Slim Jesus Drill Time Song Download

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Selesio Gurule

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3:32 PM (4 hours ago) 3:32 PM
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The chorus emphasizes the idea of "drill time," which is referencing the practice of "drilling" or engaging in gang-related violence. The verses mention Slim Jesus' association with a group of shooters who are always ready to attack when it's "drill time." The rapper's lyrics also suggest a deep mistrust of other people and the idea that he is always ready to defend himself.

As far as his name, he said his friends started calling him Swag Jesus and over time it transformed to Slim Jesus. "Yeah, and we flipped it and made it Slim, for obvious reasons, I'm skinny as hell. But uh, yeah I just kind of stuck with it. It made people mad for shock value. The name worked." Slim said that he makes drill music now because that's what he listens to regularly, especially Keef, Lil Bibby, Lil Herb, and more. "Ugh, I don't know, that's just the music I fuck with," he said, though he resides in Ohio and not Chicago, where Drill music hit the mainstream.

Slim Jesus Drill Time Song Download


Download >> https://geags.com/2yXlvR



The 18-year-old from small-town Hamilton, Ohio, made a big splash online last week with his song "Drill Time." The track borrows heavily from the sonics and themes of drill music, a variant of trap rap grown out of the most violent and parts of Chicago and popularized by Chief Keef and his affiliates. Drill is not for everybody, but in an age where much of hip-hop and rap culture has been absorbed into the mainstream, drill is one of a few sub-genres that has largely retained its identity and afilliation with the hardship that black youth in places like Chicago endure.

So there is a new viral sensation and he's causing some controversy. Slim Jesus, a 18-year-old Hamilton, Ohio native, released \"Drill Time\" plus the accompany video in August. By September the song went viral. At press time, \"Drill TIme\" has over 4...\nRead More

The lyrics of drill tend to be wary and callous. The Guardian's Lucy Stehlik said "nihilistic drill reflects real life where its squeaky-clean hip-hop counterparts have failed."[24] Drill lyrics strongly contrast with the subject matter of earlier Chicago rappers[25] and contemporary mainstream hip hop which at the time of drill's emergence tended to glorify and celebrate a rise to wealth.[26]

YouTube was a platform for many drill rappers to release their music videos on, and ultimately significantly contributed to the genre's popularity.[45] Chief Keef is considered the primary progenitor and popularizer of drill music, responsible for bringing it to the mainstream.[23] In 2011 and 2012, he recorded multiple singles, including "Love Sosa", "I Don't Like" and "Bang", which became viral hits, and was subsequently offered a deal from Interscope Records.[46] Around the same time, King Louie, another drill rapper, was given a record deal from Epic Records.[10]

Later Brooklyn drill production is heavily influenced by UK drill (the latter of which brings production influences from grime and UK garage)[65] with artists such as Fivio Foreign, Sheff G, Smoove'L, Bizzy Banks, 22Gz, and Pop Smoke collaborating with UK drill producers such as 808Melo, Yamaica Productions, Yoz Beats, Tommyprime and AXL Beats.[66][67][68] Pop Smoke's song "Welcome to the Party", produced by 808Melo was a prominent release in 2019 and saw remixes from Nicki Minaj, Meek Mill and British MC Skepta.[58][69][70][71][72] Sheff G's "No Suburban" (released in 2017) and 22Gz's "Suburban" (released in 2016) have been credited for bringing attention to later Brooklyn drill.[61]

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