English Language & Usage Asked on July 8, 2021
The phrase means literally “good song” or “good DJ”. selecta is the DJ (“the selector”). But why that spelling? And where does bo come from? Is it from the French beau or the Latin bona? Is there a link via Jamaican English? What evidence of use exists prior to the 1999 song?
One explanation is bo is a gunshot, representing appreciation. And selecta is the DJ, the one who selects the music. So when the crowd say "Bo selecta!" they're giving appreciation and want the song played again.
From the Drum n Bass Dictionary:
Bo! - Simulated gunshot.. when a tune is big, say this loud if you want a rewind. In Jamaica people used to fire blanks all the time when a tune was big.
Booyaka! - an expression, like a gunshot.. say it loud when you want the rewind.
Boomshot - see booyaka, bo
Selector - A DJ, the person who is mixing records,
The phrase "bo selecta" was featured in the 1999 song "Re-Rewind (The Crowd Say Bo Selecta)" by The Artful Dodger featuring Craig David. In the song 'Gunman' by '187 Lockdown', the phrase "bo selecta" can also be heard.
Answered by Hugo on July 8, 2021
Get help from others!
Recent Questions
Recent Answers
© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP