MongolHorde
altai steppe   Osh, Kyrgyzstan
 
 
Hello

Currently Offline
Recent Activity
92 hrs on record
last played on 6 Feb
0.6 hrs on record
last played on 28 Jan
4.4 hrs on record
last played on 27 Jan
Tonio 22 Dec, 2024 @ 11:07pm 
+rep greatest drone pilot in the People's Liberation Army
henjen 4 Jul, 2019 @ 11:41pm 
♥♥♥♥ you
:cozykcdaxe:
rich pomp 13 Jun, 2018 @ 1:17pm 
YO C TORONTO HAS THA REALLIST RAPPERS...BUH IF U WANA HEAR A SICK TORONTO RAPPER....SEARCH ..FLEX463


rich pomp 13 Jun, 2018 @ 1:15pm 
damnnnn bro! THIS IS A SICK ASS MIXTAPE FA REAL G! keep grindin im really feelin the cover and track#3...but yoooooo I GOT THIS BOY he friends with drake and Kardinal Official...CHECK HIS NEW ALBUM!!! "THE INTERNATIONALZ EP" search "KENNY CHEEZE"!!
Wyman 17 Jan, 2018 @ 4:09pm 
zog ftw
rich pomp 10 Dec, 2017 @ 3:49pm 
I'unno if we should be thanking Lil B or Chief Keef (probably both!), but rap's punk revolution has been in full swing this decade and this song is an excellent summary of its ideology. It can't really be compared to punk rock, of course, because it's utterly materialistic and proudly self-centred (what could be more American than that?), but it rejects technicality and perfection in favour of absolute simplicity and brutalism. Rap has always been inherently boastful and combative, after all, and this new generation is just boiling away the fat. Older heads may complain that these lyrics lack nuance or artisanship, but the core message is the same. "Why should I keep juggin' all these broke boys?" is, roughly speaking, a sentiment you can find expressed in rap music from just about any era; this song just eschews wordplay as a needless indulgence and gets right to the point.