1. Nettspend - That One Song.flac ((full)) (2024-2026)
of the beat's mixing or a comparison to other tracks from his album Early Life Crisis
Nettspend’s delivery on this track is a study in calculated disaffection. He does not rap at the listener; he raps past them, mumbling couplets that seem to evaporate as soon as they are uttered. The lyrics—fragmented references to designer drugs, stolen credit cards, and existential boredom—are treated as texture rather than narrative. When he repeats the hook’s non-sequitur (“I don’t even know the name of this one”), it functions as a meta-commentary on the fleeting nature of internet fame. He acknowledges that the song itself is disposable, a product of algorithmic churn, yet by naming it “That One Song,” he forces it to become singular. It is a paradoxical act of anti-branding that has become his brand. 1. Nettspend - That One Song.flac
The legend states that an early collaborator exported a direct studio master of "That One Song" to FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) and shared it on a private forum. Unlike the compressed MP3s that circulate on YouTube (capped at 128kbps OPUS) or the "remasters" that add artificial bass, the represents the raw data. It is the sound as it left the DAW (Digital Audio Workstation). of the beat's mixing or a comparison to
, the beat heavily samples the track "Entombed" from the Deftones' 2012 album Koi No Yokan Musical Style: When he repeats the hook’s non-sequitur (“I don’t
Produced by , the track is defined by its "symphony of stimuli" approach.