Skip to content

Soulja Boy: Bitcoin song, Listen Now.

US rap artist Soulja Boy has paid reverence to the world's most popular cryptocurrency on his latest record. The track, just
US rap artist Soulja Boy has paid reverence to the world’s most popular cryptocurrency on his latest record. The track, just titled “Bitcoin”.

US rap artist Soulja Boy has paid reverence to the world’s most popular cryptocurrency on his latest record. The track, just titled “Bitcoin”, includes on the outline topper’s fourth album, Young Draco, which was released prior today.

With expanding quantities of eminent references happening overall entertainment mediums, bitcoin keeps on rushing towards perpetual quality inside the popular culture of today and tomorrow. Be that as it may, not at all like prior name-checks which concentrated on dim web guiltiness or tech-nerds, or were met with general personality bogglement, the latest mention is a somewhat more constructive, if somewhat one dimensional, examination.

“Bitcoin” is the fourth track from graph topping US rapper Soulja Boy’s fourth studio album, Young Draco. The record dropped Thursday and is being released by labels SODMG Records and Palm Tree Entertainment.

Regarding expressive substance, the track is quite fundamental. As you may have suspected, Soulja Boy avoids some of the more perplexing socio-political and philosophical thoughts encompassing bitcoin and instead centers entirely around the money related side of things. He’s unashamed in his permission that he’s not here for the tech:

“I made a hundred racks off of bitcoin. You can catch me running up the bitcoin.”

Amid the lyrics of “Bitcoin”, Paypal is mentioned entirely mysteriously, before CashApp. It would likely have been seeking after excessively much for bars referencing exchanges on the blockchain and the significance ensuring your private key. Digital security isn’t as engaging the lady friends Soulja Boy intends to draw with his newly discovered technical education and additionally riches.

The rapper additionally unveils his entry point into the bitcoin showcase which, contrasted and the present prices, seems as though he figured out how to get himself a quite decent arrangement:

“I spent 6,000 on the bitcoin.”

So, the track would have most likely had an altogether different feel if the snare was, “I burned through 17,000 on the bitcoin.”

Soulja Boy isn’t the main standard rapper to have name-checked bitcoin in 2018. A month ago, multi Grammy grant winning performer Eminem referenced the cryptocurrency on “Not Alike”, which highlighted on the artist’s latest album Kamikaze.

“Remember everyone used to bite Nickel, now everyone doing bitcoin.”

None these musical references can contrast with those originating from Japan at the statures of bitcoin lunacy the previous winter. Kasotsuka Shojo are, or maybe were, an eight-in number J-pop band. Every member speaks to one of the main cryptocurrencies. Among them is bitcoin, bitcoin cash, ether, NEM, and XRP. Their first track was titled, “The Moon and Virtual Currencies and Me.” Sadly,

Latest