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Birth name | Frank Fallico |
---|---|
Origin | Greater Toronto Area, Canada |
Genres | Rap music |
Occupation(s) | Rapper and record producer |
Labels | Knowledge of Self |
Associated acts | Choclair, Maestro Fresh Wes, Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz |
Frankenstein is the stage name of Frank Fallico, a former Canadian rapper and record producer.[1] He is most noted as a two-time Juno Award nominee for Rap Recording of the Year, receiving nods at the Juno Awards of 1998 for his single 'The Rain Is Gone'[2] and at the Juno Awards of 1999 for his album Frankenstein UV.[3]
![Gone Gone](/uploads/1/1/8/8/118885568/402161613.jpg)
The nightmare put an end to her writer’s block, and, thanks to the ongoing storms, Mary Shelley, as she would soon be known, began penning the first pages of Frankenstein in the weeks that followed. Chorus: Frankenstein Yo, the rain is gone, the pain is gone No matter how you flip it, what you did was still wrong The rain is gone, the pain is gone Here, check-check it out! Discogs で Frankenstein - The Rain Is Gone / All Hands に関するリリース、レビュー、クレジット、楽曲などを発見し、Frankenstein のコレクションを完成させましょう。. Frankenstein is the stage name of Frank Fallico, a former Canadian rapper and record producer. He is most noted as a two-time Juno Award nominee for Rap Recording of the Year, receiving nods at the Juno Awards of 1998 for his single 'The Rain Is Gone' and at the Juno Awards of 1999 for his album Frankenstein UV.
Forming his own independent Knowledge of Self label in the mid-1990s,[1] he released a number of singles, including 'Frankenstein's Pain', 'What Does It All Mean' and 'The Rain Is Gone', before releasing UV in 1997.[4]
The Rain Is Gone by Frankenstein - discover this song's samples, covers and remixes on WhoSampled.
Fallico also produced material for other artists, including 'Situation 9' on Choclair's album Ice Cold, 'When I Rhyme' on Maestro Fresh Wes's album Ever Since,[5] and a remix of Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz's 'Deja Vu (Uptown Baby)'.[1] Under the stage name Frankie Ano, he also collaborated with Bahamadia on the song 'Droppin' Gems' for the Drop the Beat television soundtrack.[6]
With Day, Choclair's business partner in Knee Deep Entertainment, he was also co-host of an internet radio show devoted to Canadian hip hop.[1]
He has since left the music business, and is currently a real estate agent in the Greater Toronto Area.
Much of his recorded material was reissued by Ill Adrenaline Records in 2014 as the compilation album The Science of Sound.[7]
Frankenstein The Rain Is Gone
References[edit]
Frankenstein The Rain Is Gone
- ^ abcd'Hip-Hop in Canada Gains Recognition'. Billboard, April 4, 1998.
- ^'Our Lady Peace leads Juno nominations'. Halifax Daily News, February 12, 1998.
- ^'Dion leads Juno nominees: Ladies and Twain also up for awards'. The Globe and Mail, January 28, 1999.
- ^Steven Green and Karen Richardson, T Dot Griots: An Anthology of Toronto's Black Storytellers. Trafford Publishing, 2004. ISBN9781553956310. p. 52.
- ^'Maestro working on some new rap tricks: Frankenstein suggests toning down volume on his raps'. Edmonton Journal, January 24, 2001.
- ^'Drop the Beat becomes a CD: Canada's first hip hop TV show releases soundtrack'. National Post, March 7, 2000.
- ^Matt Jost, 'Frankenstein :: The Science of Sound :: Ill Adrenaline'. Rap Reviews, July 22, 2014.
Frankenstein The Rain Is Gone Lyrics
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