Released: September 21, 2018

Featuring: Guru

Songwriter: Napoleon Da Legend

Producer: DJ Premier

[Hook]
Ayo, I'm gonna be on ti-dop, that's all my eyes can see
Victory is mine, yeah, surprisingly
I've been laying, waiting for your next mistake
I put in work and watch my status escalate

[Napoleon Da Legend verse]
5:24 the world belongs to early risers
My circle solid, u can be the first to cop it
They see it popping then they flip and commercialize it
None of these nerds can knock it this ain’t for the bloggers
This ain’t for profit this for bragging rights
Maybe a bag rice still it might make the algorithm spike
This is flour white powder organic spice
I plan it right like Dana White, I don’t pay for likes
I don’t ask for favors twice, one man gang
Hit it up on Bandcamp name ya price
The original no duplicates
Budapest movers we colluded with
Salute kid this might be my new career
My life went thru the roof when I removed the fear
This mood is rare take a souvenir
This the cross I choose to bear
All you can eat I got food to share

[Hook]
Ayo, I'm gonna be on ti-dop, that's all my eyes can see
Victory is mine, yeah, surprisingly
I've been laying, waiting for your next mistake
I put in work and watch my status escalate

Napoleon Da Legend

Bilingual, Hip-Hop/Afrobeat artist, Napoleon Da Legend transferred his skills on the basketball court to the wax. But before that, he had to teach himself English. He kept his ears glued to the radio.

Paris-born, to the Comoros Islands, then Washington DC raised, the son of an immigrant family, Napoleon is a Brooklyn-based artist who uses his voice as weapon of hope, social-critique, conquest, and joy. After an untimely split, his parents left the U.S. and went their separate ways leaving the 16 year old to fend for himself in the DC / Maryland area, which helped him develop his hustle, instinct and work-ethic. NDL’s song “Black Privilege” led him to be featured at the Essence Festival in 2017. He was then invited to perform live on FOX 5’s Good Day DC.

NDL’s message of empowerment, community, and self-determination through music doesn’t stop there. He also works regularly with youth, running hip-hop workshops in Brooklyn’s toughest schools and Rikers Island’s juvenile programs.