Gonna sound like a right geek now, but he was born in Luton and moved to
the york area (where you said probably. All i know is he busked in york
when he was younger) when he was young-ish. Yes, I know too much about him.
I run a fansite, why shouldn't i?! lol
Man i tried to get from iTunes and not available. No wonder p2p exists. Too
bad I'm on an iPod wifi right now and not a pc. Guess there's still
youtube. Great track!
I really love this song, thanks for posting it! It's different from the
version on Grey's, the ending is different - anyone know why that is? Help
appreciated.
this guys great he performed at my school a few years back its a shame his
career has never taken off he puts mc fly and others so called bands to
shame
+zentsuko59 Gotta ask permission from Elk Road, and then still credit the name in your video, but it's very rare I see someone get permission to.But there are songs that say (Free Download) you can use :D
Daniel Bedingfield - Gotta Get Through This with lyrics (good sound quality)
Gotta Get Through This by Daniel Bedingfield with lyrics on screen, enjoy! (I'm not entirely sure about all the lyrics though. I tried to double-check them, but every ...
Ahh man the nostalgia just hit me, fond memories of early 2000's techno.
Everyday before elementary school my brother & me would play 21 on a Fisher
Price basketball hoop in our garage. We had this radio set up & would
always listen to the techno station. Castles In The Sky & One More Time are
the songs I remember the most. Good times.
+nathangarry911 His dad was in Vietnam. A lot of the soldiers and their kids developed all kids of disorders from the Agent Orange chemical they were spraying in the jungle.
So many people that are saying How does he is not bigger than mainstream
music. The thing is mainstream rappers get mainstream fans. We are real
fans that get this real shit. It is sad that soo many people are
mainstream, but mainstream is what allows people to escape the truth.
lol @ "real hip hop" fans who expect a track like this to be played on the
radio/clubs where people just want easy listening.
Yes it is good and yes the lyrical content is good but stop preaching your
hip hop elitist bs. This type of subject matter stays underground period.
Yeah once we stop trying to get ppl to raise the bar music is only going to get worse. So naw fuck that this music should be on the radio . But im a realistic and understand it won't be happening yet . But Never say Never .
+MrGreg Detroit I think everyone needs to think for a sec. I'm assuming this bloke is a youngster. shitty music/artists are force fed down their throats nowadays. the days of borrowing cassettes and calling the music store from work to see if the new whatever is in yet are over... he's saying drake is shit and R.A. is dope... If he's only now discovered this, then cool.... on the right path i say...
+MrGreg Detroit Well, that's a loaded-ass question man. If you really want the answer, you've got to look to a couple of songs. First is Bloodshed Hua Hoo, or w/e the f that was he was saying. That was the beginning, and honestly when you look at that you can kind of see why RA's career started off a bit rough. The other was the song that he did with Biggie, and when you're asked to produce a marketable, playable on the radio song to hype your career and move your life forward and you stick your guns and talk about - point is - Biggie took that song as a joke, and one that even a year or two later he didn't remember the punch line to. RA launched a career off of that, some internet hype, and another guest appearance. Don't get me wrong, he's great, a very powerful lyricist and believable - unlike drake - who dances in his own videos... like he means it. RA is as close to ground level as any underground rapper, ever. If he did make it big, it almost ruins his credibility. It goes against everything he stands for to go industry, and it points out something that a clever kid named Dan Bull already tuned you in to in his song "Dear Lily". Talent ain't really all that rare. There's plenty of people out there like this guy RA who are indicative of a statement I've made many times with pride. "Hip Hop couldn't die if it tried". Fck the Industry. Or groove with 'em while you get shi+faced. Who cares? They're a dying species fighting for survival while killing themselves with their own product, almost like cigarette smokers. They've got a shelf life, and you'll always be able to enjoy real shi+ now that the internet has made it impossible for the bi+ches in the industry to keep real stuff like this away from us. Even more funny is the fact that I can glean through all their industry shi+, find the one or two songs in the bunch that are worth a fck, and strip all the other bullshi+ the industry dix package with it... away. And Fair Use doctrine trumps their every move. Game over.
+MrGreg Detroit It sucks for the artist but to me it feels like I'm one of an elite few who know about this quality gold. The people who listen to the likes of Drake are not open minded enough to take in lyrics like these.
+i2Shea its because drake is signed to ymcmb and rugged man isn't signed to anyone. he's an independent rapper with no one to promote him like the big guys. and he chooses to be like that along side tech n9ne and immortal technique
+MrGreg Detroit This song has a real message. Drake is about what weak minded people want to hear cause he raps about stuff that people think they care about but once they grow up they will realize how dumb they were to like that shit.