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Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 3:44 pm
by Trichome
Depone wrote:Dictionary Flip.. true story...

Whats in a name anyways...
wasn't it related to "dropone" somehow? i remember reading that somewhere..

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 3:55 pm
by mta7388
JackalMask

no meaning behind it. buddies who i play music with just sitting around thinking of shit and i blurted it out as it just popped it in my head

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 3:58 pm
by Depone
Trainrek wrote:
Depone wrote:Dictionary Flip.. true story...

Whats in a name anyways...
wasn't it related to "dropone" somehow? i remember reading that somewhere..
Pffft naa. I keep well away from the disco biscuits. Im clean from everything but alcohol.

Btw Depone means to testify under oath.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 4:04 pm
by staticcast
I liked the idea of stamping "OBJEKT #1" on a record, and the German spelling looked better. And I live in Germany, so that kind of worked.

static_cast converts from one data type to another without any runtime checking to ensure the conversion is valid. It's something I'm very passionate about and spend a lot of my spare time doing.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 4:11 pm
by kaiori breathe
Well, I had settled on Kaiori because it comes from a Japanese word for 'artist', although I kinda butchered the word and changed it around to make it look nicer, and I used to play lots of Warcraft III and Starcraft, had a pretty bass heavy playlist for it, which happened to include a lot of prodigy and aphex twin (great music to play SC to), the song 'breathe' came on and 'Kaiori Breathe' just sounded good in my head after that, plus double meaning for me since my heart stops in my sleep a lot which feels kinda like you've got a black hole in your chest.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 4:18 pm
by krispy
My name is Chris Pullishy and everyone calls me krispy

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 4:48 pm
by MKRUGGER
Osciller.

Step 1. http://translate.google.com/
Step 2. Translate from: English to: French.
Step 3. Enter "Wobble".
Step 4. Click Translate.
Step 5. Osciller is born.

I should of made my username on DSF Osciller.. But whatever.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 4:49 pm
by LordBid
From the movie almost heroes there is a character named Bidwell, its been my nickname forever along with B, and ive shortened it to a tag alias Bid.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 4:58 pm
by Basic A
[quote="Voodeedoo"Neurotically Yours[/quote]


J's good peeps. Didnt know anyone other then me used to watch those lol. Biggup dude. You need an av. to match it.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 5:09 pm
by DJ Crackle
I'm a retard

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 5:50 pm
by ojsmooth
reading a carton of juice

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 5:58 pm
by Johnst
LordBid wrote:From the movie almost heroes there is a character named Bidwell, its been my nickname forever along with B, and ive shortened it to a tag alias Bid.
"Bidwell! Bidwell can you hear me!"
"Why yes, yes I can!"

"Of course he can, he's standing right next to you!"

sorry for the lame joke, but i fucking love that scene.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 6:13 pm
by arisemprex
Aris = Modem
Emprex = Keyboard
Aris Emprex = Nothing
So...yeah...

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 7:19 pm
by Siderealdb
Did a Google search for interesting words and came up with Sidereal. It has to do with measurements of time in astronomy. Supposed to be pronounced saɪˈdɪəri.əl but everyone pronounces it as two words side real. At one time I had convinced myself of some deep meaning, but I could really give a shit now.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 7:25 pm
by JemGrover
Sirius wrote:
JemGrover wrote:
Jem always gets spelt a "Gem" which is just ridiculous for a guy.
Think it's quite possible I am named after an Ibanez Jem, though as we were both created in the same year which I suppose is less camp :lol:
ya never heard of Jem & the Holograms cuz??
Image

your name always makes me think of them crossed with...
Image
hahahaaaahah

!!chea
hahahaha, was waiting for someone to bring them up. :6:

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 7:26 pm
by trypset
TrypseT

Tryptamines + a set of music

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 7:31 pm
by Wrigzilla
Well Wrigzilla was one of my nicknames at school and I preferred it to the other one: Wriglesaurus Rex.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 8:00 pm
by krispy
Wrigzilla wrote:Well Wrigzilla was one of my nicknames at school and I preferred it to the other one: Wriglesaurus Rex.
haha how did Wrigzilla become your nickname in the first place?

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 8:27 pm
by DJ Crackle
trypset wrote:TrypseT

Tryptamines + a set of music
I've always thought of dipset when I heard your name.

Re: Your Artist Name and the Story Behind It

Posted: Thu Dec 09, 2010 8:34 pm
by +verb
adverbialsensationalist:

taken from theory of adverb sensation...

An analysis of sensing that intends to convert the objects of sensation into sense-experience characterized in an adverbial way. An adverb is introduced to describe the way a sensing activity is taking place; thus, “I sense a red color patch” should be regarded as a statement of how I sense, that is “I sense red-ly.” The purpose of this analysis is to deny that sense-data are independent entities; rather, it takes them as sense-contents that cannot exist independent of the act of sensing of them. Sense-data are considered as modes of awareness instead of internal objects of awareness. The starting-point of this theory is the idea that sensations cannot exist when not sensed. It eliminates mental objects by reducing all statements about sensations to statements about the way or mode in which a subject is sensing. The analysis influenced both Moore and Russell with regard to their act-object theory of sensation and was later advocated by C. J. Ducasse, Ayer, and Chisholm. The analysis becomes difficult once a complex sensation is involved, such as, “I sense a red color patch to the left of a blue color patch.” It is also challenged for its inability to distinguish sense-experience from purely mental imaging.“If the adverbial theory is right, it tells us how I am sensing and does not require for its truth that there be an object being sensed.

so yea right? major fucking blah! over the years it became adverbial, then adverb, and now it sits at "+verb" -

i figure one damn day it will become:

the symbol formerly known as +

maybe one day i will become a noun?

/end

sorry if u read all that. peace everybody!