What killed 90s death metal? Some of what I talk about: - How I first got into thrash bands like Sepultura, The Accused and Forced Entry - The compilations that introduced me to death metal: Earache's "Grindcrusher" with Morbid Angel, Carcass, and Napalm death; Roadrunner's "At Death's Door" with Deicide, Malevolent Creation and Obituary and Relapse's "Corporate Death" with Mortician, Incantation, and Suffocation - The big death metal scenes: Tampa, Florida (Cynic, Atheist); Long Island, New York (Pyrexia, Internal Bleeding); and Scandinavia (Entombed, Dismember) - How Cannibal Corpse's appearance in the Jim Carey movie "Ace Ventura Pet Detective" and MTV's Beavis & Butthead helped death metal - Death metal's stagnation in the mid 90s, which opened the door for black metal bands like Emperor, Mayhem, Darkthrone and Cradle Of Filth to take the spotlight - The long term impact of death metal on rap, fashion and pop culture as a whole.
Lil Peep - Save That Shit (Official Video) has almost 200 MILLION views on YouTube!!! This song is good but so fucking depressing... Here are the lyrics below.
Save That Shit
Lil Peep
Fuck my life, can't say that girl Don't tell me you can save that shit All she want is payback for the way I always play that shit You ain't getting nothing, now I'm saying Don't tell me you is Nothin' like them other motherfuckers I can make you rich (I can make you rich) I can make you this, baby, I can make you that I can take you there, but baby, you won't make it back Growing sick of this and I don't wanna make you sad Do I make you scared? Baby, won't you take me back?
Nothin' like them other motherfuckers I can make you rich (I can make you rich) Nothin' like them other motherfuckers I can make you rich (I can make you rich)
Fuck my life, can't say that girl Don't tell me you can save that shit All she want is payback for the way I always play that shit You ain't getting nothing, now I'm saying Don't tell me you is Nothin' like them other motherfuckers I can make you rich (I can make you rich) I can make you this, baby, I can make you that I can take you there, but baby, you won't make it back Growing sick of this and I don't wanna make you sad Do I make you scared? Baby, won't you take me back?
Down another lonely road, I go Just another lonely road, oh I just wanna know, I just gotta know Do you wanna go? Baby, we could go
Fuck my life, can't say that girl Don't tell me you can save that shit All she want is payback for the way I always play that shit You ain't getting nothing, now I'm saying Don't tell me you is Nothin' like them other motherfuckers I can make you rich (I can make you rich) I can make you this, baby, I can make you that I can take you there, but baby, you won't make it back Growing sick of this and I don't wanna make you sad Do I make you scared? Baby, won't you take me back?
Do I make you scared? Baby, won't you take me back? Nothin' like them other motherfuckers I can make you rich (I can make you rich)
Songwriters: Dylan James Mullen / George Astasio / Gustav Elijah Ahr / Jason Andrew Pebworth / Jonathan Christop Shave / Mike Blackburn
“Save That Shit” describes Lil Peep’s relationship problems with a girl. He wants to know if she’s open to living the life that he is, and describes how he can treat her right.
The video for “Save That Shit” was released on December 19, 2017, after Peep’s death. It opens with a dedication from Peep’s mother, Liza Womack: “In loving memory of my son Gus” and features First Access Entertainment Sarah Stennett‘s daughter, along with Peep’s longtime on and off again girlfriend Emma Harris.
The song is likely about life-long friend, first love and on-off-ex-girlfriend Emma Harris. He met her at school in third grade when they were 8 years old. It has never been explicitly clarified, but after his death, Peep’s mother responded to a fan’s Instagram comment asking who his songs are about. She claimed almost all of them are about Emma.
In 1987 Oslo, 17-year-old Euronymous becomes fixated on creating "True Norwegian Black Metal" with his band Mayhem, his record shop Helvete and his own label Deathlike Silence Productions. He mounts shocking publicity stunts to put the band's name on the map, but the lines between show and reality begin to blur.