Salute to the older boss: con artist, lover and representative from Brooklyn

Your grinding mentality

Most of us go to work every day and do our best to make that day count for something. But sometimes we all need that extra boost of powerful music to cheer us up in the morning and / or in the afternoon, when we can start to feel lazy. Boss Major Salute created what I like to call an ‘energy booster track’ to get us back to the routine titled “24”. I dare you to put this song on your morning alarm clock!

He’s having so much fun on this track that all listeners think he’s turning up the newspaper. It has a contagious instrument that makes whoever hears it get up and go to work, however they arrive every day. Boss Major makes even the money trip sound fun when he spits “We ride the train, we ride the plane / We ride the bus, the tour bus. Get it, man! /” That covers a lot of other scammers out there too ( I’m sure he knew when he wrote the line), whatever their respective careers are!

Boss Major Salute reminds us that hard work has many monetary benefits (to put it lightly!) While happily spitting “When you see me it’s my birthday / I have a lot of cake!” If you don’t know what ‘cake’ is, then you desperately need a lesson on Grinding 101. We all need songs like this that allow us to imagine what we will get as a reward for our constant day. -Today I work hard, hence the title of the song “24”, the number of hours in a day. Depending on how many hours you are in the routine of those 24, it will determine how many times you press rewind or repeat on this exciting track.

The sensitive side of the older boss

Boss Major Salute does it again with metaphors in his song “Never Say Never”. It’s a hopeful love track where you are reassuring your partner that while they are not where they want to be, at least they are not where they used to be, and they should still be positive about their future. “How many times have I dried your eyes?” He spits out quickly, “tears from a rainy sky.” This metaphor shows how much she feels that being with her love is like being in paradise, with her representing the sky (or heavens) and her raindrops (or tears) falling through the windows of her soul.

Maybe the reason why Boss Major shows that she’s upset sometimes is because, in a way, she had a different personality type compared to him. In “Never Say Never” he paints a beautiful picture of the phenomenon of the attraction of opposites. How many times has that happened in our lives? He recognized it when he put the lyrics in this melodious song with the words “I was tough, she was kinder …”, then goes on to say that although they were somewhat different, she still supported him and his craft. He also points out that it is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all when he raps “Even if we go our separate ways / At least I walked you half way.”

“Never Say Never” is a track for anyone who needs to feel a renewed hope in their relationship, and the song is featured on upbeat and pleasant instrumentals with a great mix of soothing background guitars. He balances everything well, without going too harsh or soft in the song, which is why all street hip-hop lovers love it just as much as women.

Boss Major Salute loves his hometown

Many people forget where they came from, but Boss Major Salute reminds everyone that he definitely hasn’t in his victorious sounding song titled “City I Was Born”. He has the traits of many Brooklynites: loyalty, honesty, and work ethic. Sometimes when we work so hard, it can seem to people at home that we are ignoring them, that we care more about money than about our family and friends we came up with. This song is a good reminder so that you never forget your personal roots, wherever you are from.

Boss Major repaints a picture in our minds with what he’s rapping on this upbeat track that’s full of meditative sounds and traps. It shows that in every adventure the journey is the reward, but reaching the end triumphantly is priceless and well worth the fight to get there: “You can’t stop me, treat life like a race / When I reach the finish line the sun is shining on my face / “.

It is horrible when a person or people reach a certain level of status and then forget about their home. If it weren’t for home and what it taught us (whether that lesson is negative or positive), where would we all be? How would we explain to those people (the ones who marvel at our success) how we become who we are? Boss Major Salute summarizes these statements with this line at the beginning of the song: “We are important from the fight to the coffin / I have to put up with myself in the city where I was born /”. It doesn’t matter how we start or what obstacles we have to overcome to get where we want to be, as long as we don’t let our foundations be forgotten.

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