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Ren is a Genius and he's been at this game for 19 years. He's been writing and singing and rapping since he was about 15 years old and he's 34 right now.
I think it was when first I saw clips of him on his computer making beats and doing production with his team when it hit me: "Oh... Ren is a GENIUS genius."
Glad I caught you before you did Jenny's Tale. Jenny's Tale is the first part of a trilogy. Ren put all 3 together in the right order called The Tales of Jenny and Screech, it's 13 minutes. You'll have to pay attention tho, it's 🔥(Jenny's Tale, then Screech's Tale and the lady part is Violet's Tale ruclips.net/video/TYAnqQ--KX0/видео.htmlsi=gvz2S6QkeJfqOzBi
One thing I’ve noticed about rap and other pop music in general. In Europe they don’t seem to have their own identity and copy American style and culture - they are completely colonised culturally by America. The UK is different - somehow they have kept their musical and cultural identity and create their own flow.
@ You’re right but not in the way you think: Pop, in the strictest sense of the definition, was created as a genre when The Beatles (they were a British band) came along. Before that, there was only Rock n Roll, Blues, Country, Jazz and Folk music. And believe it or not, a year before the first rap track was released in America (Rapper’s Delight by The Sugarhill Gang in 1979), you had Ian Dury and The Blockheads release the first rap track that had chart success in the UK - “Reasons To Be Cheerful Part 3” - it’s on RUclips, you should check it out. He was rapping before rap was a thing. Where rap or pop was invented is not the point though. The point is that the UK has been more creative (when’s the last time you heard an American rapping over an EDM track like this one?) and has produced its own styles: Grime, Garage, Drill, Trap, D&B and Trip Hop. Europeans on the other hand don’t seem to have developed their own styles, but copy whatever they hear in the States. And as far as other music styles go, the UK has created more genres than the USA (Heavy Metal, Prog Rock, Punk Rock, Britpop, Industrial, Dub Step, Ska, Acid Jazz). The reason for that is because in America the record industry indirectly controls artistic output, which hampers experimentation and creativity. The way it works is they study demographics (ethnicity, age group, population size, etc) and use that info to predict what type of genre would sell best and by how much. They then only promote artists who stick within those genres so that they can predict sales and revenue. That’s why you’ll often hear Americans asking, “wait, what genre is that?”, when listening to British music. It’s because they’ve been drip-fed what to listen and trained to stay within one lane, so listening to something that doesn’t fit within a specific genre is confusing to them. I’m not British or American, but I’ve lived in both places as well as in Europe for a long time (I’m 55 years old) and this is my personal observation from seeing things develop musically over the past 45 years that I’ve been listening to and following music as a fan.
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Premium Subscription & One-on-One Coaching 🏆
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buy.stripe.com/8wMaFNbWl1HD8dq9AG
Ren is a Genius and he's been at this game for 19 years. He's been writing and singing and rapping since he was about 15 years old and he's 34 right now.
Yeah you're right, I realized. For sure genius level!
I think it was when first I saw clips of him on his computer making beats and doing production with his team when it hit me: "Oh... Ren is a GENIUS genius."
Yeah for sure, he has created his own lane. I'm happy you guys made start reacting to him
Ren also filmed most of this video and did all of the editing.
Now, thats wild!
Not as drunk as yesterday 🤣 I feel that brother! Haha you're awesome. Remember that.
Heeeey! Thank you, appreciate you. 🍻
Glad I caught you before you did Jenny's Tale. Jenny's Tale is the first part of a trilogy. Ren put all 3 together in the right order called The Tales of Jenny and Screech, it's 13 minutes. You'll have to pay attention tho, it's 🔥(Jenny's Tale, then Screech's Tale and the lady part is Violet's Tale ruclips.net/video/TYAnqQ--KX0/видео.htmlsi=gvz2S6QkeJfqOzBi
That's a long reaction, its coming today! Thanks for the recommendation, stay tuned.
Geniuses could learn a lot from Ren
He's a genius for sure
One thing I’ve noticed about rap and other pop music in general. In Europe they don’t seem to have their own identity and copy American style and culture - they are completely colonised culturally by America. The UK is different - somehow they have kept their musical and cultural identity and create their own flow.
You might be onto something there! Rap and pop originated from America I believe though. But I might be wrong..
@ You’re right but not in the way you think:
Pop, in the strictest sense of the definition, was created as a genre when The Beatles (they were a British band) came along. Before that, there was only Rock n Roll, Blues, Country, Jazz and Folk music.
And believe it or not, a year before the first rap track was released in America (Rapper’s Delight by The Sugarhill Gang in 1979), you had Ian Dury and The Blockheads release the first rap track that had chart success in the UK - “Reasons To Be Cheerful Part 3” - it’s on RUclips, you should check it out. He was rapping before rap was a thing.
Where rap or pop was invented is not the point though. The point is that the UK has been more creative (when’s the last time you heard an American rapping over an EDM track like this one?) and has produced its own styles: Grime, Garage, Drill, Trap, D&B and Trip Hop. Europeans on the other hand don’t seem to have developed their own styles, but copy whatever they hear in the States.
And as far as other music styles go, the UK has created more genres than the USA (Heavy Metal, Prog Rock, Punk Rock, Britpop, Industrial, Dub Step, Ska, Acid Jazz). The reason for that is because in America the record industry indirectly controls artistic output, which hampers experimentation and creativity.
The way it works is they study demographics (ethnicity, age group, population size, etc) and use that info to predict what type of genre would sell best and by how much. They then only promote artists who stick within those genres so that they can predict sales and revenue. That’s why you’ll often hear Americans asking, “wait, what genre is that?”, when listening to British music. It’s because they’ve been drip-fed what to listen and trained to stay within one lane, so listening to something that doesn’t fit within a specific genre is confusing to them.
I’m not British or American, but I’ve lived in both places as well as in Europe for a long time (I’m 55 years old) and this is my personal observation from seeing things develop musically over the past 45 years that I’ve been listening to and following music as a fan.
❤❤❤ Ear Candy
Piano , is also something he can play.
He's GREAT, thanks for the comment 🍻
#Renegades assemble
Lets goooo
Jass and blues or Soul YES Back on 74 Message in a bottle retake
Amazing!
The attention span og a goldfish... and that's probably being unfair to goldfish!
You just a hater, arent you lol