Guest
06-12-2022, 09:02 PM
I do wonder how the troon's conception of art differs from more orthodox perspectives. Around 2018 I found J-core - Jap EDM of the fast, loud variety. To me and all the teens I knew on Twitch, it was like crack. All of these people were strange, I realize now it was a sign the scene was infested with trannies.
At the time my mental state was fragile, unstable, disturbed. One of my favorite artists was "Kobaryo" - he makes speedcore. Words like "painful" "chaotic" "unhealthy" can be used to describe his songs. They're well designed with good melodies, but the appeal is in the rapid BPM which adds a feeling of emotional disarray: like a mental breakdown given form.
Most normal people can't fathom liking this spew of noise, but I found it quite simple: the music "sympathizes" with me. The songs' climax of jittery beats and dramatic melodies symbolized my own emotional trauma, and amplified it; personified it. Even the more upbeat and happy tracks had a feeling of mental illness to them, like a fake smile.
I don't know if this method of projecting your own feelings onto music is the default way people consume, but I still do it. Right now I listen to the Darkest Dungeon II soundtrack as its themes of melancholy, adversity, suffering, and stress help me to cope with my near-sweatshop work conditions, giving it meaning. Trannies too seem to internalize their illness, exacerbating it with disordered music that "understands" them. In this sense they groom themselves into being trannies since the very music itself promotes madness. Perhaps the phenomena of treating art like an outlet to express yourself is indicative of consoomerism as a whole.
Even if the music is "good" (as in it's pleasing to hear), music being a personification of negative emotions seems very basely; not lindy. Music does appeal to the body since our bodies are inherently rhythmic, which is why rhythm-heavy music helps you work out. But artists in the past have used it to do much more than simply say "I'm frustrated and angry " in musical form. Music that promotes rage, fear, and other intemperate emotions have only been popping up for the past several decades, perhaps technology has aided this (see: dubstep, metal, etc.) I definitely think music becoming more animalistic has contributed to the deterioration of people's minds.
While on music, I will note: the youngest trannies (~14 year olds) seem to be getting hooked on Electro Swing (Especially of the Japanese variety, it exists and is growing rapidly). It seems to have the same effect on zoomers as FNAF/Undertale fan music had on them, and a lot of the Electro Swing artists in this scene do seem to originate from Tumblr and those fandoms. Perhaps there's something to elaborate on with how trannies become obsessively absorbed into the fiction they consume, but I'll leave it there.
At the time my mental state was fragile, unstable, disturbed. One of my favorite artists was "Kobaryo" - he makes speedcore. Words like "painful" "chaotic" "unhealthy" can be used to describe his songs. They're well designed with good melodies, but the appeal is in the rapid BPM which adds a feeling of emotional disarray: like a mental breakdown given form.
Most normal people can't fathom liking this spew of noise, but I found it quite simple: the music "sympathizes" with me. The songs' climax of jittery beats and dramatic melodies symbolized my own emotional trauma, and amplified it; personified it. Even the more upbeat and happy tracks had a feeling of mental illness to them, like a fake smile.
I don't know if this method of projecting your own feelings onto music is the default way people consume, but I still do it. Right now I listen to the Darkest Dungeon II soundtrack as its themes of melancholy, adversity, suffering, and stress help me to cope with my near-sweatshop work conditions, giving it meaning. Trannies too seem to internalize their illness, exacerbating it with disordered music that "understands" them. In this sense they groom themselves into being trannies since the very music itself promotes madness. Perhaps the phenomena of treating art like an outlet to express yourself is indicative of consoomerism as a whole.
Even if the music is "good" (as in it's pleasing to hear), music being a personification of negative emotions seems very basely; not lindy. Music does appeal to the body since our bodies are inherently rhythmic, which is why rhythm-heavy music helps you work out. But artists in the past have used it to do much more than simply say "I'm frustrated and angry " in musical form. Music that promotes rage, fear, and other intemperate emotions have only been popping up for the past several decades, perhaps technology has aided this (see: dubstep, metal, etc.) I definitely think music becoming more animalistic has contributed to the deterioration of people's minds.
While on music, I will note: the youngest trannies (~14 year olds) seem to be getting hooked on Electro Swing (Especially of the Japanese variety, it exists and is growing rapidly). It seems to have the same effect on zoomers as FNAF/Undertale fan music had on them, and a lot of the Electro Swing artists in this scene do seem to originate from Tumblr and those fandoms. Perhaps there's something to elaborate on with how trannies become obsessively absorbed into the fiction they consume, but I'll leave it there.