Shared Visions [Explicit]
South African rapper GYRE released Queernomics towards the end of 2017. Queernomics is divided into five chapters: I am Human, Queer, Sex, Love, Black. In each chapter, GYRE and his few guests explore the politics of being a black gay man in South Africa, not without flair and bravado. He talks about white gays, the white gaze, racism, religion, and many other ills a young black gay man has to deal with in South Africa all with a convincing conviction in his delivery. The rapper's English and IsiZulu raps are equally potent. Peep the wordplay on Black Jesus: White home run by a black man/ DAlines, man, you their puppet/ Helen back uzo Zilla/ Abantu bakho bayak'ziba The album doesn't stop at ills, though. On songs like Premium Bottom and Eat My Ass, the rapper goes sexual. Stereotypical when it comes to me/ I'm a black man who loves big black cock, he raps on the latter. Hearing sexual songs from a gay man's perspective is refreshing in a genre (and a world) that is still highly heterosexual. Sonically, Queernomics reveals a rapper who is in touch with the times. The production on the album, which is handled by J-Word Audio, leans towards the trap side of life. It's characterized by big bass lines, a wide selection of synths, pounding kicks and 808 snares. Queer rappers are becoming a force to be reckoned with in South Africa, with the likes of Mr Allofit, Andy Mkosi, Dope Saint Jude, among others making wavea. But Queernomics is the one body of work that shares the experience of queerness wholesomely. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
South African rapper GYRE released Queernomics towards the end of 2017. Queernomics is divided into five chapters: I am Human, Queer, Sex, Love, Black. In each chapter, GYRE and his few guests explore the politics of being a black gay man in South Africa, not without flair and bravado. He talks about white gays, the white gaze, racism, religion, and many other ills a young black gay man has to deal with in South Africa all with a convincing conviction in his delivery. The rapper's English and IsiZulu raps are equally potent. Peep the wordplay on Black Jesus: White home run by a black man/ DAlines, man, you their puppet/ Helen back uzo Zilla/ Abantu bakho bayak'ziba The album doesn't stop at ills, though. On songs like Premium Bottom and Eat My Ass, the rapper goes sexual. Stereotypical when it comes to me/ I'm a black man who loves big black cock, he raps on the latter. Hearing sexual songs from a gay man's perspective is refreshing in a genre (and a world) that is still highly heterosexual. Sonically, Queernomics reveals a rapper who is in touch with the times. The production on the album, which is handled by J-Word Audio, leans towards the trap side of life. It's characterized by big bass lines, a wide selection of synths, pounding kicks and 808 snares. Queer rappers are becoming a force to be reckoned with in South Africa, with the likes of Mr Allofit, Andy Mkosi, Dope Saint Jude, among others making wavea. But Queernomics is the one body of work that shares the experience of queerness wholesomely. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Eat My Ass
Circle to Feed
Live Up To The Trip
Story is Told
Faces Through the Flames
Wanting More
Let Me Go
Come to Carry On
One and the Same
See Through Hollow Dreams
New Life
Weaving Blind
At All Cost
All Revealing Eye
Wishful Thinking
Liars and Friends
Ever Devourer
Attuned To Another
Wind
Underwater
I, Receiving All
We've Left Paradise
Mars Synthphony
Off The Wall
Live Up To The Trip (Original Mix)
Infinity
S.O.S
Fem Physique
Halber Mensch
We Are No Where
Eyes on You
I Release
Where's Your Patience
Japan
Slay 'N Sleep
Morose
Premium Bottom
The Plan
Coil Horizon
Inkunzimalanga
Still
Koh Phi Peace
Quiescence
Dream the Obscene
Quarantine
Moirai
Inkane
Manifest
Behind the Eyes
Crumbs
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