
This disc trumps the first in a major way, and it's not just because the groups on it did the innovating. Raumschmiere's gnashing cyborg-glam stomper "The Game Is Not Over." (Avenue D's "Do I Look Like a Slut?" is of note for the fact that it's one of the dumbest songs ever recorded, parody or not - a fact the group no doubt takes pride in.) On the second disc, there's the older material that inspired most of the tracks on the first oft-compiled stuff like Gina X Performance's "No GDM," the Normal's "Warm Leatherette," Fad Gadget's "Back to Nature," and - of course - Cabaret Voltaire's "Nag Nag Nag" are some of the highlights. Gusto ko nang bumitaw-aw-aw Kung kalungkutan kong kaligayahan mo Kung pagkagapos ko'y paglaya mo Kung ang sugat sa puso kong siyang lunas diyan sa puso mo (Ooh) Paano na ako, magpaparaya ba Papakawalan na lamang ba kitang buo sa loob Pinanghihinaan na nang loob Gusto ko nang bumitaw Ngunit ayaw pa ng puso Gusto ko nang bumitaw May pag-asa pa. You can translate it as ‘did’ in most cases, but the meaning depends on the context. On the first disc, there's the newer material - Swayzak's "I Dance Alone," Tiga's "Burning Down," Chicks on Speed's "We Don't Use Guitars," and T. NAG- The Tagalog prefix nag- is used to verbalize nouns in the past tense. Compiled by Johnny Slut, a DJ and the promoter of the club night that takes its name from that same Cabaret Voltaire song, this two-disc set makes for a snapshot of what you might've heard if you had set foot in his domain.


Filipinos do this all the time That’s why when you hear them speaking Tagalog, there seems to be a lot of. This prefix is very useful because you can put it in front of English nouns. So there you have it: one example of how slowly music has moved during the past couple decades. All solutions for 'nag' 3 letters crossword answer - We have 21 clues, 99 answers & 193 synonyms from 3 to 19 letters. The verb nag can be used to describe someone annoying you by repeatedly asking you something, telling you something, reminding you to do something, complaining. The Tagalog prefix nag- is used to verbalize nouns in the past tense. It's very doubtful that, while making its initial impact, the song could have been connected in any way to a club night reliant on advances made in music around 1955.

In 1979, 25 years prior to the release of this compilation documenting a London club night, Cabaret Voltaire released a song called "Nag Nag Nag" - a blaring, blistering, nagging song built on what sounded like rotting electronic instruments.
