history
Iconic moments in music history.
Every Rose đč Has its thorn by Poison covered by Rikki La Rouge
all of the cover songs that you hear here are on my YouTube playlist called X-rated . link to get to the playlist on I always had this great idea that the power metal the hair, metal ballad by Poison every rose has its thorn would make a great salsa song and so I went ahead and did it and what you hear in the track is my demo version of the salsa version in my cover of every rose has its thorn by poison. I just wanted to see pretty good. Itâs a little fast yes but if I slowed it down, I realize that would sound a hell of a lot but it really sounds good at the it really sounds good. I must say.
By Rikki La Rouge8 months ago in Beat
Iâm too sexy remixed by Rikki La Rouge
I forever have loved by Right Said Fred. Iâm too sexy. Give me an idea of how much of a fan of this song I am I know there are so many versions of this song. Itâs great. Since I like to do a little DJing and reworking songs with things, this is my version of. Iâm too sexy. I call it the rose color glasses even at night remix. I think itâs a really cool trap the way I did it just to add to how many versions and remixes this unbelievably funny song about supet models is.
By Rikki La Rouge8 months ago in Beat
Babalu Aye cover by Rikki La Rouge
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZY8X43FIz0&pp=ygUVUmlra2kgbGEgcm91Z2UgYmFiYWx1 what you are hearing in this article is my cover of the iconic Cuban song Babalu Aye. Like Willy Chirino says about himself, hijo de Babalu I believe in Babalu myself too. Babalu was introduced to American audiences on the famed classic and iconic 1950 sitcom starring Lucille Ball and Desi I love Lucy. Desi is underrated and a genius who deserves to be more celebrated than he was. He was truly and over looked icon. Everyone focused on Lucille Ball but they overlooked Desi . Also, thatâs something Iâll get into another article.
By Rikki La Rouge8 months ago in Beat
đŻ Sonic SĂ©ance: Channeling the Dead Through Dark Ambient
Dark ambient is often described as hauntingâbut what if it wasnât just a vibe? What if it was a method of summoning? Not in the theatrical occult sense, but as a ritual of remembranceâa way to invite the presence of those weâve lost, or the versions of ourselves that time has buried.
By Yokai Circle8 months ago in Beat
From âBe Faithfulâ to Forever: Scoopâs Voice Now Echoes in Harlemâs Concrete
A Street Named Scoop: The Unlikely Journey of Harlemâs Most Electrifying Export By NWO Sparrow There are voices that define eras, Biggieâs effortless Brooklyn cool, Bustaâs manic energy, Missyâs futuristic flow, and then thereâs Fatman Scoop, the human airhorn who turned ad-libs into anthems. On August 9, Harlem will cement his legacy in concrete as 109th Street and 5th Avenue becomes âIsaac âFatman Scoopâ Freeman III Place.â But this isnât just another street co-naming. Itâs the culmination of a story thatâs pure New York, a kid from the projects who became the undisputed blueprint for hype men worldwide, The voice that once made stadiums tremble and block parties erupt will now echo forever through Harlemâs streets. This is a permanent tribute to the Grammy-winning hype man who left us too soon but whose impact will never fade.
By NWO SPARROW8 months ago in Beat



