Music

The Black Esper & Slug G Release Bold Collaborative EP Do The Thing

72

Genre-bending artists The Black Esper and Slug G have joined forces on a new collaborative EP titled Do The Thing — a high-voltage project that urges listeners to stop hesitating and start moving.

Rooted in sharp lyricism and heavy textures, Do The Thing is more than a body of work — it’s a creative manifesto. The EP explores the tension between potential and procrastination, pushing a message that’s as urgent as it is universal: just do it.

To bring the project to life, the duo launched a powerful visual campaign centered around a fictional book also titled Do The Thing. The book appears in surreal public settings — read by people as they muster the will to Do The Thing!— becoming a symbol of discipline, self-starting energy, and the courage to act.

“It’s about the moment just before you take the leap,” says The Black Esper. “That point where you can talk yourself out of it—or choose to move.”

“This tape is for the people who are done waiting,” adds Slug G. “Done thinking, done second-guessing. It’s fuel.”
The project merges sound, visuals, and storytelling to create an immersive experience that lives beyond music —tapping into themes of creative discipline, and self-determination.

https://open.spotify.com/track/4Ye6bF1rmCkILiechrzwYx

Written by
Barbie Edonia

OWNER AND MANAGER OF CHUNEDESK || BLOGGER || GRAPHIC DESIGNER || WEB DEVELOPER

Related Articles

Music

NORDSTAHL’s “Das Geisterschiff” – A Haunting Ballad of Fate and Human Error

Hamburg-based artist NORDSTAHL takes the time-worn ballad of a ghost ship and...

Music

Seth Schaeffer Unleashes Dark Cinematic Single “I Found A Monster”

The newest single by Seth Schaeffer, I Found A Monster is a...

Music

Curb Records Artist Stars Go Dim Releases Fourth Studio Album Roses

Stars Go Dim, the Christian pop musician born Chris Cleveland, has released...

Music

Soheil’s The Lost Recording Season (1974–1978) – Vol. 1: A Cultural Time Capsule Reborn

Influenced by the glory days of Western pop of the seventies, and...