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Guide Over Us - Sizzla



     
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Guide Over Us Lyrics


Intro:
Tell you about Black Man supremacy. Ises Rastafari!
Woi yoi Salassie I will tek I home.
Hotter fire, hotter fire. (Aye hay hay!)
These are the Trumpets of the living man making the sound.CHOHey, watch over us, Emperor Salassie I Dem ya road rugged and steep,
I know it is a must, for us to make it home, even through dem yah nashingof teeth,
Hey guide over us, Holy Emanuel I, Sizzla Knees could a never get weak.
I know it is a must, for us to make it home, through dem yah nashing of teeth.
Unno sey it.1. There are those who constantly they have been been placing
The rocks on the tracks leaving devil snairs laying.
And them wish fi all who dem hate to be falling
Yet inna dem face they witness thy uprising.
Feeling Irie making it into my way
No apology, fire bun dem everyday-ay-ay-ay.
Conspiracy leads the game you play
Now they fall on their knees without my sayCHO2. Dem fi know I climb mountain and the valleys, (ohhoe)
Jah tell mi so I run both river banks.
Within life you've got follies (yeah yeah!)

Here is the rasta yout whilst giving thanks
Hey Jah Jah, give I-man health and strength
Working for you makes no sense
You Could Never put a dime in my pocket
King Salassie- I-run the frontline so watch this.CHO3. Dem high statistics and Economics have dem going-so Kinky
Mi draw fi mi rastamon song mi, binghi drum, mi calabash chalice
Babylon sey mi crazy!
Giving praises, Niyabinghi Ises, our business
Mi nuh join dem slavery
Jah Jah dem burn dem bridge spiting mi big.
When yuh dun (done) know I swim across through my victory.CHO

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Sizzla Kalonji (real name Miguel Orlando Collins) is a Jamaican reggae musician. He was born on 17 April 1976, in St Mary, Jamaica, of devout Rastafari parents and raised in August Town. He is unusually prolific, even by Jamaican standards. Sizzla has worked with such artists as Mobb Deep.

Sizzla, along with reggae recording artists such as Capleton, Buju Banton, and Anthony B, are credited with leading a movement toward a re-embracement of Rastafarian values in contemporary reggae music by recording material which is concerned primarily with spirituality, social consciousness, explores common themes, such as Babylon's corrupting influence, the disenfranchisement of ghetto youth, oppression of the black nation and Sizzla's abiding faith in Jah and resistance against perceived agents of oppression. Sizzla has over 40 full completed albums sold in record stores to date, the most popular which have been "Black Woman & Child" and "Da Real Thing" on the Digital B label, "Praise Ye Jah" on Xterminator, and "Rise to the Occasion" on Greensleeves.

Recently, however, he has come under fire for the homophobic content of many of his lyrics, and the advocacy of violence against gays.


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Sizzla