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Come Again (Interlude) - TQ



     
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Come Again (Interlude) Lyrics


Written by tqI hope your blessin'
Cos lord I'm missing
And I wish I could did something with it
It's time for us to come again
Here I go again (2x)
It's time for us to come again
Prayin an blessin'
Cos lord I'm missing
And I wish I could did something with it
It's time for us to come again
Here I go again
It's time for us to come again
2000
Thank u jesus
We made it
Everybody alright
Everything stands
It ain't a damn thing changed

Time 4 some shit to change
Time to come again (time 4 us to come again)
A mans worth
Can't be judged by how much money he got
But by the actions that he takes to better hisself
Understand
So 4 scott le rock the human beatbox
Freaky todd and
Tupac
Eazy e
The notorious one
And big pun
God bless em
Prayin an blessin'
Cos lord we missing
And I wish I could did something with it
It's time for us to come again
Tq
Here I go again
Westside 4 life
Prayin an blessin'
Cos lord we missing
And I wish I could did something with it
It's time for us to come again
Here I go again (2x)
Even do I miss my people I still ride with my people
When I bump 'em in my stereo so hit me do
For all my people that still remember my people
It's time for us to come again

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."

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Tq