playlist
Beat's recommended playlist for all of your musical needs.
Four Songs: One Man, One Dragon, & Sheer Badassery
If you don't want to be introduced to any spoilers then I suggest that you leave this article and go read the book "Fire & Blood." Sure, you can watch the show, but you'll finish reading the book before the T.V. series wraps itself up.
By Thavien Yliasterabout a year ago in Beat
I Wanna Dance With Somebody...
I was right. I expected to be wrong, but that just wasn't to be. When I finally went in to finalize this playlist, I realized just how eclectic the submissions had been, and that it would be a struggle to get the listening order just right.
By Mackenzie Davisabout a year ago in Beat
The Music That Made Me: Wires by Athlete
This is a song that I can never listen to without crying. It has a potency for me like no other in terms of how it reaches into my very essence and squeezes my heart. It seizes me, like a long lost brother and takes me back to a period of my life which was hard. Very hard.
By Rachel Deemingabout a year ago in Beat
In 78 Everyone Born In 45 will be 33β . Content Warning.
The Songs Introduction This is a nine-year-old excavation from Seven Days In With A Few extras thrown in. Chris Morton designed a lot of the artwork for the label and this is my interview with him here.
By Mike Singleton π Mikeydred about a year ago in Beat
Learning Portuguese Through Music
When I started learning Portuguese this summer, I discovered one of the most enjoyable ways to practice pronunciation and vocabulary: listening to music and reading along with the lyrics. It all began when I heard the lively beats and melodies playing while the Brazilian crew framed my house during a renovation.
By Xine Segalasabout a year ago in Beat
Life is a Jukebox
I sat in a jukebox for all of 2024. A little figurine manuevering through a big machine. Every song imprinting on me, leaving dents, echoing through my speech. I laid in my doll bed thinking "Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now." I literally was "looking for a job and then I found a job..." I'd roll out of my doll bed and into an toy Uber to Bruckner. The moment the car rolled to a stop, "Welcome to the Jungle" would pound in my chest. "You know where you are, you're in the jungle baby, you're gonna die." I worked at the "Hotel California" (Bruckner) for over 2 years. After my first day I knew I shouldn't be there. I could feel that it would emotionally decompose me, but I stayed. "You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave". Modern and polished on the outside, inviting even but unpredictability and devastation ran from the basement to the roof.
By Jada Fergusonabout a year ago in Beat











