@_versacc_: Janji - Heroes Tonight / #neymar #fyp

ɔɔɐsɹǝʌ
ɔɔɐsɹǝʌ
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Region: BR
Wednesday 13 November 2024 22:22:23 GMT
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mohaimen._.sa
17 :
prime youtube
2024-11-14 15:39:06
260
eliasenglund56
Elias💫🐊 :
Name The song
2024-11-16 09:48:19
0
britishmilitary48
𝔍𝔞𝔯𝔢𝔡𝔊𝔬𝔡𝔰𝔙𝔢𝔯𝔰𝔢🏳 :
roblox 2018-19 prime
2024-11-18 17:58:17
0
neymarjnrrr10
Neymarjr :
The greatest of all time 😭 🇧🇷 🐐
2024-11-21 17:52:42
2
futbol.is.l1fe
futbol.is.l1fe :
The Prince who never because King 👑
2024-11-19 04:52:41
1
.robloxboy12
[⭐️] zayood :
Heroes tonight 🔛🔝
2024-11-15 20:50:58
61
papegora030
De bruyne17 :
Prime Neymar
2024-11-16 09:05:46
1
omos838
NIGERIA GIANT :
Best neymar Edit i have seen👍
2024-11-19 05:08:17
2
hanoch312
חנוך :
goosebumps...
2024-11-14 13:59:00
1
lakzykka
Nagi rl :
London to Taiwan 😍
2024-11-15 14:18:53
9
thomaz_39
THOMAZ :
music 🎶 🥶
2024-11-14 23:25:12
43
timacade100
︎timo cade :
my goat
2024-11-14 13:54:19
0
erwin_rommelbf109
ERWIN ROMMEL :
Prime dark king indo❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥
2024-11-19 14:13:12
0
ramadan...mubarak
فلسطين الحرة فلسطين 🇵🇸 :
young neymar 💔
2024-11-15 18:36:41
0
dz.prods
dasyz :
this tune + neymar oh boy
2024-11-23 17:44:30
0
ahmedgght43
Ahmed✨️😊 :
heroes night Neymar🔥
2024-11-16 12:07:32
0
ich_mag_affen5
Rimy 我 :
Prime Neymar💀
2024-11-15 13:35:09
11
mr11_footy
mr11_footy :
well done
2024-11-15 13:59:24
1
ablayendao91
EL CHARO LAYE 🖤⚽ :
I ve been flying from town to town
2024-11-22 21:00:30
1
pinqukclips
simi :
roblox 2017, playing football in 2015, prime friends, prime life
2024-11-17 20:52:34
5
weleoroblox
Ispletanha OFC U d Izy☠️ :
Heroes tonight
2024-11-18 20:41:35
3
5091kvngrichie
Kvngrîçhįë5091 :
My goat😊❤️
2024-11-14 16:26:51
0
mohaclrizaq
mohamutt__🖤🤎_🕷️🌃✈️ :
Star ⭐️
2024-11-20 09:35:27
0
dakling61
dakling :
Prime stick war legacy
2024-11-17 08:34:35
1
oskars097
40 km/t urban Max :
Good Edit
2024-11-17 09:25:57
0
To see more videos from user @_versacc_, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Out Today: Karate - Unsolved 2xLP Whatever sense of unity bound a hodgepodge of underground American punk sounds in the 1990s like a Duct-tape wallet began to come unglued by the end of the decade. A couple years into the new millennium and the emo scene that once had enough space for a band as brazen in their fusion of slowcore, jazz, and post-hardcore as Boston’s Karate would barely be reflected in a cookie-cutter style commercialized by major labels and mid-level indies that acted like the majors. The part of punk that overlapped with indie rock would begin a slow ascent from its comfortable home on college radio charts to the soundtrack of American Apparel shops and eventually the Billboard charts. In this strange, stratifying milieu, Karate, a band that seemed to thrive by cleaving to a nether-zone between several sounds that otherwise never touched, delivered an engrossing constantly shifting shot of rock that covered three sides of 12-inch vinyl: Unsolved arrived in 2000. Karate spent much of the ’90s wrestling punk aggression and volume into svelte shapes and often condensed what felt like a generation of scuffed-up intensity into whispers. The quiet moments carried much of that unbridled intensity throughout Unsolved —the fuzzy guitar squawk and snatchet of machine-gun drumming on “Sever” aside, things hit a little more sharply the moment the trio pivoted into their subdued jazz melodic interplay on that song. Karate’s transition into indie-rock maturity had become so complete by the time they dropped Unsolved that you could play the coffeehouse soul of “Halo of the Strange” and sultry jazz of “Lived-But-Yet-Named” to an unsuspecting punk and spend an entire evening trying to convince them that, yes, this band had made their bones playing the same DIY circuit made of bands that sounded like they wanted to harm their audience. But few bands other than Karate played like they understood the musical lingua franca of scene godheads such as Fugazi and Unwound, and knew how to make that language evolve, and nearly every song on Unsolved made that clear. If you didn’t get the memo by the end of the elegiac 11-minute closer “This Day Next Year.
Out Today: Karate - Unsolved 2xLP Whatever sense of unity bound a hodgepodge of underground American punk sounds in the 1990s like a Duct-tape wallet began to come unglued by the end of the decade. A couple years into the new millennium and the emo scene that once had enough space for a band as brazen in their fusion of slowcore, jazz, and post-hardcore as Boston’s Karate would barely be reflected in a cookie-cutter style commercialized by major labels and mid-level indies that acted like the majors. The part of punk that overlapped with indie rock would begin a slow ascent from its comfortable home on college radio charts to the soundtrack of American Apparel shops and eventually the Billboard charts. In this strange, stratifying milieu, Karate, a band that seemed to thrive by cleaving to a nether-zone between several sounds that otherwise never touched, delivered an engrossing constantly shifting shot of rock that covered three sides of 12-inch vinyl: Unsolved arrived in 2000. Karate spent much of the ’90s wrestling punk aggression and volume into svelte shapes and often condensed what felt like a generation of scuffed-up intensity into whispers. The quiet moments carried much of that unbridled intensity throughout Unsolved —the fuzzy guitar squawk and snatchet of machine-gun drumming on “Sever” aside, things hit a little more sharply the moment the trio pivoted into their subdued jazz melodic interplay on that song. Karate’s transition into indie-rock maturity had become so complete by the time they dropped Unsolved that you could play the coffeehouse soul of “Halo of the Strange” and sultry jazz of “Lived-But-Yet-Named” to an unsuspecting punk and spend an entire evening trying to convince them that, yes, this band had made their bones playing the same DIY circuit made of bands that sounded like they wanted to harm their audience. But few bands other than Karate played like they understood the musical lingua franca of scene godheads such as Fugazi and Unwound, and knew how to make that language evolve, and nearly every song on Unsolved made that clear. If you didn’t get the memo by the end of the elegiac 11-minute closer “This Day Next Year." #numerogroup

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