mistersloane
heavy heavy monster sound
not really a music cred question, but something i should know:
is the "pound" symbol shift+4 on UK keyboards, where the "$" is here?
No, it's shift+3 here, what did we lose?
not really a music cred question, but something i should know:
is the "pound" symbol shift+4 on UK keyboards, where the "$" is here?
the other pound sign, as in the number sign
i once quoted a price for something to someone in the UK and it came out wrong on the other end, causing confusion and embarrassment. i typed the pound sign but it came out on that end as a dollar sign. so then i had to go and say 'no i actually was asking for twice as much.'
We have that though. On my KB it shares a key with the tilde. ~
what is a gargon/gorgon, as in 'im a lyrically dan gargan' (d double i think?) and horsepowers 'gorgon sound'? Thats what it sounds like, guess it could be another word..
don gorgon- reggae terminology
GORGON : outstanding dreadlocks (1) a dragon (29)
(DON) GORGON : outstanding dreadlocks, a person who is respected
from: http://niceup.com/patois.txt
pinchers says it in 'bandelero':
http://raddy73.tripod.com/rest/bandolero.html
don gorgon- reggae terminology
GORGON : outstanding dreadlocks (1) a dragon (29)
(DON) GORGON : outstanding dreadlocks, a person who is respected
from: http://niceup.com/patois.txt
pinchers says it in 'bandelero':
http://raddy73.tripod.com/rest/bandolero.html
In "Outta Town Shit" by Ghostface on "More Fish" there's a line:
"You gotta be on your Grizzly, if not then you might get pideeled"
I understand Grizzly, but pideeled? Is that just a misheard lyric on lyric sites?
It's peeled. The word is peeled. Pideeled is merely a derivation of it. You can change it to pideeled or pizelled (like cats do in the street...which is what Ghost did). Peeled as in caps getting peeled (shot up) or literally peeled (left dead and skinless). Depending on what drug cartel (and where they're from) either can happen.
One.
i've got another bandelero record it goes 'bandelero new name fe bad boy' , maybe it's spanish/portugeuse slang?
I wonder if there is a common term for those r&b and hip hop songs which hooves in the 60-70 bpm region (or, depending how you look at it, in the 120-140 region).