amy o. will have to correct me if i’m wrong, but i remember it sounding really hot.
the problem was that we were using the rap as a breakdown in the redux of “kids and dults don’t mix,” and it wasn’t working. neither were, so they were lost to the ages (ie to the records)–until now!
I think Thom couldn’t be more wrong. That rap is still gold on beat or off. And I am pretty critical. Nick will vouch.
it is the strongest rhyme. strongest. i just got free high life coozies and talked to some dublin girls. i didn’t rap to them, but i have a feeling that with their natural sense of brogue they would appreciate my beats, dig my rhythms. bat would agree too. addenda: amy knows when to hold them, knows when to fold them.
amy, don’t think that i was fronting saying that you weren’t down with the rhyme. i was just saying that it’s damn hard and you should get mad props whether or not you’s on beat. respect. mutually and all other kinds, dig.
btw, if you’re really as good at the poker as nicolas says, he should bring you down to nola soon for some dirty weekend poker action we’re running now. mess with texas hold em.
Posted on 14 June 2006 at 7:49 pm
well it’s tricky to rock a rhyme and at least you were trying. maybe the backbeats make it sound better, i hear a recording coming on!!!