Get Buck
Pouya
The title promises energy and the production delivers without hesitation — "Get Buck" is Pouya at his most kinetic, a song built for movement and release. The beat is harder than his typical output, the drums snapping with aggression, the bass line coiled and ready. Where much of Pouya's catalog invites withdrawal, this one demands physical response: the tempo is high enough to accelerate the pulse, the arrangement stripped lean to maximize impact. His vocal delivery shifts here too — less detached, more forceful, the drawl sharpened into something with teeth. The lyrics operate in the register of Southern rap bravado, an assertion of presence and dominance that functions as ritual rather than literal statement. It is coded braggadocio, the kind where the swagger is the point rather than any specific claim. Culturally, this track connects Pouya's underground lineage to the long tradition of Southern strip-club rap — Three 6 Mafia's menace, the raw energy of early Memphis tapes — filtered through a generation that grew up on internet subcultures. It is an anomaly in his catalog that reveals the range beneath the surface: he can do the slow, druggy drift, but he can also do pure momentum. You play this at the beginning of a night out, at the gym, in moments when you need to shed something and move.
fast
2010s
hard, lean, aggressive
Miami underground rap, Southern strip-club rap tradition
Hip-Hop, Southern Rap. Underground Trap. aggressive, energetic. Sustains relentless high-energy aggression from start to finish, building toward pure physical release with no emotional let-down.. energy 9. fast. danceability 7. valence 6. vocals: forceful male rap, sharpened Southern drawl, assertive bravado. production: snapping hard drums, coiled bass line, stripped-down trap arrangement. texture: hard, lean, aggressive. acousticness 1. era: 2010s. Miami underground rap, Southern strip-club rap tradition. Opening track of a gym session or the first song of a night out when you need to shed inhibition and move.