Mysterious questions: Something seriously wrong with Dafina Zeqiri and McKresha

It's like they've done it by agreement; <x0f*ck sense, let's just stick it in and write whatever comes to our minds right now and then say it's a message about violence against women. ” It's important that connection just write down how we're feeling right now.” The frustrated lady with the system and the toxic connections of [...]
” It's not important to connect, just write down how we're feeling right now. ”
The frustrated lady with the system and the toxic connections of women, trying to voice a very important social problem, the gentleman in his youth element from the broughtrest Stallon, Rambo three to the hall pipe, writes Periscope.
Frankly, Kresha's message in Dafina Zeqiri's new song, which is part of the Dyfina Mojé album, is simply brilliant, but it still remains in the shadow of a sense interconnection with what is spoken in the song, writes Periscope.
In fact, when we first heard the song as part of the album, which is just fantastic by the way, we still didn't have the clip published, and it gave us no sense that it had a message about fighting violence against women.
Yeah, it's so confusing.
The Zeqiri part can easily be understood as a dysss for someone else, or a message to its rivals in the industry, because at no moment does anything clear in its text that the song actually has to do with what is now presented on the clip.
The same problem seems to have been the case with McKresha. It's not that we're very familiar with the way our artists create co-operation, but it would be logical to think that they -- because of their busy commitments, they send damage to each other and then add their parts to another studio, depending on what they hear in that bull.
Crees clearly understood the same way we first understood the song, otherwise we can't explain why he didn't connect absolutely anything in his part to the abuse of women. It also remains a mystery like the two did not communicate with each other in advance to clarify the issue.
Confuse and confusion in every way.
There is a real possibility that the Zeqiri himself has decided in his last moments to give such a convention of songs, making it so. Although the YouTube song description gives powerful messages that present the addresses of violence that may be addressed to victims in case of need.
Don't hesitate, call, don't take the violence, it's written at the end of the clip.
Lifting hats for the initiative, but it is unclear how the phenomenon of abuse of women can be fought with a song that, when you hear it without looking at the clip, you realize about all other things.
All right, verses <x0mmics, you just hate me, but with your hand, you can't see me. To benefit our coma, take it easy, ” can be interpreted as a message to abusive men, but only after you see the clip, where there is a demonstration of women against some men. Little did we think of it when we heard the song without a clip.
We will no longer go deep into Kresha's section, which absolutely creates the biggest mess and completely distances the project from the real message that has been trying to pass on.
The song "Although it has value to reawaken and is extremely well interpreted " has unfortunately failed to reach the standards for the message being conveyed. /Periscope. com/












