

If you’re not familiar with an OXFAM Shop, think about it as a shoppable Salvation Army, or a Fairtrade Goodwill. To be honest, I have no idea if the store was actually dim lit or run down, but with the recent turn of events, I have to picture it with a certain level of fitting grittiness. Our story begins in a dimly lit, rundown thrift store in Nottingham, United Kingdom. Panchiko in Guess What Year (any answer is a spoiler alert) Part One: It Began in OXFAM (and /mu/ ) Join me for this special edition of Sex and the CD where we find out why all girls like bad boys, and why everyone loved the rotten version of D>E>A>T>H>M>E>T>A>L (oh, how annoying that is to type, so, all due respect to artistic intent, we’ll stick to Deathmetal from here on out).

This is not what happened between me and Panchiko’s D>E>A>T>H>M>E>T>A>L, but it is what happens to me in relationships, and because I’m dating again, I’ve somehow come across this mysterious album and began to wonder: why is it that I’m drawn to promise and not payoff? Why is that the benefit of the doubt is more captivating than the goodness of the heart? Why do I like the rotten, hazy idea behind sound - and love, for that matter - and not a pristine, conventionally-produced resolution? It ceases to be something I’m intrigued by, the majestic promises behind the scope evaporate after every listen, and I find myself admiring an aural portrait of a part of my life I’ve since lost interest or appeal for. Then, there’s the music that I end up loving at first, but over time find myself stupendously unimpressed by. By the same token, there’s a lot of music that I would love to hate, but simply don’t. There’s a lot of music that I would love to love, but simply don’t. I don’t relate to how it makes me feel, I don’t see what it’s trying to do, the meaning is lost on me, and so on. I don’t think I’d ever be able to be a music critic because I can’t tell whether a form of art is bad per se, just that I don’t get it. The greatest thing about music is that it’s art, so the same holds for anything I listen to. I like to judge art by how much it can promise me: is the potential behind this idea impressive? Is the execution of this creative endeavor worthwhile? Do I just dig where it’s trying to go? If the answer to the above questions is yes, then rest assured, I like it. The greatest thing about art is creativity. It does not store any personal data.How Panchiko Made Me Fall For Death Metal

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