(This text has been automatically translated by Google translate)
Growing up in public is called the story of Brotherly Love in good English. The adventures of five football friends from Rotterdam-West who suddenly sold better with their music than . Their songs had infectious twerk rhythms and cheerful lyrics about girls scouring. But they also had to learn that as a public figure you can no longer chant anti-Semitic football slogans. All their rash words were… suddenly weighed and magnified. On the remarkably serious album (2017) the group reflects wisely on this. Incidents are looked back on, while in Life they highlight their origins from destitute migrant families. This must have had a cathartic effect because after the successor We Must Door Vol 2, the group goes back to old-fashioned explicitly with the ladies and there are parties with guests like and . WMD brings the two albums together, as a chapter in the ongoing saga of this Dutch hop unit with the heart and genitals in the right place. (MR)more
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