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It's Over - Dobie Gray



     
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It's Over Lyrics


Uh huh
Ah hah
Ah hah
See when y'all heard that
All I'm doin is laughin' at all y'all niggas that been frontin'
On my man's, in there man, these niggas started this shit man
When I come to the show that I rock
And the flow that I drop
Y'all know Run kills the mic
Can't forget about the olds that I got
And the rolls in the spot
Ya'll know I didn't steal it right?
How ya gonna take an old song been around so long
So so def done made it tight
Done went from a DJ to an MC to the REV like overnight
Everybody lookin' players get shook when
Rev Run walk up in the spot
Even though the crooks that

Be livin' up out in Brooklyn
Just can't help but point a lot
Everywhere I go now
People say "oh wow"
Cause they know how I get
It don't matter if it's motown
All the way to your town
You can't slow down my hits
Can't slow it down man
Think about this
From 1983 to 2000, its 2001
And these niggas are still on the run
Y'all niggas just crazy
Ya'll out here tryin' to front
Like they ain't the reason nigga went and bought a pair of shell toes
The fuck is wrong with y'all
People wanna hear Rev Run say
'Cause I got dough that I must be a type of fraud
But you know that the thing that's funny
If God made money, then how rich is the Lord
Went got JD , made me crazy play me up in the club
Got a brand new Mercedes for my lady
Bustin me I'm older
To a Bentley Arnage that come out the garage
On the side of a grand prestigious home
Y'all ask if I'm blessed, by God player
What you thought, what Rev you see on chromes
Gotta make these dollars, comin outta Hollis
Got my collar on too, I got the rhyme on the beat
And the vibe from the street and now the rest is on you
The rest is on me man
Let me let y'all know somethin'
The first rap group to get on MTV
Heard heavy ya heard me
And then they go turn around and resurrect Aerosmith like
You know what I mean, there ain't none of that
Know what I'm sayin
And if it weren't for these cats man y'all wouldn't know
Nothin' about no LL Cool J or Beastie Boys you know what I mean
And this comin' from me I'm lookin at it man
Since I've been 13 years old, now I been watchin these cats man
I aint no old nigga, but I know nigga ya heard me
Ya know what I'm sayin', so stop all that frontin' man
Stop all your frontin' ya heard me
Ya hear
Don't forget the hits that I made on the gig that I played
If ya had love back in the day
Just raised up my kicks and changed up the spit
And turned into the Run y'all love today
I picked the mic back up, came right back up
To the top where I'm supposed to be (supposed to be)
And when the track light up y'all come back right up
Y'all playa's too close to me
You know what I used to like?
The way my man used to come up on stage
And grab the mic and just throw the damn stand
Across the stage man
Then he used to tell his man like
"Yo D, come right here in the middle of the stage
Grab yo dick and say what you gotta say"
And you know what D used to say
He used to say
"Party people, your dreams have now
Been fullfilled, get out your seats and let's get ill
That's right y'all, we not just rough, we more than tough"
And when it comes to shit like this hah we got enough
Know what I mean? you know who the fuck I am
You know my name, you know my game
Its So So Def, Run DMC

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Dobie Gray (July 26, 1940 - December 6th 2011) was an African American singer and songwriter, whose musical career spanned soul, country, pop and musical theater. His hit records included "The 'In' Crowd" in 1965, and "Drift Away", which was one of the biggest hits of 1973, sold over one million copies, and remains a staple of radio airplay.

Gray was born near Houston, Texas, by his own account in Simonton although some sources suggest the nearby town of Brookshire. His birth name was probably Lawrence Darrow Brown, who is listed in the Fort Bend County Birth Records as being born in 1940 to Jane P. Spencel and Jethro Clifton Brown. Other sources suggest he may have been born Leonard Victor Ainsworth, a name he used on some early recordings.
His family were sharecroppers, and he discovered gospel music through his grandfather, a Baptist minister. In the early 1960s he moved to Los Angeles, intending to pursue an acting career but also singing to make money.

He recorded for several local labels under the names Leonard Ainsworth, Larry Curtis, and Larry Dennis, before Sonny Bono directed him towards the small independent Stripe Records. They suggested that he record under the name "Dobie Gray", an allusion to the then-popular sitcom The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis. His first taste of success came in 1963, when his seventh single "Look At Me", on the Cor-Dak label, recorded with bassist Carol Kaye, reached # 91 on the Billboard Hot 100. However, Gray's first album, Look!, failed to sell.

Greater success came in early 1965 when his original recording of "The 'In' Crowd" (later recorded by Ramsey Lewis) reached # 13 on the chart. Written by Billy Page, arranged by his brother Gene,[8] and produced by Fred Darian. Gray's record reached # 11 on the US R&B chart, and # 25 in the UK. The follow-up, "See You at the Go-Go", recorded with such top session musicians as Kaye, Hal Blaine and Larry Knechtel, also reached the Hot 100, and he issued an album, Dobie Gray Sings For 'In' Crowders That Go Go Go, which featured some self-penned songs.

Gray continued to record, though with little success, for small labels such as Charger and White Whale, as well as contributing to movie soundtracks. He also spent several years working as an actor, including 2½ years in the Los Angeles production of Hair. In 1970, while working in Hair, he joined a band, Pollution, as singer and percussionist. They were managed by actor Max Baer Jr. (best known as "Jethro" in The Beverly Hillbillies), and released two albums of soul-inspired psychedelic rock, Pollution I and Pollution II. The band also included singer Tata Vega and guitarist/singer James Quill Smith. After that, he worked at A & M Records on demo recordings with songwriter Paul Williams.

In 1972, he won a contract with Decca Records, shortly before it became part of MCA, to make an album with producer Mentor Williams, Paul's brother, in Nashville. Among the songs that they recorded at the Quadrafonic Sound Studios, co-owned by session musicians Norbert Putnam and David Briggs, was Mentor Williams' song "Drift Away", featuring a guitar riff by Reggie Young. Released as a single, the song rose to # 5 on the US pop charts, and remains Gray's best known song today. The follow-up, a version of Tom Jans' much-covered song "Loving Arms", made # 61 in the chart. Gray also released three albums with MCA, Drift Away, Loving Arms, and Hey, Dixie, but later stated that MCA were unsure of how to market the albums - "They didn't know where to place a black guy in country music."

In the mid-1970s he moved permanently to Nashville and signed for Capricorn Records, writing songs in collaboration with Troy Seals. His biggest hit singles in the late 1970s were "If Love Must Go", # 78 in 1976, and "You Can Do It", # 37 in late 1978, his last solo chart hit to date. He increasingly concentrated on songwriting, writing songs for a variety of artists including Ray Charles, George Jones, Johnny Mathis, Charley Pride and Don Williams. Gray also toured in Europe, Australia and Africa in the 1970s. He performed in South Africa only after persuading the apartheid authorities to allow him to play to integrated audiences, becoming the first artist to do so in that country. His popularity in South Africa continued through numerous subsequent concert tours.

He re-emerged as a recording artist for Capitol Records in the mid-1980s, recording with producer Harold Shedd. Gray placed two singles in the US Billboard country chart during 1986 and 1987, including "That's One to Grow On" which peaked at #35. His country albums included From Where I Stand in 1986, and he made several appearances at Charlie Daniels' popular Volunteer Jam concerts. He also sang on a number of TV and radio jingles. In 1997, he released the album Diamond Cuts, including both new songs and re-recordings of older material.

In 2000, Wigan Casino DJ, Kev Roberts, compiled The Northern Soul Top 500, which was based on a survey of northern soul fans. Gray's "Out On The Floor", a 1966 recording which had been a British chart hit in 1975, was placed in the Top 10. "Drift Away" became a hit again in 2003, when it was covered by Uncle Kracker on his No Stranger to Shame album. The recording was a duet between Kracker and Gray, who was also featured in the video. It ended in the nineteenth place in the Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 2003.

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Dobie Gray