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Same Thing Different Day is the second studio album by American rapper Trae. [2] It was released on July 6, 2004, by Trae's independently-owned record label, G-Maab Entertainment.
Manic Hispanic is an American Chicano punk rock band from Orange County and Los Angeles, California, United States. They are a comedy act that plays cover versions of punk rock "standards" by slightly renaming songs and adjusting lyrics with humorous references to Chicano culture.
The text must be prepared beforehand as in subtitles. These machines can be used for events other than artistic performances, when the text is easier to show to the audience than it is to vocalize. Surtitles are different from subtitles, which are more often used in filmmaking and television production. Originally, translations would be broken ...
James Bernard of Entertainment Weekly preferred the album's Southern hip hop over "Arrested Development's suspiciously peppy, idealized version of down-home" and stated, "it's about time someone told today's weed-obsessed youth to 'get up, get out and get something/Don't spend all your time trying to get high.'" [30] Dennis Hunt of the Los ...
Lead singer Jaren Johnston, who wrote the song, told Billboard: "I wanted something for our live set that mirrored 'Kashmir' by Led Zeppelin – maybe a southern version of that. I got into writing it, and started with the lyrics, I remembered the first time I heard ' Sweet Home Alabama ,' and I was just mesmerized with it.
The duo is a collaboration between Z-Ro and Trae, both of whom are well established solo recording artists within Texas' underground hip hop scene. [1] Their first collaboration was on Z-Ro's debut album Look What You Did to Me (1998), with them regularly appearing on each other's albums thereafter. [ 2 ]
Restless is the third studio album and commercial debut by American rapper Trae. [1] It was released on June 27, 2006, by G-Maab Entertainment, Rap-A-Lot Records and Asylum Records . Music and lyrics
Kim Fowley included a version with altered lyrics (called "Big Bad Cadillac") on his 1977 album Living in the Streets. Recorded by The Fall in 1978. A Dutch version was made by the Belgian rocker Bert De Coninck in 1979. In 1980 Canadian punk band Teenage Head recorded a version on their second album Frantic City. Covered by The Milkshakes in 1984