Major Funding provided by National Theater Project National Endowment for the Arts Hamid and Christina Moghadam Foundation New York State Council for the Arts Jim Henson Foundation Brooklyn Arts Council
Song of the North is a large-scale, 80-minute multi-disciplinary live performance work by Hamid Rahmanian and collaborating visual and performing artists. The show employs shadow puppetry, animation, movement, an original music score by Ramin Torkian and voiced dialogue to interactively tell a tale adapted from the Shahnameh.
Yeah nigga. It's official. North North. It's on nigga. [Chorus x4] Crackin' niggas jaws Runnin hoes into walls Niggas yellin " North North
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This is an irregularly updated place for y short stories, mostly related to a fictional northern border- hence the name.
"So," the short man asked, not looking up from the papers he was going through, "Why, exactly, is a Danish Jew piloting a British Warship?"
Writer (s): Mike Donehey, Jason Ingram. "You Are More" is the first single off of the band' second album. Lead singer Mike Donehey explained, "Who we are isn't what we do. Who we are is what has been done for us.
You are more than the sum of your past mistakes, You are more than the problems you create, You've been remade. You are more than the choices that you've made, You are more than the sum of your past mistakes, You are more than the problems you create, You've been remade. 'Cause this is not about what you've done,
Males sing a sweet series of 6–10 whistled notes that accelerate over the course of the roughly 1-second song and often end on a rising note. The tone is so sweet that people often remember it with the mnemonic sweet sweet sweet I’m so sweet. The songs are a common sound of spring and early summer mornings and may be repeated as often as 10 times ...
Yellow Warblers use a variety of short chip notes, some with a metallic sound and some with a lisping or buzzing quality. Males sometimes alternate chip notes with their songs, and females may answer a song with a high-pitched chip. Both sexes use a high, hissing note in territorial defense, and may confront cowbirds with a seet call.