheard song lyrics can actually be a
funny unintentional addition to any
song. Yeah, one of my favorite instances
of that lately is that one guy that got
like a young thug uh lyric tattooed on
him, but it was with like horses. They
don't stop, they keep going. But I guess
the original lyric is like, "Hustlers
don't stop, they keep going." Which is
such a bewildering uh situation to me.
One, why is that a lyric that sticks out
to you out of all the Young Thug lyrics?
Like he he has so many other similar
lyrics out there. And I guess lyrics
that I guess you could say are like
maybe funnier or wittier or uh maybe
speak more accurately to the personal
experience of that seemingly white guy
who got that weirdass tattoo. So yeah,
why that lyric is the one I I don't
really know. I feel like hustlers makes
more sense because they hustle. But
also, I mean, it it is kind of true.
Horses don't stop. They keep going.
Horses just go and go and go and go.
That's why people like to ride them. So,
I mean, I don't know. While it is a
weird mistake, at least from what I
understand, I'm just uh merely reporting
a random video and headline that I saw
on the internet. And we all know that
all videos and headlines we see online
in 2025 are true. There is no denying
that. That is not a thing that you can
deny. All videos are in fact true and
real and media literacy is at an
all-time high in the current age. But
yeah, I think as of late that is one of
my favorite misheard song lyrics. No
music is truly worthless. If a song is
enjoyed by even one person, it has
value. The only exception is music with
an inherently harmful message like Tom
McDonald's for example. The Big Day may
be god-awful embarrassing. So on and so
forth, but I can be happy it exists
knowing that there's someone out there
who thinks it's the best piece of music
ever made. I'll do you one even better
and say that music has value based even
on just the artists themselves enjoying
the process of making it and getting
something out of doing that. A song in
my opinion doesn't even necessarily need
to have like a big or any audience
whatsoever consuming it and enjoying it
for it to have some kind of value which
again I think is the case for lots of
different artistic disciplines. if even
the artists themselves get something
significant personally out of making
that art as long as I guess you know it
didn't involve sort of like um killing a
bunch of people and sort of like you
know painting a canvas in their blood
which I know sounds freakish and
outlandish but there are legitimately
debates and philosophical bits of
discourse that have happened over the
course of art history uh about whether
or not art is valid that involves harm
being done onto others sentient beings
so on and so forth. In fact, there was
this really sick art piece in the late
2000s that involved starving a dog. So,
I mean, this stuff is out there, it does
uh exist. But again, so long as the art
process isn't doing any kind of like
harm uh to somebody else and it's just
kind of the artist making some art and
getting something out of that process,
it has value even based on that. Buying
albums in a physical format is a joy
that I hope never stops being a
possibility. I hope so, too. I feel like
that is becoming less and less of a
possibility though into the future as we
sort of like barrel further and further
into a digital streaming information age
where you essentially will own nothing
and be happy about it. Another downside
to this is that your favorite artists
and albums and songs can like have their
stuff ripped off of these platforms or
changed in some significant way and
there's pretty much nothing you can do
about it. That is unless you have your
own copy of that thing that you can
always like refer back to no matter
what. Cuz I don't know, after all, what
if there's one person out there who like
really personally enjoys that first
original like shittily mixed version of
The Life of Pablo the best with like the
OG tracklist release? What if there's a
person out there who just prefers it
that way? There's got to be at least
one. Yeah. Hopefully that person has a
personal copy of that that they can
listen to at their pleasure. Because as
more of our media and culture is
essentially owned by a smaller and
smaller number of uh multi-million
billion dollar companies, how much of
that media and art and culture we will
continue to have access to for free or
for an affordable price, it it's
becoming kind of questionable. Maybe
piracy will become a thing again. I
don't know. We'll see. You are the
internet's busiest music nerd. Yeah, I
am. Hell yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I am. Yeah,
I'm not even I don't need to I don't
even disagree with that. Nardwire seems
like he's a really nice guy. Well, I've
met him and he interviewed me one time.
I cannot watch that interview. I hate
the way that I look and act in that
interview so much. And chances are if I
did another interview, I I would still
like hate the way that I look and act in
that interview, even though it would be
nice to do another Nardwire interview
where I don't look and act like a
idiot the entire time. Anyway,
uh yes, I've met him and he is quite
nice, quite a nice guy in person. And I
do agree that he is a nice man.
Interactions with people off the
internet tend to be much more fulfilling
than talking to people online. I mean,
at the end of the day, I feel like that
kind of depends upon the person and
where you're kind of talking and
interacting. There are lots of cool
people who I know through the internet
and I love my interactions with those
people and those people are, you know,
important to me and uh have given me
vital perspective on a lot of different
things. If I had the opportunity to just
sort of like casually hang out in person
with some of these individuals, as you
know, a few that I have in mind don't
even live anywhere near me. I would, you
know, a long-distance online connection
is fine, too. Nothing wrong with that.
You should try to find balance in your
life in terms of surrounding yourself
with positive people, people who you
interact with well, and just make sure
that those people um are online and
offline, too. As having people in person
to hang out with is vital. And having
people in your life as it were who are
maybe sort of outside the normal orbit
of individuals who you regularly have
contact with can be good as well because
that sort of outside and out of context
perspective can uh most definitely um
help in some situations. But yeah, you
know, just don't give any strangers your
your social security number or your
address and and you should you should be
fine. My parents influence on my musical
taste helped shape me into who I am
today. I am thankful for them and the
memories I get while listening to some
of their favorite tunes. A that's so
cute. It's so adorable. Oh my
god. I fully and wholeheartedly agree. I
had some similar experiences, though
maybe not in the same exact way as maybe
some people might kind of envision such
a relationship to be with their parents
and their music. Oh, this is the music
of my generation. Uh here's what you
should listen to. Try this out. so on
and so forth. I just have a lot of vivid
memories of being a fan at the same time
as my mom was of a lot of contemporary
music like back in the '9s. Uh be it
certain singer songwriters who were
popular at the time or certain rock or
pop artists and hip-hop artists too. It
was like really cool to be into some of
the same songs and artists that um you
know my uh mom was at the time. She's
got some pretty current day hip hip
tastes with some stuff. You know, indie
music is often not independently
produced, but instead made by mainstream
record labels. This can be confusing for
many people. Yeah. I mean, this is just
kind of the product, unfortunately, of
uh the indie boom of the 2000s where
indie music uh as you're kind of
describing there in terms of like its
makeup and where it's produced and who
it's produced by was strictly that for a
time. And then as uh some of the newer
bands that kind of were gaining momentum
in the late '9s and 2000s started to uh
build up some steam, labels kind of saw
potential in indie music as like a new
thing to sell records with and brand
around and so on and so forth. And you
know that's when you saw bands like
Death Capricut getting signed to big
labels and other artists doing bigger
label deals and and so on and so forth.
And after that, sort of like the
conceptual meaning of the indie label uh
began to become more and more
meaningless and uh you know, kind of
degrading to the point where it is
today. And I wouldn't say it's
completely degraded. I feel like indie
as a label is kind of more descriptive
of a sound than it is a like a literal
ethos when it comes to releasing your
music. That's not necessarily the worst
thing it could have turned into. I mean,
in some respects, I think indie would be
an even less functional label if
sonically it meant ultimately nothing
other than just sort of like, oh yeah,
we release this independently. Well,
it's like, why do we have a genre label
just for like, I'm releasing my music
independently, you know? It's like, you
could release any kind of music
independently. It doesn't need to be,
you know, within a certain rubric or
sound or whatever. Having a diverse
taste in music doesn't inherently mean
you have better taste in music. I mean,
it can certainly help. I feel like
having a good taste in music means
having at least somewhat of a broad
taste in music so that you have more
perspective about whether or not
something you're listening to in a
certain genre is actually good. There's
some people who I know who just kind of
mostly listen to one single genre or
maybe a couple of different genres. And
as a result, I feel like they're more
easily impressed by releases within
those spaces that are just kind of okay
when there's not really an opportunity
to supplement those listening
experiences with maybe superior records
or more interesting records that are
outside of these genre spaces that
they're normally sort of comfortable in.
But still, with that being said, you
could be fans of artists in eight or
nine or 10 wildly different genres and
maybe all of those artists be the most
boring surface level mainstream
portrayals, uh, bland commercial
portrayals of that sound, and you're
just merely aware of them or a fan of
them because you don't really do that
much digging into music generally
outside of like what kind of just
happens to cross by you when you're
looking at random playlists on Spotify,
which when it comes to taste, is like a
lot of breadth but not necessarily a lot
of depth and I feel like having a decent
music taste some depth is kind of
required. I think listening to a wide
array of different artists and genres
can certainly help uh when it comes to
improving your music taste. And when I
say that, I mean like your capacity to,
I guess, kind of grasp and familiarize
yourself and uh understand different
types of grooves and instrumental
pallets and musical styles and so on and
so forth. It can help with that, but
it's not like, you know, the silver
bullet guarantee that you're going to
have amazing music taste because you
listen to more genres than the average
person. All right, guys. I'm done
agreeing with you for the most part.
Thank you for watching. Over here next
to my head is another video that you can
check out. Hit that up or the link to
subscribe to the channel. Anthony
Fantano. Let's agree forever.
Discover the latest Kanye West song with full lyrics, free MP3 download, and video download. Enjoy high-quality audio and official music video. Get the best song lyrics, MP3 download, and audio now. Perfect for fans seeking free music and official remixes. Stream or download the song in high quality, and explore more top hits. This page offers the most popular lyrics, MP3 downloads, and official video content for Kanye West's latest release. Enhance your music library with our trusted source for free music, MP3 downloads, and official video downloads of trending songs. Don't miss out on your favorite artist's latest hits, available now for instant download and streaming.