The Stoic Champion’s Tracklist

The Past

Lion King – Rafiki

Good Morning – Kanye West

I Wonder – Kanye West

Stressed Out – twenty one pilots

Runaway – Kanye West

The Present

Kung Fu Panda – Oogwa

Hope – XXXTENTACION

Wishing Well – Juice WRLD

Dr. Feelgood – Motley Crue

Flooded the Face – Lil Uzi Vert

The Future

Champions –  Kanye West, Gucci Mane, Big Sean, 2 Chainz, Travis Scott, Yo Gotti, Quavo, and Desiigner 15:23 – 16:53

God’s Plan – Drake         16:54-17:57

Quote – Soul 17:57-18:16

Keeps playing God’s Plan  the background of the quote 18:10-end

The Stoic Champion

A Korean teenager uses rap music to express his deep frustration with the toxic culture that often surrounds young males. He feels torn between his genuine disdain and the pressure to fit in with his peers, complicating his struggle. Through the use of DJ effects, he conveys the weight of his loneliness and depression, subtly signaling to listeners that things aren’t as perfect as they may appear on the surface. The stoic champion dreams of a day when he can distance himself from the people who bring him down and live a lifestyle filled with success.

Click Below to Follow Along with the Stoic Champion's Music Analysis

A confident young man shows a strong exterior even though inside he feels depressed and disconnected from their larger culture. The stoic champion combines bold, assertive, and popular rap along with a dash of heavy metal. Yet, the teen actively creates effects with short and long echoes, distortion, volume, crossfades, and other DJing techniques to draw the listener’s ear toward and away from specific moments in the Cultural Identity Audio-Biography. Overall, the stoic champion’s CIAB is the sound and imagery of what many young men in the United States use to start their day, pump them up, get them through workouts, and tune out the world around them. The CIAB begins with a quote from Rafiki, the wise shaman Madrill from The Lion King

Oh yes, the past can hurt… but the way I see it, you can either learn from it or run away from it.

There is a recognition of a painful past with an acceptance to the past. The teen begins with an introduction with Kanye West’s Good Morning Mr. West.

Uh, good morning

Wake up, Mr. West, Mr. West, Mr. Fresh

Mr. by-his-self-he-so-impressed

I mean, damn, did you even see the test

You got D’s motherfucker, D’s, Rosie Perez

And yes, barely pass any and every class

Lookin’ at every ass

Cheated on every test

I guess this is my dissertation

Homie, this shit is basic

Welcome to graduation

Good morning (X4)

Good Morning Mr. West is a song addressing social injustice. However, the teen surprises listeners by only including the song’s opening, which lacks any references to injustice. Does the teen not see race, or do they not see the struggle of race within their life story?

I Wonder is next. This hip-hop song with an R&B/soul background that starts with a piano and concludes with the lyrics –

And I wonder if you know what it means to find your dreams,” with an increase in the volume of the word “dreams” to emphasize the teen’s hopes for the future.

The stoic champion’s CIAB expresses the inner thoughts and emotions of the teen, which many American boys, including Asian American teens, often find difficult to articulate Stressed Out by twenty-one pilots:

I wish I found some better sounds no one’s ever heard

I wish I had a better voice that sang some better words

I wish I found some chords in an order that is new

I wish I didn’t have to rhyme every time I sang

I was told when I get older, all my fears would shrink

Kanye’s Runaway, which focuses on themes relatable to many American teens when they are alone –

And I wonder if you know

What it means to find your dreams

And I wonder

I’ve been waiting on this my whole life

These dreams be waking me up at night

You say I think I’m never wrong

You know what? Maybe you’re right, aight?

The listener is then brought into a world of American teen males who find school a cesspool of the worst type of males. During the song, the teen plays with volume. The feeling that people have hurt him has made him stronger, even toasting/thanking /mocking the toxic male adolescent world. The song drips with disdain –

So I think it’s time (so I think it’s time)

For us to have a toast

Let’s have a toast for the douche bags

Let’s have a toast for the assholes

Let’s have a toast for the scumbags

Every one of them that I know

Let’s have a toast for the jerk offs

 

As the past has a long fade out, a Kung Fu Panda quote jumps in to turn the listener’s attention to the present

Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift. 

Hope by XXXTENTACION is next. The song was written about the American high school shooting – Parkland, and the issues of survivor’s guilt. 

Tired of the fuckin’ hate,

No, I’m not alright, yuh,

I might start a riot,

I’m so fuckin’ tired, yuh,

I can’t breathe,

I’m waiting for the exhale.

The song is used as a way to discuss the need to have a facade of being okay but crying for help, for someone to notice. is Wishing Well by Juice WRLD.

I can’t breathe, I’m waiting for the exhale

Toss my pain with my wishes in a wishing well

Still no luck, but oh, well

I still try even though I know I’m gon’ fail

Stress on my shoulders like a anvil

Perky got me itching like a anthill

Drugs killing me softly, Lauryn Hill

Sometimes I don’t know how to feel

Ring-ring, phone call from depression

You used my past and my memories as a weapon

On the other line, I talk to addiction, huh

Speaking of the devil, all the drugs, I miss them

Volume is used to emphasize certain moments in the song – The volume is increased for:

Ring-ring, phone call from depression …

You used my past and my memories as a weapon and turns

Then, the volume is lowered for:

This is the part where I tell you I’m fine,

but I’m lyin’,

I just don’t want you to worry,

Sometimes I don’t know how to feel

Then, the music changes to hard rock – Mötley Crüe’s’ Dr. Feelgood. It may be a strange choice surrounded by hip hop songs but, it is an alpha male song that mean teens use to get “pumped” during their workouts. It is a way to motivate and energize the listener as it is the song is fast/furious/out-of-control.

Got a ’65 Chevy primered flames

Traded for some powdered goods

Jigsaw Jimmy he’s runnin’ a gang

But I hear he’s doin’ okay

Got a cozy little job sells the Mexican mob

Packages of candy cane

He’s the one they call Dr. Feelgood

He’s the one that makes ya feel alright

He’s the one they call Dr. Feelgood

The drug references are obvious. But, is the stoic champion highlighting drug use or using it as their song to get ready to go out into the world of alpha teen males?

The song is followed by Flooded the Face by American rapper Lil Uzi Vert. The song is about sex, making money, and living luxuriously 

First of all, I fuck eight bitches a day (yeah)

How could you ever say Lil’ Uzi gay? (How?)

Fuck four of ’em raw, fuck four of ’em safe

Think I’m splittin’ the odds before you to debate

Don’t want no pussy, want oral today

Pull out your tongue and just twirl it, baby

She lick on my Backwood in Prada, baby

Diamonds so wet, like a swirly, baby

Got more than a .40, if I pulled out a TEC with my borin’ shit

If I’m pourin’, then you pourin’ and we pourin’ shit

I fuck you, bitch, on cam, like a porno flick

I put diamonds everywhere, that’s more than rich

Outlet broke, now I’m more than rich

Brand new foreign, now I’m floorin’ it (yeah)

Don’t head broke, no ignorin’ it

 

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