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Stanzah!'s edit of Dave B and Sango's Zonin' definitely share the stage in a dope way.
Dave B and Sango's original Zonin' has a tempo equivalent to docking on calmed waters, made aware from the jump with the oceanic sounds during the intro. The beat plays with a chimey, toned chord progression. Sango, an already underrated producer, fills the beat with soothing sounds of a sax's pierce, chain swinging 808 percussion. Dave B's vocals are equally as chill. He sounds invested in this style he rolls with. It's all an even sound. Perfect for zonin'. I love it. And Stanzah! hikes everything to an onamonapia level deserving of an exclamation to match the name.
Stanzah! doesn't change anything, really. There are solely add-ons. He rockets the tempo. Dave B's vocals sound like a speedy hustle to get his. The bass that I initially heard as a low pulse now emit a stronger heartbeat pattern. The chord progression is in a stroll instead of the original float. He adds his own kneeing drums and pop-snap kicks. Stanzah!'s edit hits a different side of Zonin'. I like flipping between the two depending on my mood. They're both cool. And although the argument can be made that the edits are minute, I dig the displays of both productions. Hopefully you will too.
Listen to both cuts below.
Lead Photo Cred: soundcloud.com
Video Cred: youtube.com
Stanzah!'s edit of Dave B and Sango's Zonin' definitely share the stage in a dope way.
Dave B and Sango's original Zonin' has a tempo equivalent to docking on calmed waters, made aware from the jump with the oceanic sounds during the intro. The beat plays with a chimey, toned chord progression. Sango, an already underrated producer, fills the beat with soothing sounds of a sax's pierce, chain swinging 808 percussion. Dave B's vocals are equally as chill. He sounds invested in this style he rolls with. It's all an even sound. Perfect for zonin'. I love it. And Stanzah! hikes everything to an onamonapia level deserving of an exclamation to match the name.
Stanzah! doesn't change anything, really. There are solely add-ons. He rockets the tempo. Dave B's vocals sound like a speedy hustle to get his. The bass that I initially heard as a low pulse now emit a stronger heartbeat pattern. The chord progression is in a stroll instead of the original float. He adds his own kneeing drums and pop-snap kicks. Stanzah!'s edit hits a different side of Zonin'. I like flipping between the two depending on my mood. They're both cool. And although the argument can be made that the edits are minute, I dig the displays of both productions. Hopefully you will too.
Listen to both cuts below.
Lead Photo Cred: soundcloud.com
Video Cred: youtube.com
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