Released: April 15, 2014

Songwriter: Quelle Chris Pharoahe Monch

Producer: Quelle Chris

[Verse 1]
Comstock cell block shit, cops are minimal
Rock your snot box top notch, watch for sentinels
Hide like Sasquatch squat, the revenue drop
Pull out Glocks hot spot, pop your genitals - Pharoahe
Generally a general for generations of jams generated for criminals
Retractable claws cut country club cardigans
Both parties party with me, bipartisan
Kick start a starter kit, pull out dick on a charlatan
In Harlem when you're romancing these hoes like Harlequin
Listen, my cock'll leave 'em in a coma
But the Glock'll leave you messy like you play for Barcelona
You are now working with a renowned
Master with mastery over conjugated verbs and nouns
Yo, you are now working with a renowned
Master with mastery over conjugated verbs and nouns
Go!

[Hook]
Civilian sings, I drink, I lean
I see dead people when I dream
This war with self is so extreme
Sometimes I think I need to - scream
This war with self is so extreme
Sometimes I think I need to
Scream, scream, scream

[Verse 2]
Press your luck, fuck a press kit, press can't harm me
But chest presses a deadlift, bench press zombies
Hysteria rap burn the flag, fuck America
Start the revolution, poison the water with malaria
Fuck it, I came back from the war of scorn
Like Uncle Ruckus throwing bananas on the White House lawn
Cryptic anarchists spit that apocalyptic dark shit
Communists, radicals, racism, Marxist
You couldn't possibly wanna lock horns
Spit holy water on your throne wearing a crown made of thorns
*Ouy Kcuf!* - just thought I should say that
Every rhyme is like a time bomb strapped beneath your Maybach
Cop the range, stop the strange, lock the game, rock the chain
Stop the train, smoke a fag, pop your brain
Unless you can inject me in your arm like a narcotic and squeeze
Please never say my name in vain, let's go

[Hook]

Pharoahe Monch

Troy “Pharoahe Monch” Jamerson is a near-universally loved and respected underground rapper. He released three extremely well-regarded albums with the duo Organized Konfusion in the 1990’s, including the classic The Extinction Agenda

Since the group’s demise, he’s released several fantastic albums' worth of boom-bap beats (occasionally with a gospel touch, as on 2007’s Desire), dense wordplay, political musings, military metaphors, and thoughts on the state of radio and today’s hip-hop ( he doesn’t like it very much)