Released: April 7, 2007

Songwriter: Kid Vishis

Producer: RZA

[Intro: Statik Selektah]
And next up out of the M.I.C. camp
I'd like to introduce Kid Vishis
Pay attention

[Verse]
Ain't nobody vicious as me, besides Nickel
But nigga, a nigga nickel as me, a two of a kind self
My flow's so contagious, caught a cold from the greatest
Spill my soul on these pages 'til I grow to amazing
Eyes low, I've been blazing 'til the Lord come and get me
I'mma write rhymes, fuck hoes, smoke like a chimney
We could bump heads since you think you should
You ain't a thug, you a bitch from a rough neighborhood
Plus I keep the nine iron like I'm Tiger Woods
Blast you, ghetto tattoo half you murder statue
Stiff you like a statue, curl up like a cashew
I'm nuts, with what I'm stashing in the trunk of my truck
I'mma catch you slipping, when you do, you gon' get it
Stick up, give 'em hiccups, bullets chasing your liquor
Nigga, it's the worst two
Vishis and Royce got every style sold from gangster to commercial

Kid Vishis

Marcus Montgomery, better known by his stage name Kid Vishis, is a rapper from Detroit, Michigan. He is the current hype man for fellow Detroit artist and older brother Royce Da 5'9", whose mixtapes and albums he has occasionally been feature on. Royce has also been heavily featured on Vishis' mixtapes, in the Sick' Em series. Vishis is best known for his feature on the official remix of Eminem’s “Detroit Vs Everybody,” alongside other Detroit native artists.

Vishis began writing raps shortly after finishing high school, moving from Detroit to Oak Park early on and then back to the former city simply out of representation. He played basketball often and listened to rap, finding attraction with wanting to become a rapper himself instead of a professional basketball player after he occasionally freestyled with Royce and friends over random instrumentals in their mother’s basement with a old-school radio and microphone combination, beginning a musical career full-force in 2003 when Royce unexpectedly asked him to rap a quick verse for him in the recording studio after hearing from his friends that his younger brother was making rounds while he was occupied, Royce having no idea that he even began professionally rapping and writing his own lyrics. According to Vishis, Royce “liked what he heard for a long story short” and wanted for him to polish his style more. Ultimately, it led to them collaborating more with his very first appearance on “Right Back”, seen on Royce’s 2005 junior album, Independent’s Day.

From there on after being Royce’s hype man for a long period of time, Royce let him freestyle and acapellas on radio, on camera, and even on spot if it was dire. He generally accompanied Royce when he was all over the world participating for tours.