A Quote by David Gallagher

I'm more into beats than rhymes. — © David Gallagher
I'm more into beats than rhymes.
I'm more into beats than rhymes. I'm a huge fan of anything touched by the Neptunes. Dancing is kind of my thing. I go out with my friends as often as I can on the weekends, and I'm always drawn to girls with rhythm.
In about seventh grade, that's when we started playing around with beats, rhymes.
I enjoy writing rhymes and sitting alone in a room listening to beats. It's pretty amazing.
I definitely feel excited to be able to put really hard beats - like hip-hop beats - behind my music, more than I did before.
I think a lot of people can learn from listening to hip hop. It ain't always about beats and rhymes.
When I'm in the studio, I'm strictly thinking about the beats, the rhymes and the song. The decision I make once the songs are created, and there's a barcode put on the package, and I'm out there in the street selling it, those decisions as a businessman are different than the creative decisions you make.
?fter all the beats and rhymes, I felt like everybody around me was rapping and so I was like.
My fans love me for me, my beats, my rhymes.
I'm always in the studio with my dad. I've written a few songs. I'll start off writing rhymes, then freestyles, then I add in beats.
Rhymes more fresher than a virgin in a 'frigerator.
I'm a damned sight smarter than Grant; I know more about organization, supply and administration and about everything else than he does; but I'll tell you where he beats me and where he beats the world. He don't care a damn for what the enemy does out of his sight but it scares me like hell.
My favorite rhymes are sort of half-rhymes where you might just get the vowel sound the same, but it's not really a true rhyme. That gives you far more flexibility to capture the feeling you're trying to express. But sometimes it's best not to have any rhyme.
I hope to incorporate more variety of beats, more syncopation. It becomes very easy to play straight beats; straight rock is alluring.
Toasting is basically what you call rapping. It came off of playing the beats at the parties, however it be. You find a space in the beat, and you have somebody live just basically saying rhymes over the beat.
Hip-hop has survived as a sonic practice more than anything else. It's an approach to music-making based in sampling and rhyming over beats, that's proven far more versatile than its detractors thought it would.
People only call me 'Fiery' because it rhymes with Fred, just like 'Typhoon' rhymes with Tyson
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