Released: August 31, 2017

Featuring: Pharrell Williams

Songwriter: Pharrell Williams N.O.R.E.

Producer: Pharrell Williams

[Bridge: Pharrell]
I peeped what you goin' through, baby
You don't know, but it is in your eyes
I think you need a 180
Total opposite'll be nice (yeah, yeah, yeah)

[Pre-Chorus: Pharrell]
It's my duty to help you snap back
Leave your worries long gone, long gone
Let go what you cannot take back
Take this moment and move on, move on
I was once like you, had me in my runnin' shoes
Thought of nothing I could do, man I had it wrong
Something up in my eyes, make my self-esteem rise
Then they told me that I needa' do a song

[Verse 1: N.O.R.E.]
A twenty year career, I hope you understand
I used to pitch on the block, I did it underhand
They said I'd never make it, never be much
And I agreed wit' 'em, I ain't see such
So I celebrate life (life)
Vodka shots, this with ice (ice)
Baby we gon' drink more
At least one more, don't needa' think more

[Chorus: Pharrell & N.O.R.E]
Come have a drink with me, baby
Just fill, don't think with me, baby (just fill, don't think)
I'll be the shrink you need lately (haaa)
Just one more clink with me, baby (yo, yo)

[Verse 2: N.O.R.E]
I want to make money, I want to make more
She wanna' fly wings, she wanna' take off
She wanna eat lobster, she wanna drink wine
The realest dude in the world, that's how they rate slime!
You knew it was weird, they tried to fake you
Pay attention to love, who cares who hate you

[Refrain: Pharrell]
We'll win one way or the other, let's start now girl

[Pre-Chorus: Pharrell]
It's my duty to help you snap back
Leave your worries long gone, long gone
Let go what you cannot take back
Take this moment and move on, move on
I was once like you, had me in my runnin' shoes
Thought of nothing I could do, man I had it wrong
Somethin' up in my eyes, make my self-esteem rise
Then they told me that I needa' do a song

[Chorus: Pharrell & N.O.R.E.]
Come have a drink with me, baby (have a drink with me)
Uno más, one more
Just fill, don't think with me, baby (one more, only one more)
Singin' like, uno más 'til we go
I'll be the shrink you need lately
Just one more clink with me, baby

[Verse 3: N.O.R.E.]
She wanted one more, I wanted one more
Ignored the last call, got one more
We from the bottom, so we always celebratin' (what?)
From the bottom, so we always celebratin' (what?)
Can't help that
I wanna help that
I wanna save her life, I know she felt that
She in a good mood
And I agree wit' her
I just wanna get drunk and go be with her

[Pre-Chorus: Pharrell]
It's my duty to help you snap back
Leave your worries long gone, long gone
Let go what you cannot take back
Take this moment and move on, move on
I was once like you, had me in my runnin' shoes
Thought of nothing I could do, man I had it wrong
Somethin' up in my eyes, make myself self-esteem rise
Then they told me that I needa' do a song

[Chorus: Pharrell]
Come have a drink with me, baby (uno más, one more)
Just fill, don't think with me, baby (uno más, then we go)
I'll be the shrink you need lately
Just one more clink with me, baby

[Outro: Pharrell & N.O.R.E.]
Uno más, one more
Uno más then we go
Uno más, one more
Whoo!
Geez Louise, papa cheeks
That was it

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.