Featuring: Dirty Harry

Songwriter: The Notorious B.I.G.

Producer: DJ Vlad

[Intro]
Mic Check
Bigger than Fred Wreck
Uh, Check it out
Uh, Check it out

[Hook]
It don't stop, It don't stop
Watch the hit, Nigga
It don't stop, It don't stop
Watch the hit, Nigga

[Sample]
(Dirty Harry)
(Yeah!)

[Verse: The Notorious B.I.G]
Big Poppa, Throwing nigga's off of cliffs
Smoking Spliff's, Disappear With my Bitch
In a Mitsubishi Eclipse
Read my lips, "I kill you"
Blood I'll spill true
Did i say "Thank you"
I grant you
Three wishes, cause i be the Genie
Niggas is Ass out
Like Fat Bitches in Bikini's

[Bridge]
Read Between the lines
See what i see
I see the diary
Of a Sick Bastard

[Verse 2: The Notorious B.I.G]
Junior M.A.F.I.A Blaster
Ruger's on the hip's
Bought Coke to Flip Chips
More Bullets to Fill Clips, Check it
Putting coke in corner store Bodegas
In the back room playing SEGA, Street Fighter 2
I'm inviting you
Get your writing crew, and They Dopest rhymes
I get up in that Ass, Every time

[Bridge 2]
Lyrically, I'm Untouchable, Uncrushable
Getting Mad blunted in a 600

[Verse 3: The Notorious B.I.G]
Benz, Ask your friends who's the Illest licking shot
Nigga's screaming, "Biggie Smalls, Tried to kill us"

[Hook]
It don't stop, It don't stop
Watch the hip, Nigga
It don't stop, It don't stop
Watch the hip, Nigga

[Verse 4]
Junior M.A.F.I.A, Representing Bucktown
Mac-11 Cocked back, Nigga's better duck down
Faced-Down, you know the routine the cream
Earrings the drama Biggie Bring
Lets get it

The Notorious B.I.G.

Considered by many to be one of the greatest rappers of all time, The Notorious B.I.G. was a major figure in both hardcore hip-hop and 90’s pop music until his murder in 1997 at age 24. He’s best known for his #1 hits “Hypnotize” and “Mo’ Money, Mo’ Problems,” his top 10 hits “One More Chance (Stay with Me Remix)” and “Big Poppa,” and his iconic early single “Juicy.”

In addition to his crossover hits, Biggie is known for innovative multi-syllabic lyricism and creative storytelling techniques, heard on critical favorites like “Warning,” “Suicidal Thoughts,” “Ten Crack Commandments,” “I Got A Story To Tell,” and “Gimme The Loot.”

As a teenager, Brooklyn native Christopher Wallace started rapping as Biggie Smalls, the name of a mobster character in the 1975 action comedy Let’s Do It Again. He recorded a demo with local Bed-Stuy DJ 50 Grand, which caught the attention of Mister Cee, who was well-known as Big Daddy Kane’s DJ. Cee introduced his demo to the industry, landing him a spot in The Source’s coveted “Unsigned Hype” column in the magazine’s March 1992 issue. Sean “Puffy” Combs, a successful A&R, also heard the demo and signed Big to Uptown Records.