Memory Lane

Lyrics

[O.C.]
 Reminisce about my childhood, doin things kids did
 Roughhouse, playin in abandoned lots, throwin rocks
 Trashcan tops wearin caps in America
 That part of time be, tracked in my mind, it never blurs
 I sometimes visit my youth
 Close my eyes and think to alive, sittin on the stoop
 Of my crib it's weird, we had the "Our Gang" shit jumpin off
 Bring it up to date, a couple are gone
 Anyway, we was tight knit, mixed with, Spanish and black kids
 Inner-city youth, colorblind
 Even though we'd fight and clash, we'd get past the nonsense
 With no grown folk intervenin, we conscious
 Do it on our own with caution
 Punches are thrown, but a hour later we talkin
 If things get out of proportion, we adjust the fuss
 And turn it to fun, no more sqwakin
 Who thought about things like guns and coffins
 A child's mind nowadays wanna be flossin
 I didn't grow up fast but I knew a hardhead
 Left the store fast, 70's child, respect that
 'Til this, day and time, them moments I hold precious
 Deep in a child's place taught a nigga life lessons
 Up until the moment I chose this profession
 Work hard but there's no such thing as perfection
 I often sit and say to myself this be a blessing
 Forseein my callin in my adolescence, destined
 To get the cars, the fly clothes, I stand froze
 Thinkin back, swingin in the snow, makin angels
 [O.C.]
 Yeah, yo, harsh reality smacked me in the face as a pre-teen
 Some of my mans got caught up in the street dream
 Hustlin it wasn't my thing, yet I knew
 Some who did it and did it well, you know this tale
 But there's a slight twist to this ghetto tale I tell
 I had a cousin named Orell he was funny as hell
 His momma name was Pearl, so I called her All Pearl
 Auntie had a job offer in Cali in the San Diego jail
 So she packed up her shit and split, from my uncle
 They was married a decade and five cent, now fate
 Me and my cousin's tight, the youngest out my nanny grandbabies
 Let me show ya why life is crazy
 When we used to sham people, it never dawns on ya
 That ya might not see 'em no more, I could remember
 He was 5, I was 8, playin in front of my gate
 Momma tellin us to come in cause it's time to ate
 Say grace over food my providers was great
 Sayin peace to mom and pop still alive today
 I recall one of my cousins goin out to California
 Comin back tellin us niggaz dyin over colors
 He told me 'bout, khaki wearin, jheri curl brothers
 Doin drivebys in cars with machine guns bustin
 I found it farfetched, thinkin his story is stretched
 Findin out later on about the West coast sets
 Let me fast-forward the story and tell ya how it ends
 They moved to start a new life for his life to end
 Come to find out later on he was Blood inducted
 From the same set he claimed was the Blood who bucked him

Audio Features

Song Details

Duration
04:40
Key
6
Tempo
152 BPM

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