What is the one song called/who is it by where it talks about how he needs coffee all the time. It starts with some actual talking and then it goes into a really cool brass part. sorry, this is sorta vague, but thats all i remember. all i know is that it's great and i want to find it again. thanks!
Do you like your house the way you like your coffee; deep, rich, with soulful notes of floral citrus? You need to tune in to Black Coffee, because the South African producer and DJ is brewing some of the most compelling house music on the market today.
Lattes are a perfectly balanced drink with just the right amount of foam, milk, and espresso. This playlist features a great mix of songs with just the right balance of energy, perfect for listening to while enjoying your favorite latte.
Made entirely of solid brushed ash with a painted Black finish, the base of the Song coffee tables reveals its ancestry, firmly-established in the cabinet-making tradition, while the finishes for the table tops communicate an irrepressible desire to experiment with unconventional materials and sophisticated colors, each of which can be traced back to different stylistic interpretations.
Alabama song is an American deep south themed bar located in Northbridge. The dimly lit bar is choc-a-block full of American patriotism ranging from moose heads on the wall, route 66 signs, saloon bar doors and USA banners and flags painted on the walls. The detail of the bar is impeccable even with a fireplace nook in the corner covered with old saloon paraphernalia of the deep south.
Many coffee lovers feel so strongly about coffee, it can seem like the flavorful brewed beverage practically makes the world go round. This extreme devotion to coffee even tends to manifest within the work of musicians, with several popular songs making references to a good cup of Joe.
Originally released in 2019, the breakthrough track made the Top 25 on the Billboard Hot 100, and has been streamed more than a billion times, and counting. Its success story helps illustrate the ways that such platforms as YouTube, SoundCloud, and TikTok can break a song.
All week, Morning Edition has been examining how coffee fits into modern life, which led us to look into the many ways the drink's trembling tendrils have reached into popular music. With the Beastie Boys taking their "sugar with coffee and cream," Carly Simon finding "clouds in my coffee," and countless singers using black coffee as a metaphor for a life in need of a swift kick, it was actually tough to narrow a caffeinated playlist down to just 10 selections.
Early-20th-century bluesman Mississippi John Hurt sang the praises of not just coffee, but Maxwell House-brand coffee in particular, as he opened "Coffee Blues" with a strangely endearing pitch for the product. "It's good to the last drop," he announces, "just like it says on the can." But the blues classic has had more influence than most songs that open with product placements: The song's repeated references to a "lovin' spoonful" gave the '60s rock band its name.
A sleeper classic featuring backup vocals from Elvis Costello and Paul Young, Squeeze's 1982 single "Black Coffee in Bed" finds a narrative use for coffee stains as the remnants of a failed relationship: "There's a stain on my notebook where your coffee cup was," Glenn Tilbrook sings. Helping to cement coffee's unexpected place as the most wistful of beverages, "Black Coffee in Bed" is one of many career highlights for one of the most reliably sturdy pop bands from the '70s, '80s and beyond.
A 1994 hit for the pop-minded rapper, "Black Coffee" finds Heavy D chronicling and celebrating the attributes of his ideal woman: "Black coffee, no sugar, no cream / That's the type of girl I need down with my team." For all the metaphorical uses of coffee in song, "Black Coffee" hits upon one of the most intuitive, as he raps lovingly, "Black coffee, the African queen / part of the Afro-American dream."
J.S. Bach's Coffee Cantata (BWV 211) is, by its very nature, a departure for the oft-solemn composer, who frequently wrote in coffee shops. One segment of the piece translates as, "If three times a day I can't drink my little cup of coffee, then I would become so upset that I would be like a dried-up piece of roast goat." That snappy little passage may not fit on a mug, but ... you know, someone should fit that on a mug. Make the type small or something.
On Adult Swim's animated series Metalocalypse, Dethklok is a massively popular death-metal band, but it's also spun off a real-life incarnation. In cartoon form, the group gave a memorable, fatality-riddled performance of a commercial jingle in this scene from the show. If nothing else, "Duncan Hills Coffee Jingle" demonstrates that coffee is as metal as any number of more debauchery-inducing beverages.
Setting aside debates about coffee's metaphorical equivalents in Yung Joc's celebratory 2007 hip-hop anthem, the video itself is a timelessly silly, bawdy and broadly comedic romp, bursting out of eras past with larger-than-life characters (and caricatures), as well as cameos from Rick Ross, Trae, Eightball & MJG and others. It feels like it could have been made in 1986, and that's a compliment.
For the U.K. rock band Blur, coffee actually represents a chance to slow down and "start all over again," as Damon Albarn sings, "Give me coffee and TV / peacefully / I've seen so much, I'm going blind / and I'm brain-dead virtually." Given how often coffee is regarded as a pick-me-up, Albarn understands the way a sip serves to settle us into a place where we can process the world around us.
Research design and methods: Leveraging dietary and metabolomic data in two large cohorts of women (the Nurses' Health Study [NHS] and NHSII), we identified and validated plasma metabolites associated with coffee intake in 1,595 women. We then evaluated the prospective association of coffee-related metabolites with diabetes risk and the added predictivity of these metabolites for diabetes in two nested case-control studies (n = 457 case and 1,371 control subjects).
Results: Of 461 metabolites, 34 were identified and validated to be associated with total coffee intake, including 13 positive associations (primarily trigonelline, polyphenol metabolites, and caffeine metabolites) and 21 inverse associations (primarily triacylglycerols [TAGs] and diacylglycerols [DAGs]). These associations were generally consistent for caffeinated and decaffeinated coffee, except for caffeine and its metabolites that were only associated with caffeinated coffee intake. The three cholesteryl esters positively associated with coffee intake showed inverse associations with diabetes risk, whereas the 12 metabolites negatively associated with coffee (5 DAGs and 7 TAGs) showed positive associations with diabetes. Adding the 15 diabetes-associated metabolites to a classical risk factor-based prediction model increased the C-statistic from 0.79 (95% CI 0.76, 0.83) to 0.83 (95% CI 0.80, 0.86) (P < 0.001). Similar improvement was observed in the validation set.
Conclusions: Coffee consumption is associated with widespread metabolic changes, among which lipid metabolites may be critical for the antidiabetes benefit of coffee. Coffee-related metabolites might help improve prediction of diabetes, but further validation studies are needed.
Working from Portugal these days, this innovative artist has recently issued a new collection of songs on a record called Electricolorized. Playing it through as I type, I really like the freedom of this album and the fact it allows you do dip in an out without losing the tread of where this is going. Taking its time, the music is a bountiful meandering of groove, style and rhythm. Sometimes hypnotic and always an intriguing mix of sounds and textures, I like its free-flowing energy and improvised feel this music has about it. I could quite easily lose myself here!
Black Coffee revealed that his first album was created using very basic music-making software. I don't know how to explain the production stages of my album because all I did was put down the basic ideas that I had, I didn't use any MIDI controllers everything was played with a computer mouse. He added that the use of live instruments in a song is also very important, giving a track that final magic touch and bringing it to life.
Reserved, studiously academic, inventive, imaginative, quiet, enigmatic, shy and bold are but of the few ways in which many across the world perceive and see Black Coffee. No matter how he is seen he remains one of the very few Club DJs in the country who genuinely understands the precise function of a music deejay: he does not simply re-mix songs, he re-interprets their
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