Parents got him taking piano lessons in the elementary music school when he was in 2nd grade, but he dropped out 2 years later because he wasn't feeling that whole classical music thing as that was the only genre they were teaching. He later got some private piano lessons, learning the stuff he wanted to learn to play like Beatles and Rhythm & Blues in general. He and a few of his 4th grade classmates formed a band and became the youngest band in the history of his elementary school, playing school events on the regular. When he got to 7th grade he discovered Hip-Hop and felt totally overtaken and compelled by it's elements, especially by the power of the rhythmically accented poetry(RAP). He soon left the band, started writing and became an MC. His friends were amazed by his flow and delivery since there were no hip-hop artists in his home town Piran(Slovenia) at the time, except him and one of his classmates and they were dope on top of it! They formed a duo called Bow Down and threw the first hip-hop party in the history of their home town. In 1998, Gramatik met his first audio sequencing software on the computer of his classmate's older brother and felt like he got struck by lightening, totally overwhelmed by it! His parents were financially struggling at the time, so they couldn't afford a computer, so he was hanging out at his friend's house all the time, messing around with the sequencer when his older brother wasn't home. 2 years later his parents bought him a computer and the first thing he did was install that audio sequencer! He started producing his first beats and day by day felt more and more compelled by the craft & the magic of it. It wasn't long untill he discovered sampling which became his one true love in the music making process, chopping up all those old funk, soul, blues and jazz tracks he used to listen to all the time and making something completely new out of it was the best feeling ever. All of a sudden his life started to make perfect sense.
In 2006, he and 2 of his friends, fellow MC's, released their debut hip-hop album as a group called 5th Element, which was critically acclaimed throughout the country as one of the best hip-hop albums in Slovenia. After the album, Gramatik felt hip-hop just wasn't enough, that he was limiting himself with doing only one genre while he enjoyed listening to so many of them so he started producing House, Techno, Breakbeat, Electro, Drum'n'Bass, basically any genre that he liked which was anything that evolved from Blues, Jazz, Soul and Funk, as those ''father genres'' were all embedded deep in his style, whatever he would do. He realized that to him, music is much bigger than a genre name and their specific categorization, it's all about embracing what moves you and rejecting what doesn't. He released his first ever track on Beatport.com in june 2008, which was an Electro House track, a remix he did for DJ Vitamin D's track entitled Motherfuckers Know Whos The Best. The track ended up 24 on the Electro House Top 100 chart, a nice surprise and an excellent quality validation for this newcomer. Soon after that he ended up on 40 of the House Top 100 chart with his tribal banger Letz Get Ill while his Dreams About Her EP topped the Chil Out top 100 chart for 3 weeks. He kept releasing different stuff on various labels all owned by DJ Vitamin D which he became good friends with. Not long after his first release stroke the chart, Vitamin D suggests to him that he should scrap up those 20 hip-hop beatz he had sitting in a flash player on his myspace for over 2 years and release them as an album on the new Chill Out/Trip-Hop/Instrumental Hip-Hop label he's about to open inspired by those same beatz he was listening to. So Gramatik does that(thinking he won't sell more than 3 tracks off the album since they were just 2:30 minuets long hip-hop beatz, which are not commonly sold on beatport) and the album he entitled Street Bangerz Vol.1 get's released in december 2008 on the fresh new label Cold Busted. little did he know that the album was gonna catapult straight to the 1 spot on the Top 100 Chill Out chart and has been holding hostage the first 20 spots ever since. Street Bangerz Vol.1 has been a total success, completely unexpected, selling over 50.000 tracks world wide in less than 6 months on beatport alone. It made him realize that quite often, the things that you expect to work the least, usually work the most. Gramatik is now working on various projects while determined to keep up the SB series, dropping one a year, perfecting them volume after volume and hopefully tour the world in due time.
Brave Men
Gramatik Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
I don't, I don't need no saving day
I don't, I don't need no saving day
The lyrics to Gramatik's song Brave Men are quite straightforward. The singer is expressing frustration at the notion of needing rescue or salvation from an external force. The opening line, "You gotta be fucking kidding me," serves to emphasize this impatience and almost disbelief. The repetition of "I don't need no saving day" further emphasizes this rejection of the idea of needing help.
One potential interpretation of these lyrics is that the singer is advocating for self-reliance and independence. They may reject the idea of relying on others to solve their problems or come to their aid in times of need. Alternatively, the singer may simply be expressing frustration at the pressure to conform to societal norms or expectations, which may include the expectation of needing help from others.
Overall, the lyrics to Brave Men are relatively simple but impactful in their rejection of the concept of needing saving or rescue.
Line by Line Meaning
You gotta be fucking kidding me
I cannot believe what I am hearing or seeing
I don't, I don't need no saving day
I am independent and do not require assistance or intervention
I don't, I don't need no saving day
I am capable of handling any situation on my own
Contributed by Zachary D. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
Evil Paradigm
DJGreenscreen A video doesn't need to take on a moral high ground to teach a moral lesson. You yourself interpreted what is wrong with what these characters did. Wright or wrong, there was something shocking and thought provoking about this video. That is the pointy of art in general.
Does this slightly glorify violence, maybe, but does the video seem like it is saying it's okay to go beat up other people? No not really. If you want to take this another way I could say it is unlikely that this woman actually went to a fightclub and after her husband got arrested, that was just a fantasy of hers, while she fed her bird. (Though I do think she went to fightclub)
You understand yourself when you said "As soon as the woman began fighting, I just kept thinking "she has every reason to vent, but she can never fight to take her years of oppression back?"
Those questions were raised by this video as is. If they changed it to be politically correct, would you still be asking the same questions?
J GW
I still think this is one of the best drops out there.
DaPunksFunk
I remember watching this at 3 am one day on tv and listening to this for the first time was glorious
Andrew Kee
Godamn this is such a work of art. I appreciate it more everytime I watch it. Timeless
Pete Nicol
the production values on this are mind blowing!
aaaaaaaaaaaadddd
This Man needs to record for Movie , Games , he dam GOOOD !!
Johnny Smoke
my god what a track.. this is the future
Sergey Ivanov
2020 yes
My Name
2021
HubsonPL
Pssstt.... this track was known in 2022
Steve H
Best music video I have seen in a very long time. Well done boys.