Scanner Internet Archive Python library 0. Plus-circle Add Review. Reviews There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write a review. JPEG download. Download 15 files. The Waters is a concept mixtape. Jenkins' lyrics are immersed in the symbolic meanings of water.
TO - Download torrents, music, movies, games, apps, software and much more. The Pirate Bay is the galaxy's most resilient BitTorrent site. Download Link 1 Download Link 2. Share with your friends. When the album's main trio is composed of some of the best songs of the year, other tracks can't help but pale in comparison. Still, The Water s proves that Jenkins is as ambitious as he is talented.
The improved songcraft of The Water S tightens his focus, yet each track feels of a piece, its cohesive sound reflective of the album's titular metaphor. Even when Jenkins' poetical hand gets a bit too free with the pen, his verses are drawn together by the unbroken stride of his words. He stands apart thanks to a rap style that gives muscle to a moral position. As Guru once said, it's mostly the voice: deep and sonorous, Jenkins' vocals resonate with a particularly masculine brand of authority.
Where Chance the Rapper's voice affects a manic, elastic character, or Vic Mensa aims for empathic transcendence, Mick Jenkins is practical, decisive, and no-nonsense. Uninterested in high-minded frivolities, he often sounds like he's getting to the point, even when he isn't: 'Everybody wanna be the back of a D-Rose' is a bit of coded language Derrick Rose's jersey has the number one on the back , but his delivery still gives this wordplay pointed gravitas.
Serious and dignified, he wears his voice like a Sunday suit. This confident rhetorical style is underpinned by the anxiety of a person who perceives that the world has issued him a false bill of sale. Clear-eyed, he recognizes the superficiality of his peers' wealth and status obsessions and the counterfeit choices the world has presented them.
For Mick Jenkins, 'water' represents spiritual nourishment, clarity, purpose, qualities essential to life yet too easily ignored by the distracted. Mick Jenkins combats this anxious frustration with aggressive confidence, willing his truth to reshape a warped reality. The album's best songs foreground his words. The sparse, unsettling 'Jazz', which twists with terse ambiguity, lets his vocals take center stage. Statik Selektah's 'Black Sheep' gives the back half some sleek momentum, while the frenetic 'Who Else' upends the casual atmosphere with some of Jenkins' most focused writing.
But The Water S peaks with the climactic DJ Dahi-produced urgency of 'Dehydration', where each word seems underlined for maximum dramatic impact. In sharp contrast with Mick Jenkins' brolic tone, the album's leisurely production is soothingly therapeutic, all smudged-graphite edges.
Where his first album was jazzy in a general sense, The Water S ' languid guitar lines and airy atmosphere bathe the music in soft-focus blues and greens, a watercolor that recalls the placid cool of '60s modal jazz.
The connection between aggression and relaxation is essential: his vocals keep the chilled production dynamic, while the reassuring ambiance is immersive, sanding the rough edges on occasionally weighty material. Heaviest of all is 'Martyrs', released as a video at the end of last year.
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