| It’s the brown child, better version of the story
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| Sees Conji, a sister, mother played by Tori
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| In Astoria, kid named Tiki took the cake
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| The greens and the steak and the potatoes and the plate
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| Never a dummy, rejections are funny
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| Cuz, the first years of my life I thought that food stamps were money
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| So by ten I was the mess, got a men and then I had friend
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| So now I’m snatching pocket books with Sean Wilkinson
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| 'Get that money, lil nigga' that’s what they told me
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| I never sweated props cause like my pops they couldn’t hold me
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| Until he found shorty’s got it going on, rolling on
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| Damn, Who told? |
| bendecion.
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| The Bland man, and my pop don’t give a damn
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| The day I played with matches, took the stove to my hand
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| Hot temperature! |
| He told me the players' version
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| The ego in submersion for the end of week excursion
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| Until I’m back, back on the scene
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| Like a ball on the green, giving strokes with my team
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| Cuz, despite the commentary pop told me, I’m lowly
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| And moms change-bank can’t hold me, so
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| She don’t scold me, she just grabs the belt
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| Knuckle the buckle, tells me all about the pain she felt
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| At the precinct when a pre-teen was spotted at the scene
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| Came up with the green, not a cop could intervene
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| (Mother)
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| Listen here, you little motherfucker
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| You ain’t going to fuck with me
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| Got me coming to this damn precinct
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| Dammit, I’m a kick your motherfucking ass
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| Shit! |
| You ain’t going to drive me crazy
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| Now, dig it, Tori met Tom not too long ago
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| He was a nigga, yo, he said he had the flow though
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| He loved a bro, I know I didn’t see you grow
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| To a TV show cause the nigga said we all could go
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| So I’m up and out of the ghetto, son of a gold miner
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| City-slicking Carolinian standing out like Ming china
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| A golden bull at heart though I moved around
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| The balls bounced to the bottom, settled at a small town
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| 'Hey, boy! |
| What’s your name?!' |
| First day, first fight
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| I’m out of New York and «boy» it don’t sit right if you’re white
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| Light were my steps from there
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| Did my dirt on the low, a Southern town nightmare
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| Cause the next year it was me and «F» on the furlough
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| We were the only Queens kids but there were other boroughs
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| With Rockwell, D-Ski, Ron Duke and Freddie
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| New York was represented like we danced for Rock Steady
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| Stan had tables and mics, every brother nice
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| Not only could we rip and rhyme but backspin and slice
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| With Paris and Foxy and Christina P’s bust
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| You know them loud, raunchy, trouble-making niggas? |
| That was us
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| A menace yet still I played tennis, ain’t that cruddy
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| Advanced with the Reeboks, they called them 'cut buddies'
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| I hung with one, only one younger brother
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| Shorty Doo-Wop could cut and scratch up any other
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| Bigger than his size, was barely five feet
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| In '83 broke beats that today rock streets
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| With no one to grade it, still never debated
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| Some saw and hated but they never contemplated
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| Yeah! |
| It was the foul child with wild styles, pal but not foul
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| A dis was never okay unless it came before corral
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| Pals of mine, peoples though were down
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| I graduate next week and, yo, next week I’m NY bound
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| Seven days from that one I’m leaving love that weighs a ton
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| I’m going to miss you niggas, yo, that rapping shit was crazy fun
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| But I’m leaving on the next bus
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| I’ve got your numbers and we’ll keep in touch, I trust
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| Gliding, riding back to my domain
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| For love and money, fuck fame, my life will never be the same
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| As the next man’s words, can you dig it?
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| I say I got a scheme, a-yo, I gots you figured
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| (Corner)
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| Yo, wassup, wassup. |
| Is money out here?
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| Yo, I just got a call from that nigga Tiki
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| Remember that nigga Tiki?
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| He on his way from down South
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| My real pops was a pusher, when we left he had a section
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| So I keep it in the family, or at least I make connections
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| With the prime figures for affiliated support
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| In my purchase of cargo in the import and export
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| Flushing, Queens: back when junkies was the fiends
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| My childhood friends held buddha, had babies in dreams
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| I took pops off my shit list cause he had the fitness
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| To help Tiki get his, what the fuck, pop? |
| Jehovah witness
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| What the fuck, pop? |
| What’s with the fizz-plop |
| I’m like, I can’t put him down but the shit don’t stop
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| Worked at a law firm, for lack of fear
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| I wrote a resume, spending words like a millionaire
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| From there to the bank, see the bank’s down the block
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| So now I’m close to home, I clock, I plot
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| With Popote, he’s my cousin and a wily one
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| Though the kid was younger, quick like thunder
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| With the heart to put you under
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| Props even, the shit can’t fail
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| I saw Reese, bagged with Pote and made a sale
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| (Co-Dee)
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| Go ahead, get that money
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| Get that money!
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| I ain’t going to let nobody see you
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| I got your back, baby, I got your back
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| You want five? |
| You only got two
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| On one late night, I had made a nice amount
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| More than two weeks pay, playing with the new accounts
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| So I rose like a petal, fuck pops, I run with thugs
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| Levis, Tims, hoodie, coat, skully, drugs
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| Fatigues before they were the fashion
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| Pockets with work and others with cash in
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| Thought I was cool with tools and mad trap
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| My pops was like «read this» but I was like fuck that
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| So I jingle-jangled, clocked at every angle
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| Tiki’s getting paid and his crew’s star-spangled
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| And everyday, all day/night, yo, whatever
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| Niggas on the strip in sub-zero weather
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| Back before the first generation of fiends
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| My team was sheer cream, keeping dollar bills green
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| Fashion, Calvin cooler, playing Rick the Ruler
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| And I won’t front on nobody cause I pulled on a woolah
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| Back in '86 first, foremost and final
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| Rhyming on the corner, all I want to be’s on vinyl
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| I bum rush and boom bash, not even for merit
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| Bounce out to see Reg and Joe down on Merrick
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| But mostly it’s the strip that I played like a cock
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| On the block until the day I got knocked
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| (Police sirens to fade) |