Added: 3 years ago
From: noveroog
Views: 226,375
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  • 1:42 <3

  • lyrics pls? :o

  • Comment removed

  • Yes yeessss perfect!!!!!!!!

  • 3:01

    Ia understand that you wanted some arabic calligraphy bur what you have at 3:01 is something very very religious ... Are you able to read arabic?

    It is a shi-a muslim say, for the 3th imam.

    I not saying that it is unsuitable but it meaningless to mix music and photo like this. and I am definitely not religious.

  • You racist bastard!

  • serius .. strange song ....... PLAY go this link:

  • @CatalystDestroyer what link

  • perfektttttttttttttttttttttttt­ttttttttttt

  • Nice song like it !1 ... But noveroog, please remove the picture the begins at 1:45m thats tooo damn respectless,, its something about karbalaa,, not to be associated with music..

  • I personally don't use iTunes Store because I don't like their ways of doing business. They are monopolists! And I don't like the compressed audio format. A good quality mastered CD is still better than both AAC and MP3 put together. Why is it that only indie records are available in the much better FLAC format for download? I don't get it. I think the best online music store is yet to come. Till then I'll keep buying CDs and converting to FLAC. (Hope you learned something. Cheers!)

  • I think the iTunes Store gives you the best buying experience at the moment. It has the largest catalog, decent audio quality, and a good price. But I don't like MP3 or AAC format too much. I only use it for ripping, when converting my physical discs to files, because most media players are accepting MP3. I mostly use Ogg or FLAC whenever I can. But it's a challenge to keep track of two completely separate music catalogs, one that media players like (mp3) and one they don't like (flac).

  • Needless to say, music files downloaded from (illegal) file sharing services is crap! It's plain stupid! Good quality distributions are really rare. Even when you do find a good distribution, it's still nothing compared to the original. For those who like to download music, services like iTunes Store, Amazon Mp3 and Emusic are good alternatives. For electronic music fans there are also specialized stores like Beatport.

  • You're not allowed to do that change, because you are manipulating with the original distribution. In that case you need to start a new distribution with the correct file names. So you need to rename those files, and publish a new torrent to the tracker. This is obnoxious but it is a necessity in order to have some sort of quality control over the things you distribute over the BitTorrent service.

  • This is exactly why services like BitTorrent are not allowing you to change file names. They have designed it this way to prevent false derivations, like in the case where the original file was named "01 - Unknown artist - Unknown title.mp3" and you rename it to maybe DJ Aligator - The Whistle Song (Radio Mix).mp3" because you know this is it.

  • So you don't care for naming the files, or tagging them, and you just put it in your shared folder. Now someone downloads this. And they don't recognize the artist or the name of the song, so they just assume it's DJ Aligator or whatever, because it sounds a lot like it, and they add that name as artist and they add assumed song titles. You see where this is going?!

  • Here's another example of how I think the false artist and song titles were introduced. Say you take a CD album and put it in your CDROM drive. Then you launch something like the EAC to rip the tracks. Say it's an odd album, little known, and the EAC or the CDDB server fails to find a match for it. So the resulting files don't get ID3 tags, and the file names are like "01 - Unknown artist - Unknown title.mp3" and so on. The ID3 tags might be "Track 01" and "Track 02" and so on.

  • At that time, people would just download as many mp3 files as possible. That's it! They cared little for the fact that what they were doing was wrong, and they cared nothing at all about what song it was, as long as it was a good song playing. You would just throw in a bunch of mp3 files in a media player and hit Play. It was all just a big mess! Then the behaviors started to change, and people started "tagging" mp3 files. And then we finally started to get legal alternatives like iTunes Store.

  • Why in the world would someone want to rename a file called "Infernal - From Paris To Berlin (DJ Aligator Club Remix).mp3" to something like "DJ Aligator - From Paris To Berlin.mp3"? If it's not in an attempt to deliberately falsify the information, and discredit the original author, then.... then it's plain stupidity! I personally like to know what I'm listening to. But at the time of Napster and the explosion of piracy, people didn't actually care much about that, as long as it was a good song

  • So you get this chain reaction of false information spreading through the Internet, increasingly fast. You could even step it up one bit and claim that it's a deliberately falsified title. You know, someone else wanting credit for the good song that you have created. This happened too, a lot. Any stupid thing is possible on the Internet. Because, even though the Internet and the Web was created by visionary intelligent people, even stupid people are using the Internet and computers today.

  • Now, you do rename it. And then, someone else downloads this file from you. It's now named "DJ Aligator - From Paris To Berlin.mp3". Now, they have never heard this song before, so they naturally jump to the conclusion that this is a song called From Paris To Berlin and it's by the artist named "DJ Aligator", which in fact is false. But they take it for a fact, and they start sending it to all their friends because they liked it. And their friends in turn send it to their friends, and so on.

  • Here's one example. Say you download a file named "Infernal - From Paris To Berlin (DJ Aligator Club Remix).mp3". Then you rename it to "DJ Aligator - From Paris To Berlin.mp3" for whatever stupid reason, you know. Maybe you think it sounds a lot like DJ Aligator, little too much, I don't know. I think only a moron can do something like that, or someone who does it intentionally, someone who wants to claim the song to be his own production, and distributes it in his own name. Well, anyway.

  • Somewhere, at some point, someone would rename one or several files to something else, to something that it wasn't. They would then pass it on to others. This way they would have introduced false names to the distribution/swarm.

  • Internet access was a big thing in the year 2000. Like many amateur musicians of the time looking for a chance to show themselves and make it big in the music industry, DJ Aligator would also use the new medium called "Internet" to distribute his music. In the old days, when looking to sign a deal with a record company you would give out demo tapes. In the new millennium, Internet was a much faster, and more effective way of distributing your music.

  • Don't get me wrong, I still think DJ Aligator is a talented DJ, and a good remixer. And that's exactly what he should be focusing on. But I don't see him as some major music producer.

  • Even after he signed a contract and released a few hits like The Whistle Song, and Lollipop, the reception was... well, I don't think it was as he would have expected. He managed to sell some records, and he gained some popularity and a fan base. But he never made any major breakthrough. Even today, very few people in the general public know of him, he is not well know even among electronic music enthusiasts.

  • This whole situation... this whole confusion with DJ Aligator... you know, figuring out what song IS a DJ Aligator song and what song is NOT a DJ Aligator song... it all has to do with piracy and file sharing on the Internet. It partially also has to do with the fact that DJ Aligator's rise to fame was a very slow and painful process. You know, in the beginning, he was an amateur, a nobody! He was not even on any record label!

  • Also, it's worth to mention that the Dance Lollipop album was only released in Russia. And it's more like a compilation album than a completely new album with new songs. And it features not only DJ Aligator songs, but also remixes done by DJ Aligator for other artists, such as the "From Paris To Berlin" song by "Infernal". Many people think that this is a DJ Aligator song. It's not! DJ Aligator only made a remix of it, for Infernal. So it's still a Infernal song.

  • Arash does have a song by the name Yalla, on his self-titled album "Arash". But it's 3 minutes and 6 seconds long, and this is not the same song. Also, DJ Aligator does have a song titled "Yalla (DJ Aligator Remix)" on his "Dance Lollipop " album, released 2006 on Veter Entertainment. But that song is 4 minutes and 53 seconds. And this one here is much longer.

  • Is this really a DJ Aligator song? Is it on label? What does he say in the beginning of the song? To me, it sounds like "introducing... for your listening pleasure... a 2005 collaboration... with Andy... Rocket Alani... and DJ Aligator". But really?!? Is he saying "ROCKET ALANI"? Or what?! I couldn't find this on any of his albums. I did a search on Discogs and it directed me to Arash. I know DJ Aligator did some minor remixes for Arash, but this is not one of them.

  • yyyyyyyyyhhhhhhhhhhhhhhe

  • يلا يلا!!

  • like it <3

  • pretty badazz

  • EPIC DJ. THATS WHAT I CALL IRANIAN. Ali forever!

  • yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

    

  • best song ever !

  • arabic :D!!!!!!!

  • e bem legal , acho bem interesante as pessoas q curtem , nao importa o idioma .

  • kose nanat aligator + andy halam beham mikhore az arabi khondaneton

  • Some1 pls translate the words that he's saying :) like it :-!

  • @NBGDDjomla91

    yallah (Arabic word): literally means  LET'S...

  • @NBGDDjomla91

    Yallah (Arabic word - informal): literally means LET'S.....

  • YALA YA SHABOB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!­!!

  • no hebrew at all. this is arabic and persian both. listen to it carefully. those who know the languages they know it

  • i got my glowsticks in my handsmother fuckers lets go!!!!

  • Yallah its not just arabic, its in Hebrew too..

    yallaaaaaaaaaaaa ya fatima ya sharmutta ibni ars titfadel ya kalb :D

  • mix arabic&iranian

  • Cmon, let's go boy cmon, cmon let's sing boys..... Sounds better in arabic

  • yeahh))) yella yella))

  • He sings iranian ... its not arabic

  • @iraner4life

    Persian not "iranian"

  • Comment removed

  • i love this song :x

  • Yallah is Arabic for let's go. I'm half Algerian, so I know these things. Also, this is a coincedence since my favorite song of DJ Aligator is Doggystyle and I found this looking for different remixes for Doggystyle.

  • @Snakemast345

    We use yallah in hebew also lol :P

  • fed musik :)

  • haha arabic song <3 it

    

  • its hott

    

  • altamente

  • Enjoy Awesome x)

  • mashalla

  • Awesome,,loves it <3

  • GREEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTT

  • Super nuta Good Music ja ljublju ruski

  • to nie jest ruski! to arabski

  • @Kaym94 naravno da nije ruski ;) Who told you that xD

  • GREAT Music xDD

  • born in Iran, raised in Danemark

  • he is a persian ( iranian )

  • Dj Alligator is Danish.. (:

  • born in Iran, raised in Danemark, now lives in Sweden

  • ur head suck gtfo if u dun like it.its cool song

  • well its only my opinion whats ur problem mate?

    plus i was already off it since didnt like it never heard it again DUH!!

  • that reminds of my summeholidays in egypt last uear :

  • OMfg i was searching this music for a while THX ALOT DUDE 5/5 !

  • i understand the farsi but not the arabic

  • lol i understand the arabic but not the farsi

  • lol if u understand 1 of them the another one has the same meaning haha =))

  • Wow

    Farsi and Arabic

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