Jafunk - Weekend Love feat. Dana Williams & Mike Nasa

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We're so glad we get to welcome back Jafunk on the channel, especially since the weather is getting better here, and we need more tracks like this to get us started for the sunny, healthier days.

Enjoy!

thesoundyouneed
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Thank you so much TSYN and everyone for listening! Stoked to be back here again, glad you're feeling the funk ;)

Jafunk
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THIS TRACK IS literally can not stop listening to it

kosmikkidd
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A P e r f e c t T u n e ! Good Vibes from 🇧🇷😉💚💛

DaroGoms
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Imagine liking before you hear it. Wait that's me and I'm listening to it rn and its lit for my chill mood. Thx guys 😀

stevennehilla
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0:36 legit thought he said "why you poop like that" lmao ;)))



but damnnn I love this song!!

JustCallMeNorth
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Sounds a lot like Young Franco’s “Juice”

conjurecorpse
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Aye been a while since I've seen Jafunk here, loving this track in particular

manoklm
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The effects of noise on human beings are of interest to specialists across many academic disciplines including medicine, economics, and psychology (Basner et al.,  2015). In cognitive psychology, people's susceptibility to distraction by background sound/noise is often used as an instrument to understand the nature of selective attention and short-term memory, and many theories have been proposed to explain why people tend to perform better in silence compared with when there is noise in the background (Hughes,  2014). For example, one explanation of noise effects that has been offered is that noise captures attention. On this view, the reason why performance on a visual task (e.g., proofreading) is impaired by background noise, is that the locus of attention is diverted away from the target information (e.g., the visual text material) and is instead reallocated to the sound, causing interruption to the task (Bell et al.,  2012). A competing explanation is that similar processes partake in the involuntary analysis of the background noise and the voluntary elaboration of the task material, causing a conflict and performance decrements (Macken,  2014). A third explanation, offered in the context of noise effects on complex cognition, such as that on reading comprehension or word processed writing, is that noise impairs subcomponent abilities (e.g., working memory) that is assumed to underpin the complex behavior (Jahncke et al.,  2013).

vidushiverma