Drop, DROP, drops or DROPS may refer to:
"Drop" is a hip-hop song by American hip-hop duo Timbaland & Magoo, released as the first official single from their second studio album, Indecent Proposal. The track features rapper and DJ Fatman Scoop. A music video (directed by Chris Robinson (director)) for the single was filmed in May 2001 and premiered on BET in early June 2001. Since the single was released strictly via radio airplay it did not receive a physical release till November 13, 2001, a week prior to the album's release. The track is also featured on Def Jam Fighters III.
A drop in popular music, especially electronic music styles, is a point in a music track where a switch of rhythm or bass line occurs and usually follows a recognizable build section and break.
The term "drop" comes from the composer or producer "dropping in" the primary rhythmic and foundational elements previously hinted at into the mix more or less at once. Related terms, typically describing certain types of drops, include "beat-up" (so named because it is a point where the producer brings up the foundational kick drum beat after having faded it down during a break or buildup) and "climax" (typically describing a single particularly striking drop heard late in the track).
Many genres of EDM can have more than one drop during a track, especially if the song is built on a "dance-pop" verse/chorus with vocals; a drop of some kind is typically heard somewhere during each chorus as the high point of that verse/chorus cycle. Most genres, however, tend to emphasize a single drop as the beginning of the high point, or climax, of the entire track; in vocal subgenres this is typically the last repetition of the chorus, while in nonvocal genres it typically occurs in the last quarter of the track.
Tsar /zɑːr/ (Old Church Slavonic: ц︢рь (usually written thus with a titlo) or цар, цaрь; also Czar or Tzar in Latin alphabet languages) is a title used to designate certain European Slavic monarchs or supreme rulers. As a system of government in the Tsardom of Russia and Russian Empire, it is known as Tsarist autocracy, or Tsarism. The term is derived from the Latin word Caesar, which was intended to mean "Emperor" in the European medieval sense of the term—a ruler with the same rank as a Roman emperor, with-holding it by the approval of another emperor or a supreme ecclesiastical official (the Pope or the Ecumenical Patriarch)—but was usually considered by western Europeans to be equivalent to king, or to be somewhat in between a royal and imperial rank.
Occasionally, the word could be used to designate other, secular, supreme rulers. In Asia and Russia the imperial connotations of the term were blurred with time, due to the medieval translations of the Bible, and, by the 19th century, it had come to be viewed as an equivalent of King.
Drop to Zero, Drop
(its happening again)
I feel boxed in, (its happening again)
I'm trapped inside, (its happening again)
Feels like the world's closing in (its happening again)
and there's nowhere to hide
This time nothing feels right to me,
I'm sinking deeper within,
I'll wait for you to loose sight of me,
Before I suffer again.
(its happening again)
I feel strapped down, (its happening again)
While you feed the disease, (its happening again)
i'm lying face on the ground (its happening again)
For the whole world to see.
This time nothing feels right to me,
I'm sinking deeper within,
I'll wait for you to loose sight of me,
Before I suffer again.
Drop, Drop, Drop to Zero. Drop, Drop.
Now I'm so far away.
This time nothing feels right to me,
I'm sinking deeper within,
I'll wait for you to loose sight of me,
Before I suffer again.