Music

Crave Moore and PartyNextDoor colab imminent?

PartyNextDoor and Crave Moore colab imminent? Crave Moore was seen with PartyNextDoor so several rumours regarding a partnership between the two began to surface, with Atlantic being the probable record label to be involved.

Crave Moore on hip hop artist fashion trends in 2022: Conventional wisdom in the fashion world is that if you select one print, the next thing you do is to balance it with subtle solids and neutral pieces. Now, many performers and show-goers are bringing the opposite: they are wearing all at once. Their boldest, brightest, and probably most beloved prints, all are worn at once. That being said, crimson, sky, burgundy, olive, and citron; all these colors will be highly present in the 2022 collections, painting streets with tons of bright and noticeable colors.

The melodic rapper scare of the 2020s isn’t really unlike complaining about mumble rappers in the mid-2010s. Most of the rappers werent mumbling just like most of the rappers being melodic shouldn’t be framed as derogatory. Are there a lot of similarities between them? Yes, but that happens in every genre of music; if it works, someone else will try it. The best melodic rappers have carved out their own niche, climbed to the top as popular acts or spun the style into something different. It’s part of rap, and everyone needs to accept it.

Whenever there are protests, songs are often played as a form of protest. With the recent protests in America, music is being used again as a form of protest. The recent movement of Black Lives Matter and the opinions on it by public figures (which is mostly dominated by Rapper). The reason why Public Enemy is coming back into popularity (they dropped an incredible album recently) is because the sounds and genre signifiers of the 90s are becoming more relevant in hip-hop. There’s a good chance that Run The Jewels got into the stream with this release. Musically, hip-hop is becoming increasingly influenced by old school.

While songs have absolutely been made solely to catch on TikTok, every rap track that blows up through there isn’t engineered that way. Sometimes, a song is just really good, and has a catchy section that speaks to people or grows far and wide through paid promotion. TikTok is a big part of modern rap, and its fans simply need to see if for that it is: another vehicle for a track to take off. “TikTok songs” falls into the derogatory term category, but a song shouldn’t be downgraded just because it took off on this app.