STREET MAGAZINE NO.80 NO.43 1996,1992

3 min

language: ja bn en es hi pt ru zh-cn zh-tw

London Collection Venue

1996 STREET MAGAZINE No.80

ERDL pattern TROPICAL COMBAT JACKET top and bottom set-up with an M-1956 pistol belt.

1992 STREET MAGAZINE No.43

1992 STREET MAGAZINE No.43

Was this roll-up width popular back then?

It doesn't seem like the roll-up width is due to the original length being too long.

About three or four years ago, Playboi Carti had a Japanese woman as his Instagram icon, and I wondered what that was about. When I image-searched it, CUTiE came up, and that's what sparked my interest in STREET MAGAZINE, I believe.

Influenced by an acquaintance who lived in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, when I was a high school student, I was interested in A$AP Rocky and Playboi Carti, but their activities largely stopped, and my interest waned, especially when assault cases started emerging.

Since then, I've been into UK artists and still listen to them now.

https://youtu.be/zAK3gGXckWU

Bakar

https://youtu.be/Ib2-bnJv51I

slowthai

It feels somewhat spiritual.

Even looking at the lyrics with Google Translate, including Skepta's, many British artists use diverse terms like “God,” “sin,” and “angel,” making it feel strongly religious.

As someone who likes it and feels a touch of UK acid folk, it's easy for me to listen to. I'm not sure exactly why or how I feel that way. Is it the way the sound is produced?

Or rather, it might be because of Europe's diverse ethnic music and its multicultural nature.