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Topic-icon Full Song Mp3 Ariana Grande & Victoria Monét MONOPOLY Leaked Download Free

5 years 7 months ago #16265 by SDCS

Full Song Mp3 Ariana Grande & Victoria Monét MONOPOLY Leaked Download Free

It’s no secret that Billie Eilish is a superfan of The Office and on Friday (March 29), the brooding pop star took her love for the NBC sitcom one step further by including several snippets of dialogue from the series on a track off When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?, her long-awaited debut album.

The song, “My Strange Addiction,” kicks off with Steve Carell’s bumbling Michael Scott inadvertently name-dropping the singer in a line from Season 7 episode “Threat Level Midnight,” in which the Office boss unveils his self-made secret agent film after years of referencing it within the series.






“No Billie, I haven’t done that dance since my wife died,” Carell’s character says, before Ed Helms’ Andy Bernard adds, “There’s a whole crowd of people out there who need to learn how to do the Scarn.” (For the uninitiated, the Scarn is a dance named after Scott’s spy hero in the film-within-the-show, which was first referenced back in Season 2.)

The rest of Eilish’s song features interpolations of dialogue from Office characters including John Krasinski’s Jim Halpert, Mindy Kaling’s Kelly Kapoor and others. Eilish’s love for The Office is well-documented, dating back to at least 2017 when she played the sitcom’s peppy theme song before each show on her first headlining tour.

Eilish credits “Bury a Friend” as the main inspiration for its parent album, stating that “the entire album clicked” in her head when the song was created, and added that she “immediately knew what it was going to be about, what the visuals were going to be, and everything in terms of how [she] wanted it to be perceived. It inspired what the album is about.”[5]

British rapper Crooks makes an appearance on the track and music video.[6] Eilish discovered the artist on social media; Crooks repeatedly tagged pictures of himself with the caption “Where’s Billie at?” on her Instagram comments, prompting her to think “Who the F is this kid?” She decided to make his acquaintance and found him “super funny and … kind of cute” and the two soon became best friends.[7]

“Bury a Friend” has been described as a minimalist electronica[1] and industrial song.[2] According to sheet music published at Musicnotes.com by Universal Music Publishing Group, “Bury a Friend” is set in common time with a “moderately fast” tempo of 120 beats per minute. The song is composed in the key of G minor, with Eilish’s vocals ranging between the notes of F#3 and B♭4.[8] The tracks opens with Crooks saying “Billie” before Eilish begins singing, her voice affected by a Vocoder, over a taut, muffled beat reminiscent of Kanye West’s track “Black Skinhead” (2013), a vocal line similar to “People Are Strange” by The Doors, and scattered synth melodies.[9][6][10] Lyrically, the track is written from “the perspective of the monster under [Eilish’s] bed” and explores what “this creature [is] doing or feeling.”[11]

Consequence of Sound named “Bury a Friend” the best song of the week, calling it “the perfect combination of spooky and caring” and added that “Eilish’s truly masterful feat here … is her wedding of the superficially repellent and the innately appealing, the scary and the loved.”[17] Thomas Smith of NME praised it as “a statement song from an artist who is currently tearing up the rulebook of what young fans want from their pop stars” and further stated that “Billie is looking inwards and vocalising the uncertainties and inquisitions of a generation ready to make their mark.”[6] He later named the track Eilish’s best and further compared it favorably to Lorde’s 2013 song “Royals”.[10] DIY called the track “as throbbing, sparse and industrial as you’re likely to find from a high profile major label concern” and “intoxicating and intriguing.”[2] Chloe Gilke of Uproxx hailed “Bury a Friend” as Eilish’s best single and stated that it “proves that the millions of young people who are obsessed with her atmospheric, weirdo pop know what they’re talking about.”[18] The Music Network called the track “a devilish masterpiece” and added that “The song is unsettling … but there’s something tranquil and thoughtful about it.”[19]

An accompanying music video for “Bury a Friend” was directed by Michael Chaves and shot in one day. It was released on January 30, 2019 on Eilish’s YouTube channel.[24][25] In an interview with Annie Mac of BBC Radio 1, Eilish explained that the video was inspired by her love of “being scared”, prompting her to incorporate common phobias, such as the fear of injections and of being manhandled, in it.[26] The video begins with Crooks waking up suddenly at night. He lies down again and says “Billie.” The camera then moves under his bed where Eilish sings the song’s chorus. The rest of the video features intercut scenes of her levitating or walking in corridors, being grabbed and manhandled by gloved, bodiless hands, having syringes inserted in her back and singing under or next to Crooks’ bed.[24] The video attracted attention for its elements of horror and has been described as “creepy” by Rolling Stone and Complex.[1][5] The visual has also been compared to The Haunting’s first season The Haunting of Hill House, and Jordan Peele’s 2017 film Get Out.[27]

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