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Back Gate - Yo Gotti



     
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Back Gate Lyrics


You want an ounce?
Nigga, meet me at the back gate
Pull up, cut ya car off
Never sipped lean in the first place
'Cause I ain't never wanna nod off
I was cooking cocaine getting hard off
25 and a sawed-off
Eight dimes for the 80
Hope and foreign, the baby
Put a pound, hot nigga
Head to start off
(Back gate)
Pumping like a motherfucker (back gate)
Jumping like a motherfucker (back gate)
Get money like a motherfucker (back gate)
We robbin' like a motherfucker (back gate)
Pull up at your own risk (back gate)
Knowing we were with the shit (back gate)

Tryna down a lot of bricks (back gate)
Lot of niggas got hit (back gate)Ay, I'm talkin' 'bout
That back gate made a nigga
I seen that same back gate break niggas
You wanna fish a nigga, I advise you stay on top, yeah
Yo
Lost nigga in through the back gate (back gate)
Trap came fucked up the crime rate (back gate)
Old head fucked up my mind state
Watch him killing me cold blood in the broad day
If I ain't know God I would've lost faith
Niggas couldn't eat while they lost weight
Niggas ain't going on no diet
Niggas kill a nigga by they pride
Niggas gon' slide
Niggas gon' do 25 in a cell for' a nigga switch sides
You can see it in my eyes
That's pain, lost niggas to the game, and ain't the same
Did it for the check, I ain't do it for the fame
Only time you shot a pistol is at the motherfucking range
You a pussy if you gotta close your eyes before you aim(Back gate)
Pumping like a motherfucker (back gate)
Jumping like a motherfucker (back gate)
Get money like a motherfucker (back gate)
We robbin' like a motherfucker (back gate)
Pull up at your own risk (back gate)
Knowing we were with the shit (back gate)
Tryna down a lot of bricks (back gate)
Lot of niggas got hit (back gate)Told the plug meet me at the bottom (back gate)
Showed me two bricks and I shot him (back gate)
First time I ever did a robbery (back gate)
Ever since then they been hard for me
I'ma cut throat nigga's arteries (back gate)
I shouldn't be trusted properly (back gate)
Reach Chris turned me to a savage
Used to couldn't flip on a pissy ass mattress (back gate)
I know a lot of killers is activing
Know a lot of rappers that's active
Used to get my work from the plug I was paying on the backhand
That was back then when I was trapping
First time I ever shot a pistol I was 13
Glock hold 17, black with the red beam
First time I ever shot a nigga, rival hood shoot-out shit
Feeling like a wet dream, fell in love with the streets
Got a couple choppers, fell in love with the beef (back gate)
Got a couple bricks and we all gon' leave (back gate)
Back gate jumping like the coddle (back gate)
Ain't no other hood trapping harder (back gate)
Saved a hunnit thou when I was 16
I was moving bricks by the 16
That millimeter hold 16
Turned the back gate to a crime scene(Back gate)
Pumping like a motherfucker (back gate)
Jumping like a motherfucker (back gate)
Get money like a motherfucker (back gate)
We robbin' like a motherfucker (back gate)
Pull up at your own risk (back gate)
Knowing we were with the shit (back gate)
Tryna down a lot of bricks (back gate)
Lot of niggas got hit (back gate)Ooh ooh, ooh ooh, ooh ooh ooh ooh ooh ah
Back gate

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Mario Mims (born May 19, 1981 in Memphis, Tennessee), better known by his stage name Yo Gotti, is an American rapper signed to Cash Money Records. Formerly known as Lil Yo in the 90's, he released his first album, From Da Dope Game 2 Da Rap Game, in 2000. Since then he has released 2001's Self-Explanatory, 2003's Life, 2006's Back 2 Da Basics, 2008's Cocaine Muzik, 2009's CM2 (Cocaine Muzik 2 hosted by DJ Drama), and The Pyrex King: Street Runnaz Special Edition.

As one of the six epicenters of Southern hip hop, Memphis has always had a thriving underground capable of producing major platinum superstars such as Eightball & MJG, 3-6 Mafia and Project Pat,Skip a.k.a Gianni Booker. All of the above-mentioned artists at one point in time literally dominated the city’s underground rap scene before going on to become national superstars. Next up to bat is Yo Gotti, M-Town’s current underground rap kingpin. Like his namesake John Gotti, the Memphis based rapper has been running the Southern underground scene with an iron fist for the past. Known and respected throughout the South for his skill and finesse on the microphone, Yo Gotti is one the South’s most respected young rappers.
Born Mario Mims, Yo Gotti grew up in the infamous Ridge Crest Apartments in a North Memphis neighborhood called Frazier. His childhood was typical for a poor ghetto youth in the Deep South. Raised in a family of hustlers and exposed to hard times 24 hours a day the Tennessee rap titan soon turned to the only thing that he knew could get him paid, hustling. “Being from the hood things like hustling will come your way,” says Yo Gotti. “Everybody in my family hustled in some kinda way.” Ironically, hustling is what ultimately led Yo Gotti to rapping.
Taking his cue from Memphis rap legends such as Eightball & MJG, Al Kapone, Gangsta Black, Triple 6 Mafia and Kingpin Skinny Pimp, all of whom he lists as influences, Yo Gotti released his own underground tape entitled, Youngster on the Come Up and placed it on consignment at local mom & pop record stores as well as hustling it out the trunk. The tape sold like hotcakes on the street and made Yo Gotti the hottest rapper on the streets of Memphis. From the Dope Game to the Rap Game, Yo Gotti’s sophomore effort sold so well that Select-O-Hits, a local based independent distributor offered him a small deal and the Memphis rapper more than doubled his fan base with absolutely no marketing or promotions. Soon he found himself ranked among the city’s top rappers. In addition to being featured on the cover of Murderdog Magazine along side his idols Kingpin Skinny Pimp and Al Kapone his record From the Dope Game to the Rap Game made the list for the magazine’s top independent record for the year 2000.
Two years later he inked a distribution deal with TVT Records and released the critically acclaimed album Life, which did respectable numbers for an independent label. “It sold about 40 or 50,000, with no promotions or video,” says Yo Gotti. “That record did what it did on its own.” But as the old saying goes when one door is closed another opened. Gotti’s reputation as the king of Memphis continued to spread and that eventually led him to a production deal with Cash Money/Universal records for his group the Block Burnaz. With his TVT sophomore album entitled Back 2 Da Basics, Yo Gotti returns with the same hardcore street flavor that his die-hard fans have come to know and love, only this time around the true king of Memphis has elevated his game a bit. Given the fact that his last record didn’t do the type of big number he’d hope for you’d think that Yo Gotti would switch up his style to reach a larger audience. Right? Wrong! According to Gotti his street credibility with his underground fans means more to him than gold or platinum status.
“The one thing that you have to understand is that when you create a fan base off of street product the last thing you wanna do is disrespect them by changing because of the record companies and stuff like that. When you do that you change what created you. To me it is very important that I keep in tune with the people that helped to sell 40,000 records independently. That’s why I call my record Back 2 Da Basics.”
Produced by DJ Thoomp, Mannie Fresh, Carlos Brody and newcomers Street Tunes, Back 2 Da Basics offers fans a gritty, insider’s view into the real streets of Memphis as seen through the eyes of Yo Gotti. Nowhere is this viewpoint more intense than on “Full Time,” the amped up lead single –and featured in the MTV Films’ Hustle & Flow movie - with a thunderous bass and intoxicating beat that espouses Gotti’s formula to success –hustle full time.
“A lotta cats wanna be a rapper or a street hustler but they don’t wanna put in the time that it takes,” says Yo Gotti. “They want the money and the cars and the girls, but they don’t wanna work hard for it. But to be successful at anything you gotta grind for it.” On the song “Mama We Gone Be Alright,” he waxes introspective by reflecting on all of the hard times that he and his family have suffered through the years and offers her hope-filled words encouragement. “Mama We Gone Be Alright” along with the gripping tune “My Story” emerges as two of the most interesting songs on Back 2 Da Basics. These three titles along with club banging songs like “Shorty” featuring Baby make Back 2 Da Basics one of the best albums of the year.

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Yo Gotti