Released: July 30, 2002

Featuring: Snoop Dogg

Songwriter: Darius Rucker Snoop Dogg Darrell Allamby Kenneth Dickerson Antoinette Roberson

Producer: Ivan Dupée

[Intro: Snoop Dogg]
Somebody's gettin' my love
Somebody's beatin' it up

[Verse 1: Darius Rucker]
Rise and shine now, baby
I got a little somethin' on my mind
I really wanna talk to you
And I hope that you will listen to me
I admit that you had me took
Had my friends, and my mama, and my sister, too
Nine times out of ten
If you did it before you're gonna do it again

[Chorus: Darius Rucker]
So why, why, why you wanna do me wrong, wrong
Made me wanna write this song, song
Baby, I gotta move on and on and on
Baby, 'cause I, I, never wanna say goodbye, bye
Baby, I know you lie, lie
Girl, remember I tried

[Verse 2: Darius Rucker & Snoop Dogg]
We went from nothin' to somethin'
We went from down to up
We went from rags to riches (Say it ain't so)
Bad times, good times
The big house and the fancy cars
Drivin' all around with big movie stars
Tell me, do you love him, baby?
Does he freak? Does he drive you crazy?

[Chorus: Darius Rucker]
Why, why, why you wanna do me wrong, wrong
Made me wanna sing this song, song
Baby, you gotta move on, on and on
Because I, I, never wanna say goodbye, bye
Sick and tired of your lie, lie
Baby, remember I tried

[Bridge: Darius Rucker]
I can't take it, no, no
I know something's wrong, yeah
(Somebody's sleep) Somebody's sleep in my bed, in my bed
What's going on?
You're messin' with my head again
(Somebody's sleep) Sleepin' in my bed

[Verse 3: Snoop Dogg]
Somebody's gettin' my love
Somebody's beatin' it up
Say it ain't, say it ain't so
Sleepin' in my bed (Sleepin' in my bed), sleepin' in my bed (Sleepin' in my bed)
Baby, said you love me, you said there'll never be (Never be)
So we put our thing together, now we family
Sleepin' together, stayin' together, good and bad weather
Tougher than leather, we still writin' love letters
Never could I ever betray you, say you do the same
But soon as I leave town, you change the game
I can't lie, it's a crying shame
That you lie in vain in my bed with that mayne
Stuck for words, you can't even explain
How your pleasure caused me so much pain
It's your loss and my gain, 'cause I'm a player in this game
And I can't do a damn thing but maintain - bang

[Chorus: Darius Rucker]
Why, why, why you wanna do me wrong, wrong
Made me wanna sing this song, song
Baby, you've gotta move on and on and on, and on
Because I, I, never wanna say goodbye, bye
Oh, I know you lie, lie
Baby, I know you tried, you tried
Oh, why, why, why you wanna do me wrong, wrong
Made me wanna sing this song, song
Baby, you've gotta move on and on and on, and on
Because I, I, never wanna say goodbye, bye
Sick and tired of your Oh, I know you lie, lie
Baby, I know you tried, you tried

[Outro: Darius Rucker & Snoop Dogg]
Somebody's sleepin' (Somebody's beatin' it up)
In my bed, in my bed
Somebody's gettin' my love
Somebody's beatin' it up
Somebody's gettin' my love, somebody's beatin' it up
Somebody's gettin' my love
Somebody's beatin' it up
Somebody's gettin' my love, somebody's beatin' it up
Somebody's beatin' it up

Darius Rucker

Darius Rucker (born May 13, 1966) is an American musician. He first gained fame as the lead singer and rhythm guitarist of the rock band Hootie & the Blowfish, which he founded in 1986 at the University of South Carolina along with Mark Bryan, Jim “Soni” Sonefeld and Dean Felber. The band has released five studio albums with him as a member, and charted six top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100. Rucker co-wrote the majority of the band’s songs with the other three members

He released a solo R&B album, Back to Then, in 2002 on Hidden Beach Recordings but did not chart any singles from it. Six years later, Rucker signed to Capitol Records Nashville as a country music artist, releasing the album Learn to Live that year. Its first single, “Don’t Think I Don’t Think About It”, made him the first African American to chart a number one on the Hot Country Songs charts since Charley Pride in 1983. It was followed by two more number-one singles, “It Won’t Be Like This for Long” and “Alright” and the number three “History in the Making”. In 2009, he became the first African American to win the New Artist Award from the Country Music Association, and only the second African American to win any award from the association. A second Capitol album, Charleston, SC 1966, was released on October 12, 2010. The album includes the number-one singles “Come Back Song” and “This”