Trends Of Culture - Who Got My Back? album flac
Performer: Trends Of CultureTitle: Who Got My Back?
Released: 1993
Country: US
MP3 album: 1636 mb
FLAC album: 1790 mb
Rating: 4.7
Other formats: ADX MIDI WAV AHX ASF TTA AUD
Genre: Hip-hop
Who Got My Back? (LP Version). 3. Who Got My Back? (Instrumental Version). Who Got My Back? (Cass, Single, Pro). Mad Sounds Recordings.
Another synonym for pop culture is popular culture. In modern world pop has undergone tremendous changes caused by the increased technological advancement. Every person seems to have a preferred pop culture menu. Most of these ideas are propagated by smart-phones. It is undeniable the nowadays pop culture has gone beyond TV shows and Bungee jumping to encompass the making of personal connections among peers and having them interact with each other. Seemingly, everyone is driven to like pop culture. It is greatly influenced by the media and penetrates all the elements of a society.
Back to the Future was never a thing of the past for Natasha Bezrukova, 36, who in 2012 managed to finagle two special guests for her son Seva’s seventh birthday. She posted an ad in a Moscow newspaper, asking for a kind heart that would be able to gift the child an hour of delight, as well as one specific detail. We saw the trilogy when Seva was six, Bezrukova says. To my surprise, he got the point of the time-space interconnection, got excited about time traveling, watched everything on YouTube on the topic. What Marty and Doc couldn’t foresee was how the past would become a fashion statement. Red lips, provocative poses, playful clothes – who would’ve thought that American pin-up, a popular 1940-50 trend, would make its way into contemporary Russia? And yet projects such as Haunted Cathouse, the first pin-up project in Russia, weave together the retro with the modern.
2019 pop culture trends - There are some incredibly exciting examples of 2019 pop culture trends in this list, including a playful and forward-thinking femcare campaign by . .An incredibly noteworthy project for this category is that of 'Stitch Gawd' - run by Emma Mckee who produces exceptional and unique hand-stitched garments for creatives affiliated with the Chicago hip-hop scene and beyond. Yet, her work is incredibly exclusive since she only exchanges garments for visual art products, beats, songs, and the like. She adds her 'payment' to an on-going project that celebrates the scene. It is dubbed 'Stitch Tape. To learn more about pop culture trends in the year ahead, check out our 2019 Trend Report.
Culture is the second studio album by American hip hop trio Migos. It was released on January 27, 2017, by 300 Entertainment, Quality Control Music and YRN Tha Label. The album features guest appearances from DJ Khaled, Lil Uzi Vert, Gucci Mane, 2 Chainz and Travis Scott, while the production was handled by Metro Boomin and Murda Beatz, among others. Culture was supported by three singles: "Bad and Boujee", "T-Shirt" and "Slippery"
King’s first album for the Stax label combines his hard, unflashy guitar playing with the sleek sound of the label’s house band, Booker T. and the MG’s. Hits such as Crosscut Saw and Laundromat Blues earned King a new rock & roll audience. Before he got into African thumb pianos and otherworldly philosophizing, EWF founder Maurice White was a session drummer at Chess Studios. EWF’s sixth album is make-out music of the gods. Anyone who thinks a woman singing country music is cute should listen to Fist City, where Lynn threatens to beat down a woman if she doesn’t lay off her man. Seventies greats like Rated ‘X' and The Pill brought feminism to the honky-tonks.
Culture (/ˈkʌltʃər/) is the social behavior and norms found in human societies. Culture is considered a central concept in anthropology, encompassing the range of phenomena that are transmitted through social learning in human societies. Cultural universals are found in all human societies; these include expressive forms like art, music, dance, ritual, religion, and technologies like tool usage, cooking, shelter, and clothing.
The pattern is this: pop culture is forever obsessed with a nostalgia pendulum that regularly resurfaces things from 30 years ago. How Memory Shapes the World. There are a number of reasons why the nostalgia pendulum shows up, but the driving factor seems to be that it takes about 30 years for a critical mass of people who were consumers of culture when they were young to become the creators of culture in their adulthood. After about 30 years, you’ve got a real market of people with disposable income who are nostalgic for their childhoods. So artists working in popular mediums are rewarded for making art that appeals to this audience. Like many pop culture patterns, some aspects of this phenomenon are intentional, and some aspects are an organic product of the personal histories of the creators involved.
Tracklist
| A1 | Who Got My Back? (Censored Version) | 3:01 |
| A2 | Who Got My Back? (LP Version) | 3:14 |
| B1 | Crotch Ripper / Mad Speaker (LP Version) | 4:05 |
| B2 | Who Got My Back? (Instrumental) | 3:14 |
Credits
- Co-producer – Grapevine & Dinky (tracks: A1, A2, B2)
- Producer – M.O.L*
Other versions
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 374631133-2 | Trends Of Culture | Who Got My Back? (CD, Maxi, Promo) | Mad Sounds Recordings | 374631133-2 | US | 1993 |
| 697127003-4 | Trends Of Culture | Who Got My Back? (Cass) | Mad Sounds Recordings | 697127003-4 | US | 1993 |
| 6971270034 | Trends Of Culture | Who Got My Back? (Cass, Single, Pro) | Mad Sounds Recordings | 6971270034 | US | 1993 |









