Folded Waffle draws this release into the current, offering listeners a closer encounter with the artistry of Fresh Kils,Myer Clarity. For those arriving fresh and those already attuned to their path, this track opens a space of focus and resonance that cannot be ignored.
This isn’t a single artist; it’s a strike force. At the core is Fresh Kils, a Toronto-based, Juno-nominated producer and legendary MPC master. He’s known for incinerating stages with high-energy routines, but his production work often reveals a deeper, more sombre musicality. The track is a Phonk and Alternative Hip-Hop crusher featuring Kils’ production alongside the collaborative firepower of Myer Clarity and the Philly Moves crew—Farout, Prolific, and Tragic. This track drops on the heels of Myer Clarity and Fresh Kils wrapping a new album, marking a deliberate, heavy statement released by No Damn Good Ent.
There’s a raw nerve exposed in the question: “Are we having too much fun? Or are we corny?”. It’s the ultimate litmus test for any artist stepping outside the lines, and this whole crew—Myer Clarity, Fresh Kils, and the Philly Moves contingent—answer that noise with an Edgy & Rebellious two-fingered salute. “Dangerous, Crazy, Stupid Boys” isn’t a plea for validation; it’s a declaration of freedom, a track that weaponizes the outsider status.
The beat, a Fresh Kils creation, is a crushing foundation for an aggressive confrontation with the Mental health stigma in artistic communities. Kils himself admits to being “plagued with imposter syndrome” despite his accolades, self-critiquing his work before it’s even heard. The high-energy confidence he projects on stage is a stark contrast to the internal struggle—a struggle he’s worked through by simply making the music he loved and letting it speak for itself, “without saying a word”. This track, then, becomes a collective therapy session turned battle cry.
The ultimate lesson here is Healing through creativity. When the world calls you “Dangerous, Crazy, Stupid,” the rebellious response isn’t silence—it’s volume. It’s allowing the music to become the outlet for the internal pressure. The lyrics and the overall Phonk texture of the track—a genre that thrives on dark, lo-fi energy—provide a vehicle for this kind of intense self-expression. It’s the sound of five artists re-claiming their value from the inside out, deciding that their genuine expression is the cure, not the symptom. The only agenda is the music itself.
This track is the sound of necessary noise. It’s the moment the collective says, we acknowledge the struggle, but we refuse to let it define the art. They are taking the psychological baggage—the “imposter syndrome” and the self-doubt—and transforming it into unapologetic energy. They’ve found their peace not by finding comfort, but by making something powerful that cuts through the noise. This is motivation, wrapped in grit, proving that the most profound acts of self-care are often the loudest acts of self-assertion.
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| Ingredients | Details |
|---|---|
| Artist | Fresh Kils,Myer Clarity |
| Flavor | Dangerous, Crazy, Stupid Boys |
| Bake Time | 2025-10-31 |
| Serving Size | Dangerous, Crazy, Stupid Boys |

This feature carries more than music—it channels movement. Fresh Kils,Myer Clarity continues to shape their own frequency, and through this work invites all who listen to gather, share, and amplify the energy forward.




















