Featuring: Lil Wayne

Producer: IllaDaProducer

[Hook: Lil Wayne]
Bitch tried to kiss me after head
Fuck wrong with your head?
She tried to kiss me after head
Fuck wrong with your head?
She tried to kiss me after head
Fuck wrong with your head?
She tried to kiss me after head
I kicked her out my bed

[Verse 1: N.O.R.E]
Okay, we left the club around 3
Headed back to that room
Yea, it’s time for that dome
‘Cause we checkin' out around noon
She said damn N.O.R.E. so cold
Keep it up, always no doors
Look at that ass, shorty on swole
We could just go go go go
How bout some back shots?
Do it missionary
Whip out my laptop, pulled out my dictionary
And I got head right off the whip
Then she came out up my lips
I'm like bitch what part is this?

[Hook]

[Verse 2: N.O.R.E]
Still gettin' head all in that whip
With out crashing that shit
You see me passing some Crys
You know I'm smashing that bitch now listen
Last night I had a new ho with a Molly on and a neuvo
She want to leave in my two door
She was on the D you know coomo
Freaks come out at night
I see she bout that life
Feed that bitch that pipe
Skeet skeet like more than twice
I'm getting head like once again and she came up out my lips
That's one part I'm just not with bitch tried

[Hook]

[Bridge: N.O.R.E]
I had to tell her man
Baby girl, Mamita senorita
We could've did what we did, what we supposed to do
But after you did what you did
Ewww

[Hook]

N.O.R.E.

Queens rapper Noreaga (also known as N.O.R.E.) was one of the most distinctive voices of the late ’90s hardcore hip-hop scene. He found critical and commercial success, both as a member of the duo Capone-N-Noreaga and as a solo artist, well into the 2000s.

Born Victor Santiago, Jr., to a Puerto Rican father and black mother, N.O.R.E. was raised in the Lefrak City housing projects in Queens, New York. In the early ’90s, while serving a sentence for attempted murder at the Green Haven Correctional Facility, he befriended Queensbridge native Capone. Once released, the two began rapping together under the mentorship of Juice Crew veteran Tragedy Khadafi, appearing in The Source Magazine’s “Unsigned Hype” column in 1995.

The duo attracted widespread attention in 1996 with the release of the single “L.A., L.A..” The song—a response to Tha Dogg Pound’s “New York, New York”—is considered a key record in the infamous East Coast/West Coast battle. Only 18 at the time, Noreaga’s unorthodox style of rapping immediately stood out. VIBE Magazine described his flow as “staggered, high-pitched parrot riffs.” The Source called it “word association-style poetics.” Capone-N-Noreaga’s debut The War Report was released by Penalty/Warner in June 1997 to critical acclaim.