Insider has ranked all of the tracks from the group's single albums, EPs, and 2020 album. We did not include remixes, acoustic releases, concert recordings, or songs rereleased in other languages in this ranking.

Over a year on the heels of the group's preceding single, "Kill This Love," "How You Like That" felt like a hollow approximation of what a BLACKPINK song should sound like. It's still a banger, but a dissonant one that requires more than a few listens to come around to.


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While "Forever Young" is poppier than its counterpart, it also hinges on a drop at the chorus that never seems to fully connect. The song's final moments fully deviate from the earlier, softer verses, pivoting into a breakdown that begins with the phrase, "BLACKPINK is the revolution!"

The closing track of BLACKPINK's first EP "Square Up" is eclectic in a way that doesn't fully pay off. Certain production elements of the song, particularly the reverb on the vocals, make the song feel a bit muddled and overwhelming at points.

"Hope Not" is an easy song to miss among BLACKPINK's other tracks. A stripped-down pop ballad with a sparse, guitar-driven instrumental, "Hope Not" allows the group's vocals to truly shine as they sing about love and regret.

While the chorus would be perfect to jump to on a dance floor, it's marred by a whooping sound in the chorus that's accompanied by a hand-over-mouth gesture in the song's choreography, harkening back to harmful Native American stereotypes.

To a certain extent, it works: the song's frequent beat shifts can be jarring, but there are enough moments of sonic pleasure, like the synth strings that come in during the chorus, that they don't feel too laborious.

The song flips the group's calling card on its head, turning it into a vocal hook at the beginning of the song. The track itself is littered with casual insults and assertions of the group's dominance.

Its bridge and final bars don't feel like a particularly satisfying conclusion as the group repeats the lyric, "tteugeowo tteugeowo tteugeowo like fire" along with the odd "BLACKPINK!" over an instrumental that dials the song's flute-like hook up to 11.

Given that it was released on "Square Two," it's easy to see how this track paved the way for the group's future releases both thematically and musically. "Playing With Fire" is sparse, but drives home the theme of the song with couplets like "My love is on fire / Now burn, baby, burn."

Ros's "No, no, no drama in my life" is a perfect lead into a simmering chorus that highlights Jennie's ability to deliver snappy likes like "Wake up, yeah, make up, maybe." Jisoo's slide on "I'ma let you fade into the background" is dramatic and subdued all at once, and Lisa's rap on this song is one of the best verses she's ever delivered.

The song, released as a standalone single during summer 2017, was the group's only music drop for that entire year, but it delivered. Its chorus is one of the most memorable out of BLACKPINK's entire discography.

"Lovesick Girls" is anthemic, tender, vulnerable, and confident all in one, and it never loses its momentum. While the production is great, what really sets this song apart from the rest of BLACKPINK's discography is its effect and paradoxical sense of both desperation and assuredness.

This is a list of songs about domestic violence and sexual violence. The list was initially generated on the PreventConnect listserv compiled by Bethany Pombar of the Vermont Network Against Domestic and Sexual Violence.

Table of Contents Impact of Violent LyricsFrom Violent Lyrics to Violence Against Women and Girls? (2004)Misogynistic Lyrics are not exclusive to a particular genreMusic videos are self-reinforcingMaking the Connection: Violence Song Lyrics & Feelings of AggressionSample LyricsLesson PlanOther MediaFinding Materials

Researchers in Iowa and Texas found a link between listening to violent song lyrics and feelings of aggression and hostility. The results of five different experiments designed to assess the relationship between violent lyrics and aggressive thoughts and feelings, suggest that listening to songs with violent lyrics increases feelings of aggression, at least in the short term. Even humorous violent songs seemed to have the same effect on aggressive thoughts and feelings as non-humorous violent songs. Such feelings can influence the way people view social interactions, leading them to interpret ambiguous actions as hostile and react more aggressively in turn. (Craig A. Anderson (2003) Exposure to Violent Media: The Effects of Songs With Violent Lyrics on Aggressive Thoughts and Feelings, The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, May Issue 2003) -sana.com/articles/violent_lyrics_article.htm

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There is a lot of violence in music, on T.V., in movies and in video games. Violence is a learned behavior and violence in the media reinforces violent behavior. Here are some songs that we selected to demonstrate how violence appears on the media. Focus on the words and decide what you think the message is.

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Love this one a lot! Especially that post-chorus driven by I Will Survive sample is brilliant. In fact, for me this song is the strongest August comeback at the moment, as the entire month has been just ultra-underwhelming, even worse than May and June. Though the only thing I can complain is the centerpiece which feels a little underdeveloped. Rating is about right.

The song is above average girl kpop. The verse melody is basic at best. Then the post chorus kicks in and it is literally another song entirely. I feel like the songwriters lean so heavily on that hook from I Will Survive and do nothing else with it except for the chord progression. I mean, if you clip out the hook sample, what is left of the song? Much less.

Flat 8 for me. 17dc91bb1f

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