Released: June 26, 2020

Featuring: Juicy J

Songwriter: Z-Ro

Producer: Jon Milli

[Chorus: Z-Ro]
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick

[Verse 1: Juicy J]
Get off my dick homes, that's where your bitch belongs
I'm the shit, I got these haters pissed like kidni stones
I'm balling, that's on my agenda, stay trippie, I'm a born winner
I just wanna see [?], so much ice, just call me winter
Sold out [?]
So much cash in that money printer
Got my homeboys still serving packs, they cook that work like a Sunday dinner
Getting head like a [?]
Chopping trees like timber
Y'all boys ain't flippin work nigga, you ain't trapping, you an intern
In H Town pouring up
You know what I sip
I got your girl with me, she going cause she on my dick
That's funny I know
I'm as funny as [?]
Fuck what a nigga think, Imma laugh to the bank, but my bank account ain't no joke

[Chorus: Z-Ro]
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
[Verse 2: Z-Ro]
Won't you get off my dick, and tell your bitch to come here?
Can't afford to drink what I'm drinking, go get you some beer
Just cause you checkd him over there, don't mean you checking none here
You giving out ass whoopings over there, but you can get you one here
I'm bout my business, I'm smoking my dope
And pimpin these bitches like I'm supposed
If I'm through with a bitch, I'm through with a bitch, I ain't tryna give her no closure
[?] been drinking so long, know I am hung over
[?] if you wanna chit chat, bitch don't even come over
They say I did this, and they said I did that, fuck what these motherfuckers said though
Cause you know they ass lying if it ain't about a dime, [?] ain't about bread ho
When you see me [?]
You standing there looking like a scarecrow
You scared than a bitch, boy I knew you was a ho
Heart beating fast, I can see it in your throat
From the southside homie, H Town to be exact
You a sucker nigga, don't come around me with that
I don't kick it with bitch niggas, I kick it with [?]
[?] try me with that
For entertainment we run in that shit
You trippin, I got my gun in this bitch
Don't give a damb about the 1 in this bitch
Just give me my money, and get off my dick

[Chorus: Z-Ro]
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick
Get off my dick

Z-Ro

Joseph Wayne McVey IV (born January 19, 1977), better known by his stage name Z-Ro, is an American hip-hop recording artist from Missouri City, TX. While he is most famous in the American South, especially Houston, where he is a local icon, Z-Ro’s two-decade-plus career as a fiercely independent workaholic has not gone unnoticed in the larger world of sources as diverse as The New York Times, Complex, and Westword have called him one of the most underrated rappers on the planet.

Z-Ro is well-known for his introverted, sometimes gloomy persona (he has been open both in song and in interviews about his periodic bouts with depression), and his ability to shift seamlessly between rapping and singing, often in a single line. Above all, he is known for his unbelievably prolific in the two decades following his 1998 debut, Look What You Did To Me, he released twenty-one official solo albums, seven more albums as part of groups like Guerilla Maab and ABN (Assholes by Nature), a dozen mixtapes, and still found the time to drop guest verses or sing hooks on well over a hundred tracks by other artists, including Southern luminaries like Rick Ross, Scarface, Bun B, and Slim Thug.

McVey’s mother died when he was six years old, and he spent the rest of his childhood and teenage years being shuttled between the homes of various relatives, as well as occasional periods of homelessness which would extend into his early twenties. Inspired to start rapping in his teens by the music of 2Pac, Geto Boys, and local Houston standouts such as Street Military, K-Rino and Klondike Kat, he developed a talent for freestyling. Combined with his deep, soulful singing voice (by necessity, according to Z-Ro himself, as in the early days he could not have afforded to hire outside singers to deliver his hooks), a signature style a laid-back, conversational flow, with occasional rhythmic flourishes and the tendency to break into singing at any moment. (This was unique at the time; Drake was years away and while Bone Thugs n' Harmony did plenty of singing, the sung parts and rapped parts of their songs tended to be cleanly separated.)

From the album