Released: October 16, 2015

Featuring: Waka Flocka Flame

Producer: DJ Two Stacks Big Chocolate

[Hook] x2
Apeshit! Dummy lose your mind
Go apeshit!
I think I'm going blind
Apeshit! Break your neck, break your spine
Apeshit! Again and again!

[Verse 1: Prof]
Slap me I’m a lunatic
My mama’s so afraid of me
Someone press the panic button
Nothing you can say to me
Guerrilla style
Throwing missiles in your house
Pissing miles, Robert Child
Lose your mind - rip it out
Start a fight
Take a couple shots you could pass the pipe
Everybody know there ain’t no afterlife
Laughing halfway through the traffic light
If you got a problem that I'm losing my mind
Suicidal motherfucker
Taking two at a time
Stepping on ya and I kill ya while I’m doing a vine
Look at it and the different benefits, the ahh
Deepak your Prof I will win forever
Come drink with the king if ye ain’t scared of the weather
Single moms in strip clubs - punani tsunami
Came in the cab
I’m bout to leave in a Bugatti
AHHH! I’m only leaving when the bouncers fighting
Bodies moving
Who’s these dudes that’s in here shooting
Terrorist music, terrorist music
Panic, panic, panic, panic

[Hook]

[Verse 2: Waka Flocka Flame]
They want that find the [?]
Get it good and finesse em out of his work shit
FN bark like a pitbull when I let it off I murk shit
Get my graveyard like a work shift
Made 50k on my worst flip
Then went to Waka Flocka
Bitch I'm famous
Need a 100 band for this verse shit
This good as long as my arm tied
Try to rob me you get hog tied
I'm from Clayco that's the Southside
Sick a dog on em like a raw hide
Bunch of real niggas on this side
Get your pussy niggas on that side
I know what they want
My boy know what I want
Send me kush like every month
I roll 4 grams in my blunt
I got life inside my trunk
Keep a chopper if you stunt
Pussy play tough if you want
You a dead man
I'm from Riverdale where them boys going ham
Blam
RIOTS
Fucking turn up bitch this real
I'ma talk about a riot
I don't give a fuck about a cop, I'll start a fire and a riot
We about to spill into the streets talking about a real riot
{​​​panic, panic, panic}​​​

[Hook]

Prof

For Prof, the worlds of fact and fiction are often intertwined, as he balances on a fine line between real-life experiences and yet unfulfilled fantasies. The Minneapolis rapper has made a robust career for himself by crafting memorable songs about everything from heartache to arson to wild adventures with women. These terrific tales and his dynamic stage show have led to concerts and tours across the country, and have exposed him to life-altering experiences. They also planted a seed.

An accomplished and open-minded artist, Prof first started playing with a concept in one of his rhyme books years ago. As the idea germinated, the Minnesota artist decided to apply it to his life and his neighborhood while tapping into his vast imagination and his remarkable life. The result is Prof’s new album on Rhymesayers Entertainment, Powderhorn Suites, a wide-ranging artistic tour de force that places him among rap’s most gifted auteurs. “There’s so many different things happening in a hotel at one time,” Prof explains. “Somebody’s doing drugs. Somebody’s having sex. There’s a fight over there. Someone’s trying to get some rest over here. There’s just so much going on in one place.”

The same can be said for Powderhorn Suites, a remarkable rollercoaster of a project that hits stunning highs and features dramatic lows. “Squad Goals” rollicks along with a festive beat and a nod to the “U Name It” challenge, while the liberating “Outside Baby” celebrates women who are vocal during sex. With the tense “Numbers,” Prof, Muja Messiah and Taylor J detail the struggles that come with trying to make ends meet. Then on “Fire Lessons,” Prof draws from the real-life anger and emotion he felt after a tense night in which he was chased by police and hit rock bottom. The album concludes with a stunningly powerful group of songs in which Prof analyzes the lasting effects of a dysfunctional upbringing (“Flower Boy”), ends a relationship with his soulmate (“The Ending”), and gives himself a moment to be proud of his accomplishments (“Karma Legend”).