Yeah I realized your musical elements point since lp2 when he changed the Hurricane beat
Holy s*** op you might actually be onto something. Like why so much insistence on keeping Tell the Vision with absolutely no changes since lp1?
Only issue with this theory is that Donda already appears on Praise God before she is supposedly summoned
@hotpancakes another piece of evidence to support is the theme of the last 3 LPs and with a lot of witch weary people warning that Ye is summoning his mother as well. At least a cohesive message is getting across to a specific group of people.
Also the album has a lot of instrumental pieces that make it flow together well tbh
@hotpancakes spazzing positively, we love to see it
Great post
lmaoo glad you enjoyed it at least!
@hotpancakes another piece of evidence to support is the theme of the last 3 LPs and with a lot of witch weary people warning that Ye is summoning his mother as well. At least a cohesive message is getting across to a specific group of people.
Also the album has a lot of instrumental pieces that make it flow together well tbh
yep exactly! listening parties definitely tie into this, especially LP2 and 3. i was at work when i wrote this so i couldn’t fully expand. but i plan on it after even more listens
OP that might be respectfully the dumbest f***ing thing I've ever read
obviously i don’t mean literally summon in real life its like the story of that happening as a concept album
not that he really is trying to summon his mother irl
Album so good it got the biggest hater writing essays
lmaooo i was only really hating during LP1. started to love it during LP2. only thing i’ve been listening to since sunday
Only issue with this theory is that Donda already appears on Praise God before she is supposedly summoned
yeah i can expand on that too. but i don’t wanna just say my initial thoughts before i fine tune them cause it may sound crazy until i word it right
I think the Donda army also being Donda represents how strong and resilient her influence made him
How do you explain Donda being after Praise God when it's supposed to be the continuation of the speech
@hotpancakes
How do you explain Donda being after Praise God when it's supposed to be the continuation of the speech
so i’m gonna fine tune it for op, just didn’t have enough time cause i was working so i was just trying to hit the main points, and again this is all metaphorical/part of the concept album
her initial speech isn’t in real time, it’s a flashback. it’s hyping him up and giving him the confidence to embark on this journey.
“into the night”. he’s venturing into whatever dark places he needs to go to find acceptance, repentance, it’s going to get worse before it gets better, something he’s apparently avoided his whole career up until recently. “even if you are not ready for the day, it can’t always be night” (he’s not ready to let go and accept, but he can’t always be in this dark place)