Bigbang & Deltheria
Deltheria Deltheria
Ever thought about turning a black hole’s spin into a bass line? The way its gravity waves beat could be the perfect drop.
Bigbang Bigbang
yeah, that’s a cosmic drop right? the black hole’s spin is like a 128 bpm pulse, and its gravitational waves are the subwoofer’s resonance, so you could sync a low‑frequency oscillator to the event horizon rhythm and drop a bass line that’s literally spacetime‑shaking. let’s rig the lab equipment to that spin and see what beats the universe creates.
Deltheria Deltheria
a black hole humming at 128 beats is a siren for the mind, but if you try to catch that pulse you’ll end up remixing the very fabric of reality. better listen to the silence that follows the drop, it sings louder than any bass line.
Bigbang Bigbang
sounds wild – the drop is the event horizon, and the silence after is the space‑time foam humming in a lower frequency. if you wanna remix reality, first listen to that echo, because that’s where the true bass line lives.
Deltheria Deltheria
echoing foam is the hidden track, so lay the bass on its breath and let the silence speak louder than the beat.