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How Many Moons - Professor Green



     
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How Many Moons Lyrics


(chorus)
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings
have i got left til ive no breath left to breathe
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings
(professor green)
have i got left til ive no breath left to breathe
how longs left for me
for whatever the time , for the rest of mine
im gonna spend time
putting an end to my
enemies who wanna put an end to my shine
why bother try offending me ?
its off with the heads of these swines
when i sign out you're gonna remember me
Remember me ? dont nobody wanna send for me
the only time they mention me or speak or me disrespecfully is when they sleep

ive been between alot of legs like the body of a centipede
please enemies be more courteous , save me the sweat and forget to breath
life could be easier i could ease it up
instead i look like someone tryna squeeze a dump
and i havent eatin in months so i need these MC's on the edge
ill be the reason they jump off
remember the jump off
when i come forth
you dont wanna be the MC i run towards
i like my liquor like im straight i aint no dumbledore
untoward two looks like i love and adore you
but this customer come before you
and its cool if i cant get it up coz ive got a cucumber for you
fuck the world im a stick in the mud
and stingy wanna drink you can piss ina cup
i leave women as livid as stunts
so run your lips ive been itching to give a chick abit of a cunt pun
(chorus)
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings
have i got left til ive no breath left to breathe
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings
(professor green)
have i got left til ive no breath left to breathe
how longs left for me
for whatever the time , for the rest of mine
im gonna spend time
putting an end to my
enemies who wanna put an end to my shine
why bother try offending me ?
its off with the heads of these swines
when i sign out you're gonna remember me
sanity i squandered it
i think ive gone too far in darkness im wonderin
ghetts is pissed he aint on the list
well im pissed off im not on the top of it
deep in thought ,conspiring
get the violin
call my thought
a firing im not twiddling thumbs
im playing the worlds smallest violin
inconsiderate like i give a fuck bout how they feel
kidnapping rappers and having them as microwave meals
i know my meals ready when the microwave stops
ima lot more jack nickolsen than i am michael j fox
the creep that crept up on daisy low
in a baby grow
sat on her knee and told her to touch me inapropriotely until my daisy grows
im not a man of her man kind
mechanical mad man
i make hannibal look more like an annabelle im an animal right now
(chorus)
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings
have i got left til ive no breath left to breathe
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings (have i got left)
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings
have i got left til ive no breath left to breathe
how many moons (how many moons)
how many mornings (have i got left)

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Professor Green is an english rapper from Hackney, East London, currently signed to Virgin Records, after Mike Skinner's The Beats label closed, and ended a run of his own radio shows on BBC Radio 1.

He was signed to The Beats, a record label run by Mike Skinner and Ted Mayhem from 2006 until 12 February 2008, when the label terminated. He rose to success upon winning the inaugural JumpOff MySpace £50,000 battle rap tournament in July 2008. Following this in 2009, Manderson worked with Lily Allen on her 2009 concert tour.

Growing up on the Northwold estate in Upper Clapton, Green's familial situation saw him being raised by his grandmother while he traded up school attendance for just hanging on the estate, like kids do. The Read All About It Songfacts reports that he had a turbulent relationship with his father, who was rarely around during Manderson's childhood and committed suicide in 2008. In his hit single, Read All About It, Green responds to accusations made by his stepmother that his debut album, Alive Till I'm Dead, was "cashing-in" on his death.

While the usual nefarious stories of low budget living played a part in his life, Green's formative years were also characterised by fun: skating was big on the estate, etc. He also had an early inkling that the art of verbal sparring would somehow play a part in his life, confessing how, he always wanted to be a barrister or a lawyer. "I like debates and I've always been argumentative, I think that's helped me in battles a lot."

However, while becoming obsessed with hip-hop at the age of nine "Biggie [The Notorious B.I.G.] is my greatest hip-hop influence", Green only switched up from passive fan to active participant at a relatively late stage. After turning 18 years old, he coined his first rhyme completely off-the-cuff when put on the spot at an impromptu freestyle jam session round a friends house. Passing the test with aplomb and impressing his music making peers, the underground rap battle scene suddenly opened up before him.

After seeing a poster advertising a rap battle at the Lyric Pad night in London, Green turned up and won. From that he graduated to competing at the prestigious Jump Off events, performing at venues like The Scala and Sound in Leicester Square, and becoming the first ever contestant to win six straight weekly finals in a row. While his seventh showdown ended in defeat, he returned undeterred, put together a second run of consecutive victories and became the first string seven wins together. Throw in a further series of seven straight wins and a dalliance with pay battles, and Green became a man to fear on the battle circuit.

Cue a change of scene and a flight to the exotic climes of the Bahamas to spar for $50,000.

Entering the Power Summit battle against America's finest freestyle icons (think 8 Mile but with no holds barred), the crowd may have first viewed Green as this white English kid who's not going to do anything, but his gift of gab and ability to coin scathing punchlines saw him through to the final where he faced Jin, a member of DMXs much amped Ruff Ryders camp. The judges decided in Jin's favour, although with the Ruff Ryder man having been given a bye to the final and Green having already been through seven prior knockout bouts (including taking out representatives from Eminem's Shady Records camp), by his own admission it was "more a case of me losing it as opposed to Jin winning it."

Still, with a crowd featuring US big rap guns like Busta Rhymes and Saigon, Green made a name for himself and in September went off to Hawaii to compete in the battle again.

A performance at the B-Boy Championships last summer ultimately paid greater dividends and opened him up to a new audience in Mike Skinner of The Streets fame.

"Mike approached me after the B-Boy Championships and wanted to bring me on tour with The Streets" he recalls. I ended up doing an opening battle on the tour and we formed a great relationship from that. At first it wasn't about me looking for a record deal though it was more a case of us deciding to lay down some tracks and seeing where it went.

At the end of April 2006 he signed on the dotted line to release his debut album on Skinner's The Beats label. And while UK hip-hop's profile is certainly in the ascendancy thanks to acts like Skinnyman, Sway and Kano, Green has his eyes on breaking out beyond the usual urban tag affixed to British rappers.

Name-checking Portishead, Radiohead, Tracy Chapman and Suzanne Vega as song-writing influences, Green is well aware of the importance of adapting his lyrics from the immediacy of the live battle circuit to cater to the depth of the album format.

"The thing with hip-hop is if you take a lot of rap songs outside of rap then they aren't great songs, whereas with something like country if you take them outside of the genre then the song-writing skills are still incredible, he rationalises. And I'd like to take those skills into rap."

So while never completely leaving behind the entertaining punchlines that have characterised his battle persona, the album will take in everything from songs about his estranged parents to wish lists of things to do before he passes away and the plight of the average stereotypical man in the eyes of the average stereotypical female (see Stereotypical Man, complete with the catchphrase "'Til my breathings done I'll be reading page three of The Sun").

As Green concludes of his new goals "I wouldn't be happy to sell just 30,000 copies of my album. I don't think that there's anything wrong with aiming above that, giving people an album they can relate to, and wanting to be successful."


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Professor Green