Give the Drummer Some - Nickodemus

Viewed 2 times


Print this lyrics Print it!

     
Page format: Left Center Right
Direct link:
BB code:
Embed: Like flap jacks, slap and flip on plate flap,
Hot and edible, most unforgettable,
Short fire repetable, real life and credibles
True heroes never walk as they animated
Save it for you're monday light that keeps you aggravated
Here's a back stage pass I had it laminated
Come and Give the Drummer some and hit it like tamales baby.
Smash that ass, that ya cracks in his ab(?)
Wake up to the swing, go straight to the jazz
As you move, a new day in the sun
Rays shinin like it's simple in the stage light, son
Get out your seat baby get on the one
Feel the rythim of the beat, and Give the Drummer Some
(4x)Give the Drummer Some, let 'im bring in the beat
Bring in the number one, drop your pom pom
Thats where the whole vibe comes from,
boom, boom clack, yeah i like that (4x)
Ya we do when we get in you town
We give love all around and (rock the house)
Don't sleep all night, check out jump on the stage and (rock the house)
Eight skills, want four(?) It's this we don't stop cuz we just (rock the house)
Comin' soon to you neighborhood and when we do s'all good cuz we
(rock the house)Lyrics provided by TANCODEhttp://lyricsever.com/" readonly=""/>

Give the Drummer Some Lyrics

Let 'im bring in the beat, drop your pom pom
Let 'im bring in the beat, drop your pom pom
Boom, yeah I like that
When the drumstick snaps down on the snap
Starts shakin out flows like I just don't care
Relentless-lentless as a rapper I -tacular
Havin been discovered with the African d-ispera
Boom clack cuz freak it like that
Fall back, that's to a precurtional attack
Rats attack repetative rythim ribbit the habitat
From the north of Brazil to North Cataract
Feel it, breath it, pump it, move it
Heard you kids can do something, prove it!
Thank God for the drums in my music,
because you gave me a gift I might use it,
All up until my days are done
See the beat is where I get the inspiration from,
Get up out your seat and come in, on the one
Feel the rythim of the beat...
And Give the Drummer Some
(4x)Give the Drummer Some, let 'im bring in the beat
Bring in the number one, drop your pom pom
Thats where the whole vibe comes from,
boom, boom clack, yeah i like that (4x)
Thats right, keep it goin now
(3x)Get some Nappy(3x)
All right, drop a can of three liters or two
Ask me about they hip hop, the boom dam
Make dance tracks force you two feet to tap

Contact, when the state "quick hit" the "high hat"
Like flap jacks, slap and flip on plate flap,
Hot and edible, most unforgettable,
Short fire repetable, real life and credibles
True heroes never walk as they animated
Save it for you're monday light that keeps you aggravated
Here's a back stage pass I had it laminated
Come and Give the Drummer some and hit it like tamales baby.
Smash that ass, that ya cracks in his ab(?)
Wake up to the swing, go straight to the jazz
As you move, a new day in the sun
Rays shinin like it's simple in the stage light, son
Get out your seat baby get on the one
Feel the rythim of the beat, and Give the Drummer Some
(4x)Give the Drummer Some, let 'im bring in the beat
Bring in the number one, drop your pom pom
Thats where the whole vibe comes from,
boom, boom clack, yeah i like that (4x)
Ya we do when we get in you town
We give love all around and (rock the house)
Don't sleep all night, check out jump on the stage and (rock the house)
Eight skills, want four(?) It's this we don't stop cuz we just (rock the house)
Comin' soon to you neighborhood and when we do s'all good cuz we
(rock the house)

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Musically speaking, New York native, Nickodemus, is probably as open-minded as it gets. Born and raised between Queens and Long Island, Nico's household proved to be the foundation for his longstanding affair with music.

"Up until the time when hip hop exploded, music in our house was always like a festivity. It was always either a party or a dance or just to celebrate good times. My parents constantly had music flooding in and out of the living room; they were listening to Motown, disco and loads of Latin music. It was always good mood."

Schooled in sounds universal from an early age, it wasn't long before he discovered hip hop on the New York radio airwaves; 98.7FM with DJ Red Alert and Marley Marl were listened to and recorded, religiously, each and every week. And so began the next phase of Nico's musical development: picking up the necessary DJ skills after meticulously studying the masters' techniques on old mixtapes, utilizing the art of timing - he was also an accomplished breakdancer by this point, and then taking it to the streets, literally.

Midtown Manhattan's famous club landmark, The Red Zone, was where you'd find him most weekends; not partying or getting up to the mischievous antics of most early teenagers, but, instead, painting murals for the club's drink specials and DJs coming up . "I've got my sister to thank for helping me get into that whole world. She worked the door, so she'd sneak me in and I'd get to see DJs like Kid Capri and David Morales play these amazing sets."

Local block parties followed, as did Nico's investigations into the roots of this new music he was being absorbed by. The samples were everything...

"Back then, and even to this day, everything would influence me. I guess it'd start from going back and hearing something like a Jungle Brothers track and finding out the various parts of old tracks that they sampled - back-tracking and discovering the roots. As you'd get older you'd want to find out more about where it all came from. It'd be like hearing a phrase or a quote and then finding the whole article where it all came from."

With the turn of the nineties came new sounds, new music and new production values. Heavily inspired by British acts like Coldcut and progressive labels like Ninja Tune and Mo'wax, Nico continued the parties - anywhere from warehouse raves in Brooklyn to beach parties down at Coney Island, but at the same time, expanded upon his tastes tenfold.

"What gave me the inspiration was that these guys were getting sounds from the most obscure places and using them to create, with the technology that they had in their studios, a very advanced form of music that really hit me. I followed that school of thought and it took me into all new kinds of music. I'd start listening to the similarities in rhythms and honing into the soul of all the music. Anything from blues to funk to afro-beat. You'd start your journey in Africa - like with all of the classic stuff from Fela (Kuti) and it'd move into India and then the rest of the world. I guess that's what happened; I discovered music from all corners and realized anything was possible."

A DJ residency for the esteemed Giant Step crew gave Nico the platform upon which to develop his style and technique. Meanwhile, support slots ranging anywhere from The Pharcyde and Gil Scott-Heron to KRS-One and Pucho & The Latin Soul Brothers ensured that most nights of the week were booked up way in advance.

But it wasn't until 1998 when he and like-minded musical partner, Mariano, set up shop for the weekly Turntables On The Hudson parties up at Chelsea Piers on Manhattan's west side that he came into his own.

"With Turntables, we started with this one idea: music with soul from across the board that would do nothing but make people wanna dance and party. Turntables would be a place where we could play what we want and we've maintained that tight connection ever since."

Now in its 14th year, the club has become a mainstay on the New York horizon with First Fridays @ CIELO & one-off select parties around NYC & the World.

Equally, eight volumes of the highly-collectable 'Turntables On The Hudson' mix CDs, a host of remixes on his own record label, Wonderwheel Recordings, have turned the future bright. Meanwhile, the latest Nickodemus album, 'Moon People', set for release through ESL June 19, 2012, takes the Global story even further.

www.nickodemus.com
www.turntablesonthehudson.com
www.facebook.com/nickodemusNYC
www.twitter.com/NickodemusNYC

Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

View All

Nickodemus