A dubdrop is the bass drop of a dubstep song, to which the rest of the song builds. The drop is typically characterized by a measure or so of reduced intensity in the music followed by an explosive entry of sub-bass and bass on the downbeat of the next measure. The nearly ubiquitous inclusion of very prominent sub-bass separates dubdrops from house drops or trance drops. Some dubstep songs might build up twice to the same drop such as Crizzly's remix of Willow Smith's "I Whip my Hair." Some songs feature an initial dubdrop and then proceed to build to a second one in halftime. These halftime drops can often be more moving and dramatic than regular dubdrops and are becoming more frequently used as the genre progresses.
by EP04 July 14, 2011
Tah-dee-woe
An unbreakable promise, one ensuring absolute truth. The validity of the promise is kept by mutual trust between two parties. One keeps a tadewo mainly in hopes that, in the future, the other party will keep it as well.
For example, Charlie makes Elliott tadewo that he Elliott will pay him Charlie back. Elliott keeps this promise to ensure that Charlie will stay faithful whenever he promises something through a tadewo in the future.
An unbreakable promise, one ensuring absolute truth. The validity of the promise is kept by mutual trust between two parties. One keeps a tadewo mainly in hopes that, in the future, the other party will keep it as well.
For example, Charlie makes Elliott tadewo that he Elliott will pay him Charlie back. Elliott keeps this promise to ensure that Charlie will stay faithful whenever he promises something through a tadewo in the future.
Charlie: Dude, I just saw a guy get run over by a truck.
Elliott: yeah right.
Charlie: No really! I Tadewo!
Nick: I got arrested last night.
Ben: You Tadewo?
Nick: ugh, no.
Elliott: yeah right.
Charlie: No really! I Tadewo!
Nick: I got arrested last night.
Ben: You Tadewo?
Nick: ugh, no.
by ep04 December 22, 2008