DamnLyrics - The center provides all the lyrics

Angela Jones - Tq



     
Page format: Left Center Right
Direct link:
BB code:
Embed:

Angela Jones Lyrics


Aw, yeah
Aw, yeah
Who's that girlSome say the blacker the berry
The sweeter the juice
You know baby girl damn sure proved it true
She was fine as Georgia peach wine
She caught the bus on a 129th
I used to watch her every morning as I ride by
Her Lil man on the bench showin' his behind
I mean she musta had so much on her mind
As she caught the city bus to the county line
She wasn't the victim of a deadbeat baby daddy (no)
The game took him and I tell you that was all she had (yeah)
Situation for a sister, real bad
I mean she need some type of assistance, a helping hand
One day she looked in the mirror (yeah)
Standin' there naked
That's when she saw the money and how to make it

Turned around, shook her ass, grabbed her titties
Miss Angela Jones is open for businessI'm like whoa, whoa, who's that girl?
She the baddest in the whole damn world
And you can call her when you're feelin' alone
This is the story of Angela Jones
I don't know (I don't know but)
What I've been told
Just get your money don't lose your soul
Sit back and ask yourself
What went wrong?
In the story of Angela Jones, nowStraight off the bat
Angie got the work
Winin' and dinin' and robbin' them jerks
She went from Gucci watches, humble beginnings
To that Cartier wrist wear with diamonds in 'em
The finest women
Couldn't fuck with Angela
It was all in the waist n how she handled ya
Dog, I mean baby girl had that thing
That could knock ya ass clean out and take your chain
It's a shame all the things that child could do to you
She'd do that booty dance like Beyonce do
Cold with her hands and a twenty two
Just in case the night don't go like it's supposed to
Who'd be mad at Angie?
Not this kid
She just playin' with the hand she was dealt
And that's real
So when I read it in the paper
Who could I blame?
Hooker found slain
Angie's her name
What a shameI'm like whoa, whoa, who's that girl?
She the baddest in the whole damn world
And you can call her when you're feelin' alone
This is the story of Angela Jones
I don't know (I don't know but)
What I've been told
Just get your money don't lose your soul
Sit back and ask yourself
What went wrong?
In the story of Angela Jones, nowI wish, I wish, I wish I could save ya (I wish I could save ya)
I wish I could make ya better (I wish I could a made it better for ya, baby)I wish, I wish, I wish I could save ya
I wish I could make ya better (oh oh)I wish, I wish, I wish I could save ya (I wish I could save ya)
I wish I could make ya better (I wish I could make ya better)I wish, I wish, I wish I could save ya
I wish I could make ya better[Repeat: x2]
I'm like whoa, whoa, who's that girl?
She the baddest in the whole damn world
And you can call her when you're feelin' alone
This is the story of Angela Jones
I don't know (I don't know but)
What I've been told
Just get your money don't lose your soul
Sit back and ask yourself
What went wrong?
In the story of Angela Jones, nowYeah, I wish I could save ya, baby
I wish I could make ya better, baby
Yeah, in the story of Angela Jones, now
Songwriters
QUAITES/THOMASPublished by
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC Song Discussions is protected by U.S. Patent 9401941. Other patents pending.

Enjoy the lyrics !!!

Tq

Terrance Quaites is an American R&B singer, known professionally as TQ.

TQ was raised in the church (he sang in the choir) but his real education came from the streets, where the first wave of hip-hop music became the soundtrack to his life. "From Monday to Saturday I was hangin', partyin', chasing girls, getting in trouble, and straight-up acting the fool," he admits. "But on Sunday my mother dragged me out of bed to go to church. That's where I developed my singing voice and learned how to make people feel me."

TQ was never a thug in the true sense of the word: His hard-working parents instilled positive values in him, and didn't hesitate to set him straight when he was wrong. At 16, when his mom found a gun in his room, she sent the teenager to live with an aunt in Atlanta. In retrospect, says TQ, "sending me down South saved my life. It made me straighten up—for awhile, anyway."

These conflicting circumstances honed TQ's survival instincts and his passion for music. "The little money I had to buy records was spent on rap," he notes. "See, I really wasn't much into my generation's r&b. I listened more to the old-school soul that my parents had in the house. So my music now is more a combination of that and hard-core hip-hop."

User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.

View All

Tq