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Snoop loves his weed, so Amsterdam’s lax marijuana laws make a perfect hideout for him.

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In possibly the most unbelievable collaboration of all time, Robyn and Snoop get together and mess around.

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“O Superman (For Massenet)” was initially released as a single from Laurie Anderson’s first studio album, Big Science. It became an unexpected pop hit, reaching #2 on the UK singles chart in 1981.

Originally, the single was a limited release of 1,000 copies that Anderson had only made because her friend, indie label owner and fellow Whitney Museum art teacher B. George had convinced her to let him release it. Says George of the recording:

We got a National Endowment grant for $500 and she recorded it in her hallway because it was the quietest place she could find. I suggested she slow it down slightly to make it longer – it ended up eight minutes long – so I’d get paid more royalties if it was played on the radio.

Soon after its release, George began working on his book, Volume: The International Discography of the New Wave. Legendary British DJ John Peel bought a copy of Volume and was so impressed, he brought George to his radio programme to give his audience a sampling of new and interesting music from New York. George brought “O Superman”.

Suddenly, the song was played all over the radio in the UK, demand skyrocketed and Anderson got an offer from a British company to press 80,000 copies of “O Superman”. She’d previously been offered recording contracts by Warner Bros. A&R men at her concerts, but had refused every time – however, with this newfound success headed her way, she went back to them and asked if they could press 80,000 copies of her single. They immediately signed her to an eight-album deal.

“Superman” was originally part of Anderson’s larger performance art piece entitled The United States, which depicted vignettes of American life through performance art, spoken word, dance, animation and music.

It is a cryptic song, with lyrics warning against the U.S. reliance on a strong military presence worldwide. Its musical structure is formed from a repeating four-bar loop of Anderson saying the word “ha”. It is accompanied throughout the song by synthesisers, off-tempo vocal loops, and a sample of birdsong.

In a 2016 interview with The Guardian, Anderson describes “O Superman” as:

…a one-sided conversation, like a prayer to God. It sounds sinister – but it is sinister when you start talking to power.

The song was inspired by the failed 1980 attempt to rescue the 52 men and women being held hostage in the American Embassy in Iran. Says Anderson:

We were left with dead bodies, a pile of burning debris and the hostages nowhere to be seen. So I thought I’d write a song about all that and the failure of technology.

In an interview with GRITtv, Anderson said:

“O Superman” was written at a time of great “techno-humiliation”… People realized “Oh my God, technology will not save you now, and the so-called U.S. ‘great technology’ is just crashing and burning.

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Ezra is attempting to not take sides, but instead go between the two to reach his true goal: the other person. He didn’t mind that she was a contra, he liked her even though she was so different from him.

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Vampire Weekend has always dealt with the problems associated with social status. Here the singer wants to think of himself as alternative and rebellious, while this person he’s cared for contradicts him by wanting the pools, white polos, and easy life of the upper middle class.

He’s saying she isn’t a “contra” because he went into the relationship knowing that such a lifestyle was what she always wanted, and it’s only now becoming a problem.

This line is referring to the internal conflict and extreme irony of the girl, a conflict which she cannot see herself. Similar to several themes in “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa”, she is dealing with the rebellion of youth juxtaposed with an upper crust upbringing (often the clash that happens when youth go off to college). She wants the rebellion and thinks she is a contra (a guerrilla fighter) but she still wants the luxuries with which she has become so accustomed – good schools cost a lot of money and pools are hella expensive. To really be a “contra”, you must be all about the cause (fighting against the state, no matter the means), her half in/half out mindset makes her “not a contra”.

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Ezra is hurt. The other person in the relationship is gone, but he isn’t. He can’t break himself off like the other person could. They are going their separate ways.

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Like many of Vampire Weekend’s lyrics on this album, this song deals with conflict. Ezra had founded a relationship of trust and sharing with this other person in a very brief amount of time.

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Fun fact: There’s roughly 220-230 sound effects in this three minute song.

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He doesn’t need election to be as famous as president

Presidential is also a term for the best stuff. It’s a basic “presidential-election” pun.

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One of Death Grips' most lyrically straightforward songs, “Punk Weight” is an ode to violence and a proclamation of constant forward motion. High-pitched, accelerated vocals abruptly segue into overblown blasts of distorted drums and wailing synth stabs.

The song also draws attention to the Stefan’s use of Ride’s monstrous characterization to display an unruly punk ideology:

There are characters in [punk] that do deliberately go as far as they can in certain kind of taboo areas.
- Richard Hell

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