If you are looking for a or a specific musical analysis based on this phrase, could you clarify if you'd like: A fictional backstory based on the phonetic sounds? A deeper technical breakdown of the song's production? A poem or script incorporating the phrase as a mantra?

While the phrase sounds like it could be a specific location or person, it is actually a rhythmic, phonetic interpretation of the lyrics from the original song being sampled: by the Brazilian rapper Rincon Sapiência . Origin and Context

: The blending of traditional Brazilian rhythms with North American hip-hop and electronic production.

The "piece" or track where you hear this most prominently is characterized by:

: The vocals come from Rincon Sapiência's 2016 hit. The original line is "Era o tronco, o preto," which translates from Portuguese to "It was the trunk, the Black man." This refers to the "pelourinho" (whipping post) used during the era of slavery in Brazil.

: In the Baile Funk-inspired track "Tento," the vocals are chopped and processed. To many English-speaking listeners, the rhythmic repetition of the Portuguese words sounds phonetically like "Ery Toronto Peweto."