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No Matter What - Valora



     
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No Matter What Lyrics


[Verse 1: Grieves]I was born with the ability to see stars
Walk steady on the beat, meeting each bar
Little goofy motherfucker, hitting C sharp
Swimming through the game like I'm a riding on a reef shark
Please, all I need is 88 keys
And the drum line jumping off an MPC
To be easy, got a lot of ghosts to chase
And a couple lady problems I'm supposed to face
Hold off on em, take another sip of the swamp water
Put a kiss on the cheek of your mom's daughter
Dance around like a fool spilling my lager
And I won't ever be a pimp, so baby why bother?
Ha, I guess it ain't my style
26 with a twist and a face like a child
Hate it if it makes you smile
Cause in the end of it it all fades away when the fake takes trial
Kick rocks
[Hook: Grieves]No matter what, it comes to be (Hey here's a suggestion)

You can kiss my ass if you doubted me (Yup)
Cause all that jabber that you're babbling (Babble on)
Has left you stranded and standing alone with your head in your hands
[Verse 2: Krukid]Look, I was born to be a moon walker
Walk into the club, suddenly the room's darker?
Fan favorite of the street preacher, peace keeper
Bridge groomer jumped the broom said skip it on a street sweeper
But don't come at me with beef, I'm a meat eater
With tongue and teeth that'll cut you like a meat cleaver
Miscreet beaver, like damn it all to hell
Told the fam I'm gonna rap, none of that went over well
I could tell they just worry
I'm trying to court the game and judge you by your hung jury
And I don't sport a chain, blame it on my ancestors
Brought to port of slaves while I failed to be affected with a lust for foreign aid
And none of y'all to blame thinkin' rap is all the same
But I can promise you to never keep it formulaic
I'm here to raise the bar though, I never caught a case
And maybe while I'm at it score a babe and fornicate
I'm human is all I'm saying
[Hook: Grieves]No matter what, it comes to be (Hey here's a suggestion)
You can kiss my ass if you doubted me (Yup)
Cause all that jabber that you're babbling (Babble on)
Has left you stranded and standing alone with your head in your hands
[Verse 3: Grieves]Skinny as a fence post, moving through the crowd
Dancing off rhythm just a minimal amount
For the hell of it
I've been on the road too long
And got a head like a weather balloon floating along
Approaching the dawn
You ain't got a jab I ain't ever heard
I let sarcasm fly like a feathered bird
So if you're looking some gratifying better words
You can try writing out a letter to the editor
Ha, cause I ain't got not time
I'm on my 24/7 and my 3-6-5
I got my heavy oar paddling to reach that prize
And you can see the dedication in my eyes
Or maybe it's the hangover
Creeping up my skull like a bad shadow
I can take it to the rocks, I am that agile
So if you came here to be that asshole
You can pick another cat to hassle
I should slap you
[Hook: Grieves]No matter what, it comes to be (Hey here's a suggestion)
You can kiss my ass if you doubted me (Yup)
Cause all that jabber that you're babbling (Babble on)
Has left you stranded and standing alone with your head in your hands

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Valora - Official Website, facebook.
Valora - I Waited For You (Official Music Video)

Moments into Valora’s Hollywood Records debut album, "I Waited for You," it hits home, singer Syd Duran is the real deal. Throughout the album’s 11 tracks, Syd sings with fearsome conviction, summoning all the just powers of rock into her three-octave range. But Syd is about more than technique or stage presence. She has stories to tell: stories about isolation and betrayal, of misbegotten love and life out of whack. As the album shows, her rock vocal chops would mean nothing if Syd didn’t sing from the heart. "I didn’t want to write a feel-good record," she says. "You don’t always feel good. For the most part, in life you’re getting over something."

"I Waited for You" was produced by Grammy-nominated Johnny K (Disturbed, Finger 11) and mixed by Neil Avron (Fallout Boy, Linkin Park.) It’s simple and raw – no horns, no synths, no auto-tuned perfection. "The main thing Johnny had to understand about Valora was the feeling I want people to get when they hear my voice," Syd says. "I needed to find a producer that valued vocals as much as I do."

The album opens with the savagely indignant "I Waited For You," a song Syd co-wrote a few years ago, and which drew early attention to the band. "I’m really proud of it," she says. "I wrote it right out of high school." Other songs, like "Extreme" ("All the girls think I’m a bit psycho/ Maybe I am but that’s the way I roll"), "Live" and "Forgotten," sustain the disequilibrium. The latter track, about a nasty break-up, was co-written with Kara DioGuardi, who applied some artistic tough love on Syd to get the best out of her during the writing process.

"I’m a very introverted person," Syd says, "but Kara demanded I tell her about everything that was hurting me. "She said, ‘I can tell you’re kind of a bitch.’ She got a lot more out of me than I was prepared to share. The end result was ‘Forgotten.’"

Upbeat tracks like "You Make It Ok," "No Matter What" and the DioGuardi-co-penned "I Like What You’re Doing" flirt with sense of respite, but Valora keeps the mood edgy, off balance and always rocking. "Life Hungover" (co-written with the powerhouse team of Antonina Armato and Tim James) delves into the impact of a sober life (think double-entendre), while "Irreversible" is a devastating memorial to a friend who took her own life. Notes Syd of the song, "You never get to say what you wanted, how much they meant to you, until it’s too late." The album closes with "Summer Stay," one of Syd’s favorites, in part due to its lush Queen-like chord progression.

Musically, Valora could be considered fans of hard rock bands such as Muse and Foo Fighters, but within the band’s style flows an expanse of rock influences. "My favorite bands center around a great vocalist," Syd says. "Any band that has a killer front person, I’m gonna be interested."
 
A California native, Syd grew up in Uptown Whittier. Though she started taking voice and guitar lessons around age 11, it was much earlier when she first knew music was her destiny. At age 5, she heard the National Anthem sung at a Dodger game, and that was it. But having a direction didn’t mean she had an easy time of it.

"I was different," she says. "Being an outsider made me a little lonely, but that’s what made me what I am now." She wasn’t one of the cool kids, but she began writing and playing some cool rock ‘n’ roll with a chosen few who understood her. Musically, Syd’s influences spanned genres and generations, including gospel singer Yolanda Adams, Jack White, Janis Joplin, Chrissie Hynde, Jeff Buckley and Muse. On stage, Syd notes, "I liked to channel flamboyant male artists. I like Iggy Pop and Chris Robinson. Both have that seductive, intriguing side of a woman coupled with the strength and power that’s traditionally thought of as male."

She and her band began knocking on music industry doors, and eventually some of them opened. For a paltry $500, an early incarnation of Valora snuck into Whittier High after hours and shot their own DIY video for "I Waited For You," which intrigued Hollywood Records execs. Cut to Syd paying a visit to the label. "I was asked to play one of my songs for them right then and there," she recalls. "All I had was this out-of-tune guitar, but it was one of those ‘no turning back’ moments. I walked out with a record deal."

Around the time Syd launched into recording the album, Ahmet Zappa and his Monsterfoot Productions created a graphic novel based on the heroic female character "Valora," as envisioned by Syd. The first three chapters have been made into videos, telling the story against a soundtrack of Valora’s music. "Ahmet liked the record and was inspired to do the novel," Syd recalls. "What intrigued him is that Valora wasn’t just a name of a band, it was this character, a kick-ass girl who saves people. Having these great visuals like the graphic novel and motion capture videos is another cool way for people to discover who Valora is."

With the album completed, Valora is ready to hit the road. The band has been playing shows across Southern California, making friends and prepping for big things to come. But nothing bigger than anything Syd envisioned for herself a long time ago. "I have never been afraid to be on a stage in front of people," says Syd. "It goes back to being the outcast. I’m saying ‘If you come to one of my shows, I’m the entertainment.’ I don’t ever hold back."



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