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Get Up - Dj Quik



     
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Get Up Lyrics


Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
Get up, pow, you foul, can't hang with this
Get up, now, gun blast, it's a Conflict
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
It's time to get up and hit the hay with the high ass hay song
Betta come and get some drop, the top up in
And cock the glock and peel rolling through the teal
What it feel? And if I slip ya betta come equipped
Listen to the whips and the gunshot rips
I really don't give a damn how you feel
I kill if I gotta do it down and to the ground I nail
When it's time to mack, them freaks
I gotta strap up with Jimmy, uh
When I get it with a girl and the dough
It's a rodeo show from the back with the Carlos
When I gon' slang them thangs
They write the word, the word is flict
Tricks with style, it's WildStyle

I'm pissed, you think you can throw
Now fool you wish, rodeo we on me, lay back
Taking all you bunk punks with the quickness
You supposed to be a playa but you running at the mouth
Shoulda mind your business
Come and get it, try to get it rougher than the necks
I break necks on somebody wanna flex
Then let's flex and get it off your chest
The wild west, yes, flict
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
Get up, pow, you foul, can't hang with this
Get up, now, gun blast, it's a Conflict
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
It's the wicked wild west, winchester for your chest
Or your man, people just can't understand
That I'm a hoodlum that's rawwed up
When I close in slowly posing if you snooze
Then you losing ya whole damn crew
Those scoundrels got a round for 'em
If ya mama want drama, I'ma bump her in too
Buck, snap, load 'em up roll out
Head for the hills now
Stuck, trapped, bottle up no clout
Death for real pow
Never could ya get it with a renegade desperado
Plenty ammo flowing like a fountain
I be coming round the mountain
Gunning, nigga done in ya best ta giddy up
When ya hear them horsies troddin'
At full riding and ya climbing and someone shotting
Much trouble passing on the barnyard
Go 'head and bounce and let it go
I'm sick a these soft party cliks wanna flow
It's the real rodeo kicking the flow
So hoe on the ride, can ya giddy up hoe?
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
Get up, pow, you foul, can't hang with this
Get up, now, gun blast, it's a Conflict
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
Thinking I won't bust you, don't luck your punk
Glad ta get your body stunk as I creep with a rowdy clik
Ta ease ya feet and pop the trunk
Man, I hate ta do this shit 'cause it was my melody
Thought that I called him a bitch, so I up my barrel Y
Didn't have ta hit ya for the homicide
That's why he died nobody cried
He shouldn'ta tried holla flict and ride
Meet you in your next life
Get on you square get high tonight
'Cause last night when he been here
Now he wanna know why he didn't ride
A pocket knife or even flict
Boing boing, ya see me dong floing
Giddy up, now watch me get thoing
Get ya ass fast, I'ma last
Demonstrate, pass we crash
Face to face and my nigga
Gohilian mixed beast type nigga
Dangerous to the world
Giddy up, now what you figure, nigga
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
Get up, pow, you foul, can't hang with this
Get up, now, gun blast, it's a Conflict
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
Everybody giddy up, drum down on your money
Do you wanna put um up now, shit
Fucking put him up punk, I'ma put him in the trunk
I'ma mind smoke him up with tha fives
All a bag a funk and go coast to coast and get up
Crucial Conflcit got 'em on cloud nine
Doing hard time in the state a mind of a killa
Niggas act like I won't pull tha block block blam
Boogie woogie shake it to the left man
Back to the right man, making the tightest song
Gone again, drinking on gin
Smoking on hay, getting in my zone
Riding slick been on the block a bit
Put on the good old Final Tic
C H I C A G O, giddy up while we kick that rodeo
Back to back, we gonna smoke on
And toke a sack and tack the proke on
I was born to get up and put 'em in flight
Never say never 'cause never'll do
And make 'em all giddy up tonight
Side to side, let's ride and roll
Ya can't control ya self no more
So come on ya gone, got 'em all dropping
And leave 'em hopping to the hip old west
For you ya boo ya whole crew too
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous
Get up, pow, you foul, can't hang with this
Get up, now, gun blast, it's a Conflict
Get up, ride, sit back, who's dangerous

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
DJ Quik (born David Martin Blake on January 18, 1970) is a West Coast rapper and record producer from Compton, California. He was raised at 436 West Spruce Street in Compton, California. As a teen he took up an affiliation with the Tree Top Piru Bloods, hence why his name is spelled Quik with the C conspicuously missing. A lot of Bloods would let the name "Quick" (because CK stands for Crip Killer) but he chose "Quik" to represent the Red but at the same time in some form of respect for the other side . He grew up without a father and moved out of his mother's home when he was only 17. He lived in the house as the only male with 8 sisters. His home life was far from stable as he raps in a song that one of his sisters was selling drugs to one of his other sisters. He began selling homemade mixtapes (like "The Red Tape", 1987) after he received a turntable for his 9th grade graduation and then began doing shows DJing around Southern California when he moved out. He signed to Profile Records in the summer of 1990, reportedly as the label's first six figure signee. Not only could he rap and write his own songs, he could produce as well.

His debut album, "Quik Is The Name" was led by the success of two top 20 R&B singles, "Tonite" and "Born and Raised in Compton." "Tonite" even charted on the pop charts. The album ended up reaching 10th on the album charts. None of his successive albums reached the success of his debut, though they have been well received in California, particularly his 1998 release "Rhythm-Al-Ism." His most popular albums are Quik Is The Name and Safe + Sound. . On "Safe + Sound" appears "Dollaz And Sense," which was a diss track to Compton rapper and member of the rival Tragniew Park Crips MC Eiht. Though full of bravado at the time, Quik now admits to fearing for his life during the period.

Instead of joining the G-Funk movement during the 1990's, DJ Quik had his own style that a new version of P-Funk, inspired by artists like Roger Troutman (who even taught him the use of the talkbox, which became a trademark for Quik's sound in the 1990's) and George Clinton. Throughout his career, Quik has collaborated with and produced for artists including 2Pac ("Heartz of Men", "Words To My First Born", "Late Night"), Janet Jackson ("All For You"), Snoop Dogg (e.g. "Doin' Too Much", "Buss'n Rocks", "Don't Tell"), Talib Kweli ("Put It In The Air"), Whitney Houston ("Fine"), Kurupt ("Can't Go Wrong"), Jay-Z ("Justify My Thug"), Xzibit ("Sorry I'm Away So Much"), Ludacris ("Spur of the Moment"), Chingy ("Bagg Up", and "Wurr's My Cash"),Dr. Dre, 2nd II None, Hi-C, Suga Free ("Street Gospel" album and on the "New Testament" album), 8Ball & MJG ("Buck Bounce") and others. Though he formally produced only "Heartz of Men" on 2Pac's masterpiece "All Eyez On Me" album, he went uncredited for work on many other tracks on the album; on that track he used his real name David Blake, because Profile did not allow him to use his stage name. In 2002, he produced Truth Hurts' Top 10 pop hit "Addictive". Quik used an uncleared Hindi sample on the record, and the copyright holders eventually filed a $500 million dollar lawsuit against Truth Hurts' label, Aftermath Entertainment.

Quik faced personal and professional tragedy when his friend and protegé Mausberg was murdered on the 4th of July, 2000. This was compounded by the death of his best friend Daryl Reed soon after.

Following 2000's "Balance and Options" CD he was dropped by Arista Records which in 1998 had bought Profile Records. In September 2005, DJ Quik released his first independent album on his own new label, Mad Science, which was supposed to be distributed by Warner Bros but Quik was forced to let Time Warner and so signed his Mad Science with Fontana/Universal. The album is titled "Trauma" and reflects the turmoil in the producer's life over the past few years. He than released "Trauma: Instrumentals". In recent years he has worked with a 74 piece orchestra during a collaboration with Marcus Miller while working on the score to the movie "Head of State." Over the years, Quik has morphed from a hardcore gangsta rapper to a mainstream producer and rapper who is not afraid to change his style. He has not abandoned his West Coast roots and now produces very much his own unique style.

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Dj Quik