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10:41 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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4:11 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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5:00 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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7:49 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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5:15 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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3:35 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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8:04 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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6:16 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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5:12 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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6:26 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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6:08 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Midnight Band: The First Minute Of A New Day (1975) | |||||
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3:30 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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5:47 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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6:23 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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9:17 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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4:31 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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11:13 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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4:52 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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7:30 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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4:24 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976)
If you're driving through the country on a lazy afternoon
Or you're watching your children playin' after school They seem to be so unaware of I know I know The things that they soon have to take care of We got to do something yeah to save the children Soon it will be their test to try and save the world Right now they seem to play such a small part of The things that they soon be right at the heart of My little Tommy he said he wants to be a fireman And little Mary she said she got to teach at school If we know or we say we know about the problems ohohoh Why can't we do something to try and solve them We got to do something yeah to save the children Soon it will be their test to try and save the world We got to do something yeah to save the children To save the children To save the children |
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3:46 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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6:29 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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4:42 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - From South Africa To South Carolina (1976) | |||||
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5:40 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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8:44 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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12:07 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976)
A junkie walking through the twilight
I'm on my way home I left three days ago, but no one seems to know I'm gone Home is where the hatred is Home is filled with pain and it, Might not be such a bad idea if I never, never went home again Stand as far away from me as you can and ask me why Hang on to your rosary beads Close your eyes to watch me die You keep saying, kick it, quit it, kick it, quit it God, but did you ever try To turn your sick soul inside out So that the world, so that the world Can watch you die Home is where I live inside my white powder dreams Home was once an empty vacuum that's filled now with my silent screams Home is where the needle marks Try to heal my broken heart And it might not be such a bad idea if I never, if I never went home again Home again Home again Home again Kick it, quit it Kick it, quit it Kick it, quit it Kick it, can't go home again |
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3:57 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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5:27 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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4:51 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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6:03 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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5:56 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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13:35 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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7:34 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - It's Your World (1976) | |||||
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8:39 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Mind Of Gil Scott Heron (1978)
Some people think that America invented the blues
And few people doubt that America is the home of the blues As the bluesicians have gone all over the world carrying the blues message And the world has snapped its fingers and tapped its feet right along with the blues folks But, the blues has always been totally American As American as apple pie As American as the blues As American as apple pie The question is why? Why should the blues be so at home here Well, America provided the atmosphere America provided the atmosphere for the blues and the blues was born The blues was born on the American wilderness The blues was born on the beaches where the slave ships docked Born on the slave man's auction block The blues was born and carried on the howling wind The blues grew up a slave The blues grew up as property The blues grew up in Nat Turner visions The blues grew up in Harriet Tubman courage The blues grew up in small town deprivation The blues grew up in big city isolation The blues grew up in the nightmares of the white man The blues grew up in the blues singing of Bessie and Billie and Ma The blues grew up in Satchmo's horn, on Duke's piano and Langston's poetry, on Robeson's baritone The point is That the blues has grown The blues is grown now, full grown And you can trace the evolution of the blues On a parallel line with the evolution of this country From Plymouth Rock to acid-rock From 13 states to Watergate The blues is grown But not the home The blues is grown But the country has not The blues remembers everything the country forgot It's a bicentennial year and the blues is celebrating a birthday And it's a bicentennial blues America has got the blues and it's a bicentennial edition The blues view might amuse you But make no mistake, it's a bicentennial year A year of hysterical importance A year of historical importance Ripped off like donated moments from the past 200 years ago this evening 200 years ago last evening And what about now? The blues is now The blues has grown up and the country has not The country has been ripped off Ripped off like the Indians Ripped off like jazz Ripped off like nature Ripped off like Christmas Man-handled by media overkill Goosed by aspiring vice presidents Violated by commercial corporations A bicentennial year The year the symbol transformed into the B-U-Y centennial Buy a car Buy a flag Buy a map Until the public in mass has been bludgeoned into bicentennial submission Or bicentennial suspicion I fall into the latter category It's a blues year And America has got the blues It's got the blues because of partial deification Of partial accomplishments Over partial periods of time Halfway justice Halfway liberty Halfway equality It's a half-ass year And we would be silly in all our knowledge In all our self-righteous knowledge When we sit back and laugh and mock the things that happen in our lives To accept anything less than the truth About this bicentennial year And the truth relates to 200 years of people and ideas getting by It got by George Washington The ideas of justice, liberty and equality Got cold by George Washington Slave-owner general Ironic that the father of this country Should be a slave owner The father of this country a slave-owner Having got by him It made it easy to get by his henchman The creators of this liberty Who slept in the beds with the captains of slave ships Fought alongside black freed men in the union army And left America a legacy of hypocrisy It's a blues year Got by Gerald Ford Oatmeal man Has declared himself at odds With people on welfare, people who get food stamps Day care children, the elderly, the poor, women And people who might vote for Ronald Reagan Ronald Reagan, it got by him Hollyweird Acted like a actor Acted like a liberruuuuuuuulllzz lolz Acted like General Franco when he acted like governor of California Now he acts like somebody might vote for him for president It got by Jimmy Carter Skippy Got by Jimmy Carter and got by him and his friend the colonel The creators of southern-fried triple talk A blues trio America got the blues It got by Henry Kissinger The international godfather of peace A piece of Vietnam A piece of Laos A piece of Angola A piece of Cuba A blues quartet And America got the blues The point is that it may get by you For another 4 years For another 8 years You stuck Playing 2nd fiddle in a blues quartet Got the blues looking for the first principle Which was justice It's a blues year for justice It's a blues year for the San Quentin 6 Looking for justice It's a blues year for Gary Tyler Looking for justice It's a blues year for Rev. Ben Chaves Looking for justice It's a blues year for Boston Looking for justice It's a blues year for baby's on buses It's a blues year for mothers and fathers with babies on buses It's a blues year for Boston And it's a blues year all over this country America has got the blues And the blues is in the street looking for the 3 principles Justice, liberty and equality We would do well to join the blues looking for justice, liberty and equality The blues is in the street America has got the blues But don't let it get by us. |
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7:58 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Mind Of Gil Scott Heron (1978) | |||||
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2:37 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Mind Of Gil Scott Heron (1978)
I had said I wasn't going to write no more poems like this
I had confessed to myself all along, tracer of life, poetry trends That awareness, consciousness, poems that screamed of pain and the origins of pain and death had blanketed my tablets And therefore, my friends, brothers, sisters, in-laws, outlaws, and besides -- they already knew But brother Torres, common ancient bloodline brother Torres is dead I had said I wasn't going to write no more poems like this I had said I wasn't going to write no more words down about people kicking us when we're down About racist dogs that attack us and drive us down, drag us down and beat us down But the dogs are in the street The dogs are alive and the terror in our hearts has scarcely diminished It has scarcely brought us the comfort we suspected The recognition of our terror and the screaming release of that recognition Has not removed the certainty of that knowledge -- how could it The dogs rabid foaming with the energy of their brutish ignorance Stride the city streets like robot gunslingers And spread death as night lamps flash crude reflections from gun butts and police shields I had said I wasn't going to write no more poems like this But the battlefield has oozed away from the stilted debates of semantics Beyond the questionable flexibility of primal screaming The reality of our city, jungle streets and their Gestapos Has become an attack on home, life, family and philosophy, total It is beyond the question of the advantages of didactic niggerisms The motherfucking dogs are in the street In Houston maybe someone said Mexicans were the new niggers In LA maybe someone said Chicanos were the new niggers In Frisco maybe someone said Orientals were the new niggers Maybe in Philadelphia and North Carolina they decided they didn't need no new niggers I had said I wasn't going to write no more poems like this But dogs are in the street It's a turn around world where things are all too quickly turned around It was turned around so that right looked wrong It was turned around so that up looked down It was turned around so that those who marched in the streets with bibles and signs of peace became enemies of the state and risk to national security So that those who questioned the operations of those in authority on the principles of justice, liberty, and equality became the vanguard of a communist attack It became so you couldn't call a spade a motherfucking spade Brother Torres is dead, the Wilmington Ten are still incarcerated Ed Davis, Ronald Regan, James Hunt, and Frank Rizzo are still alive And the dogs are in the motherfucking street I had said I wasn't going to write no more poems like this I made a mistake |
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7:28 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Mind Of Gil Scott Heron (1978) | |||||
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12:57 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Mind Of Gil Scott Heron (1978) | |||||
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3:11 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Mind Of Gil Scott Heron (1978)
I have believed in my convictions
And have been convicted for my beliefs Conned by the constitution And harassed by the police. I've been billed for the bill of rights And been treated like I was wrong. I have become a special amendment For what included me all along. Like "All men are created equal." (No amendment needed here) I've contributed in every field including cotton From Sunset Strip to Washington Square. Back during the non-violent era. I was the only non-violent one. As a matter of fact there was no non-violence 'cause too many rednecks had guns. There seems to have been this pattern That a lot of folks failed to pick up on. But all black leaders who dared stand up Wuz in jail, in the courtroom or gone. Picked up indiscriminately By the shocktroops of discrimination To end up in jails or tied up in trails While dirty tricks soured the nation. I've been hoodwinked by professional hoods. My ego has happened to me. It'll be alright, just keep things cool!" "And take the people off the street. We'll settle all this at the conference table. You just leave everything to me." Which gets me back to my convictions And being convicted for my belief 'cause I believe these smiles in three piece suits with gracious, liberal demeanor took our movement off of the streets and took us to the cleaners In other words, we let up the pressure And that was all part of their plan And every day we allow to slip through our fingers Is playing right into their hands |
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7:52 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Mind Of Gil Scott Heron (1978) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988)
We deal in too many externals, brother
Always afro's, handshakes and dashikis Never can a man build a working structure for black capitalism Always does the man read Mao or Fanon I think I know you would-be black revolutionaries too well Standing on a box on the corner, talking about blowing the white man away That's now where it's at yet, brother Calling this man an Uncle Tom and telling this woman to get an afro But you won't speak to her if she looks like hell, now will you brother Some of us been checking your act out kinda close And by now its looking kinda shaky The way you been rushin' people with your super black bag Jumping down on some black men with both feet cause they're after their B-A But you're never around when your BA is in danger, I mean your black ass I think it was a little too easy for you to forget that you were a negro before Malcolm You drove your white girl through the village every Friday night While the grassroots stared in envy and drank wine, do you remember? You need to get your memory banks organized brother. Show that man you call an Uncle Tom just where he's wrong Show that woman that you're a sincere black man All we need to do is see you shut up and be black Help that woman Help that man That's what brothers are for brother. |
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988)
A junkie walking through the twilight
I'm on my way home I left three days ago, but no one seems to know I'm gone Home is where the hatred is Home is filled with pain and it, Might not be such a bad idea if I never, never went home again Stand as far away from me as you can and ask me why Hang on to your rosary beads Close your eyes to watch me die You keep saying, kick it, quit it, kick it, quit it God, but did you ever try To turn your sick soul inside out So that the world, so that the world Can watch you die Home is where I live inside my white powder dreams Home was once an empty vacuum that's filled now with my silent screams Home is where the needle marks Try to heal my broken heart And it might not be such a bad idea if I never, if I never went home again Home again Home again Home again Kick it, quit it Kick it, quit it Kick it, quit it Kick it, can't go home again |
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988)
You explained it to me I must admit
But just for the record you were talkin' shit Y'all rap about no knock bein' legislated For the people you've always hated In this hell hole you, we, call home No knock, the man will say To keep that man from beating his wife No knock, the man will say To keep people from themselves No knockin', head-rockin', inter-shockin' Shootin', cussin', killin', cryin', lyin' And bein' white No knock No knocked on my brother Fred Hampton Bullet holes all over the place No knocked on my brother Michael Harris And jammed a shotgun against his skull For my protection? Who's gonna protect me from you? The likes of you? The nerve of you? Your tomato face deadpan Your dead hands ending another freedom fan No knockin', head rockin', inter-shockin' Shootin', cussin', killin', cryin', lyin' And bein' white But if you're wise, no knocker You'll tell your no-knockin' lackeys Ha! No knock on my brother's head No knock on my sister's head No knock on my brother's head No knock on my sister's head And double lock your door Because soon someone may be no-knockin' Ha, ha! For you |
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988)
If you're driving through the country on a lazy afternoon
Or you're watching your children playin' after school They seem to be so unaware of I know I know The things that they soon have to take care of We got to do something yeah to save the children Soon it will be their test to try and save the world Right now they seem to play such a small part of The things that they soon be right at the heart of My little Tommy he said he wants to be a fireman And little Mary she said she got to teach at school If we know or we say we know about the problems ohohoh Why can't we do something to try and solve them We got to do something yeah to save the children Soon it will be their test to try and save the world We got to do something yeah to save the children To save the children To save the children |
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988)
I was doin' it when I was a colored boy of eight or nine or ten
I had never heard of Sigmund Freud but hell I was doin' it then I was doin' it in my teenaged years when I was running the ghetto streets Now I had never seen me no ink blot test but it still felt good to me I was doin' it when I arrived in college searching for my degree But Lord knows a degree wasn't all I got and that's the way it's supposed to be I hope that when I have kids of my own they really don't get shook When I tell them that there are things they've got to learn that can't be found in books. ------------- Lyrics Powered by LyricFind Written By GIL SCOTT-HERON <i>Lyrics © CARLIN AMERICA INC</i> |
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988)
You will not be able to stay home brother
you will not be able to plug in, turn on and drop out you will not be able to lose yourself on skag and skip skip out for beer during commercials Because the revolution will not be televised The revolution will not be televised the revolution will not be brought to you by xerox in 4 parts without commercial interruption The revolution will not show you pictures of Nixon blowing a bugle and leading a charge by John Mitchell, General Abrams and Spiro Agnew to eat hog moss confiscated from a Harlem sanctuary The revolution will not be televised The revolution will not be brought to you by the Schaefer Award Theatre and will not star Natalie Wood and Steve McQueen or Bullwinkle and Julia The revolution will not give your mouth sex appeal The revolution will not get rid of the nubs The revolution will not make you look five pounds thinner because The revolution will not be televised brother There will be no pictures of you and Willie Mays pushing that cart down the block on the dead run or trying to slide that color television into a stolen ambulance NBC will not be able to predict the winner at 8:32 or the count from 29 districts The revolution will not be televised There will be no pictures of pigs shooting down brothers in the instant replay There will be no pictures of young being run out of Harlem a rail with a brand new process There will be no slow motion or still life of Roy Wilkens strolling through Watts in a red, black and green liberation jumpsuit that he had been saving for just the right occasion Green Acres, The Beverly Hillbillies and Hooterville Junction will no longer be so damned relevant and women will not care of Dick finally gets down with Jane on Search for Tomorrow because black people will be in the street looking for a brighter day The revolution will not be televised there will be no highlights on the eleven o'clock news and no pictures of hairy armed women liberationists and Jackie Onassis blowing her nose The theme song will not be written by Jim Webb, Francis Scott Key nor sung by Glen Campbell, Tom Jones, Johnny Cash, Engelbert Humperdinck of The Rare Earth The revolution will not be televised The revolution will not be right back after a message about a white tornado, white lightning, or white people You will not have to worry about a germ in your bedroom, the tiger in your tank, or the giant in you toilet bowl The revolution will not go better with Coke The revolution will not fight germs that can cause bad breath The revolution WILL put you in the driver's seat The revolution will not be televised, will no be televised will not be televised The revolution will be no re-run brothers The revolution will be live-- 27569 |
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988) | |||||
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- | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (1988)
A rat done bit my sister Nell.
(with Whitey on the moon) Her face and arms began to swell. (and Whitey's on the moon) I can't pay no doctor bill. (but Whitey's on the moon) Ten years from now I'll be payin' still. (while Whitey's on the moon) The man jus' upped my rent las' night. ('cause Whitey's on the moon) No hot water, no toilets, no lights. (but Whitey's on the moon) I wonder why he's uppi' me? ('cause Whitey's on the moon?) I was already payin' 'im fifty a week. (with Whitey on the moon) Taxes takin' my whole damn check, Junkies makin' me a nervous wreck, The price of food is goin' up, An' as if all that shit wasn't enough A rat done bit my sister Nell. (with Whitey on the moon) Her face an' arm began to swell. (but Whitey's on the moon) Was all that money I made las' year (for Whitey on the moon?) How come there ain't no money here? (Hm! Whitey's on the moon) Y'know I jus' 'bout had my fill (of Whitey on the moon) I think I'll sen' these doctor bills, Airmail special (to Whitey on the moon) |
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5:58 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994)
Ahh lovely day……
I never really thought of myself as a complex man, Or as someone who was really that hard to understand. But it would hardly take a genius to realize That I’ve always been a lot too arrogant and a little too f$%kin’ wise That was a combination that made folks feel duty bound, To do whatever they could to try and shoot me down. To head off some of the things I might possibly say, And see if they couldn’t take some of my pride away. To bring me disappointment and teach me to fear it Obviously these are folks that just didn’t have no spirit Spirits say [chorus] Don’t give up (spirits say don’t give up) Yes it’s time to stop your fallin’ You’ve been down long enough Can’t you hear the spirits callin’ Yes it’s the spirits Can’t you hear iiiiiit Callin’ your name x 2 Yeah talkin’ bout spiriiiiiiiiiiits heh There are people whose lives are so far of the track That what they like best about life is stabbing’ brothers in the back And I was obviously too blind and probably too weak To see who was responsible for my losing streak The best way to explain it is to say simply because I was looking around outside and the truth is I was the one. So I got locked into all of the analysis And found myself locked into a kind of paralysis And something was calling and I almost didn’t hear it But I spent a lot of time being blessed by the spirits They keep saying [Chorus] I didn’t matter if it was a child or and adult There was absolutely no-one that I could not insult. So that I could isolate myself somewhere off to the side And continue to juggle all the possible whys The warmth I wanted to generate so well Had turned into a frozen hell And the discouraging injustices I felt Had pinned me somewhere inside a drug infested cell Where those who told didn’t know and those who knew didn’t tell And “I could continue to feel sorry for my self” [echo of “”] And then I heard [Chorus] Ain’t no way overnight to turn your life around And this ain’t the conversation of someone that never falls back down But no matter how long you’ve been on trial With the days and weeks of self denial And no matter how many times you’ve tried to make it And found out that right then you just couldn’t take it If you are looking for a looser who found strength and success Remember the spirit of Brother Malcolm X And know that you can leave all your mistakes behind The day that you “really make up your mind” [echo of “”] Come on brother… come on up Stand on up and say… [Chorus] |
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5:44 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994)
Give Her a Call on the Spirits album, 1994.
My life is one of movement I been running as fast as I can I've inherited trial and error directly from my old man But I'm committed to the consequences Whether I stand or fall And when I get back to my life I think I'm gonna give her a call She's been waiting patiently For me to get myself together And it touches something deep inside When she said she'd wait forever Because forever's right up on me now That is, if it ever comes at all And when I'm back to my life I think I'll give her a call. |
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3:14 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994) | |||||
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4:57 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994)
Hey, yeah, we the same brothas from a long time ago
We was talkin' about television and doin' it on the radio What we did was to help our generation realize They had to get out there and get busy cause it wasn't gonna be televised We got respect for you rappers and the way they be free-weighin' But if you're gon' be teachin' folks things, make sure you know what you're sayin' Older folks in our neighborhood got plenty of know-how Remember if it wasn't for them, you wouldn't be out here now And I ain't comin' at you with no disrespect All I'm sayin' is that you damn well got to be correct Because if you're gonna be speakin' for a whole generation And you know enough to try and handle their education Make sure you know the real deal about past situations It ain't just repeatin' what you heard on the local TV stations ...Sometimes they tell lies and put 'em in a truthful disguise But the truth is that's why we said it wouldn't be televised They don't know what to say to our young folks, but they know that you do And if they really knew the truth...why would they tell you? The first sign is peace, tell all them gun totin' young brothas That the man is glad to see us out there killin' one another We raised too much hell when they was shootin' us down So they started poisoning our minds tryin' to jerk us all around And they tell us they got to come in and control our situation They want half of us on dope and the other half in incarceration If the ones they want dead ain't killed by what they instigated They put some dope on a brotha's body and claim it was drug related Tell them drug related means there don't need to be no investigation Or at least that's the way they're gon' play it on the local TV stations All your 9-millimeter brothas...give them somthin' to think about Tell them you heard that this is the new word, they got to work that stuff out But somehow they feel in the wrong way with a gun in their hands They feel real independent...but they just pullin' contracts for the man Five and five will tell you it's hopeless out there on the avenue But if they really knew the truth...why would they tell you? And if they look at you like you're insane And they start callin' you scarecrow and say you ain't got no brain Or start tellin' folks that you suddenly gone lame Or that white folks had finally co-opted your game Or worse yet implying that you don't really know... That's the same thing they said about us...a long time ago Young rappers, one more suggestion before I get out of your way But I appreciate the respect you give me and what you got to say I'm sayin' protect your community and spread that respect around Tell brothas and sistas they gotta calm that bullshit down Cause we're terrorizin' our old folks and brought fear into our homes And they ain't got to hang out with the senior citizens Just tell them, “Dammit...leave the old folks alone” And we know who rippin' off the neighborhood, tell them, “That BS has got to stop!” Tell them you're sorry they can't handle it out there But they got to take the crime off the block And if they look at you like you're insane And they start callin' you scarecrow and say you ain't got no brain Or start tellin' folks that you suddenly gone lame Or that white folks had finally co-opted your game Or worse yet saying that you really don't know... That's the same thing they said about me a long time ago And if they tell folks that you finally lost your nerve That's the same thing they said about us, when we said, “Johannesburg” But I think the young folks need to know, that things don't go both ways You can't talk respect of every other song or just every other day What I'm speakin' on now is the raps about the women folks On one song she's your African Queen on the next one she's a joke And you ain't said no words that I haven't heard, but that ain't no compliment It only insults eight people out of ten and questions your intelligence Four letter words or four syllable words won't make you important It'll only magnify how shallow you are and let everybody know it And if they look at you like they think you insane Or they call you scarecrow thinkin' you ain't got no brain Or start tellin' folks that you suddenly gone lame Or that white folks have finally co-opted your game Or you really don't know...They said that about me a long time ago If they finally start to tell people that you lost your nerve That's what they said about Johannesburg You ain't insane...you have got a brain You haven't gone lame; you have got your game Remember...keep the nerve Keep the nerve Keep the nerve Keep the nerve ...I'm talkin' about peace |
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7:48 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994) | |||||
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3:00 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994)
It's getting to be the time of year
When people once spoke of love and good cheer Peace on Earth and good will to all men And we all believed that there'd come a day When peace would be much more than "on it's way" Cause peace has been on it's way since I don't know when And the folks who decide what will be They haven't confided in me And i don't think that everybody can wait 'til then It makes me sad that my kids won't see Christmas the way it used to be I was so excited though we didn't have a dime But that seems like such a long time ago And I am still a child I know But it seems like we've lost much more than the time Cause the folks who decide what will be They haven't confided in me And I don't think that everybody can wait 'til then No, I don't think that everybody can wait 'til then No, I don't think that everybody can wait 'til then |
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5:25 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994) | |||||
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6:10 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994) | |||||
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6:40 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994) | |||||
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7:33 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Spirits (1994)
Back when Eisenhower was the President,
Golf courses was where most of his time was spent. So I never really listened to what the President said, Because in general I believed that the General was politically dead. But he always seemed to know when the muscles were about to be flexed, Because I remember him saying something, mumbling something about a Military Industrial Complex. Americans no longer fight to keep their shores safe, Just to keep the jobs going in the arms making workplace. Then they pretend to be gripped by some sort of political reflex, But all they're doing is paying dues to the Military Industrial Complex. The Military and the Monetary, The Military and the Monetary, The Military and the Monetary. The Military and the Monetary, get together whenever they think its necessary, They turn our brothers and sisters into mercenaries, they are turning the planet into a cemetery. The Military and the Monetary, use the media as intermediaries, they are determined to keep the citizens secondary, they make so many decisions that are arbitrary. We're marching behind a commander in chief, who is standing under a spotlight shaking like a leaf. but the ship of state had landed on an economic reef, so we knew he was going to bring us messages of grief. The Military and the Monetary, were shielded by January and went storming into February, Brought us pot bellied generals as luminaries, two weeks ago I hadn't heard of the son of a bitch, now all of a sudden he's legendary. They took the honour from the honourary, they took the dignity from the dignitaries, they took the secrets from the secretary, but they left the bitch in obituary. The Military and the Monetary, from thousands of miles away in a Saudi Arabian sanctuary, had us all scrambling for our dictionaries, cause we couldn't understand the fuckin vocabulary. Yeah, there was some smart bombs, but there was some dumb ones as well, scared the hell out of CNN in that Baghdad hotel. The Military and the Monetary, they get together whenever they think its necessary, War in the desert sometimes sure is scary, but they beamed out the war to all their subsidiaries. Tried to make So Damn Insane a worthy adversary, keeping the citizens secondary, scaring old folks into coronaries. The Military and the Monetary, from thousands of miles in a Saudi Arabian sanctuary, kept us all wondering if all of this was really truely, necessary. We've got to work for Peace, Peace ain't coming this way. If we only work for Peace, If everyone believed in Peace the way they say they do, we'd have Peace. The only thing wrong with Peace, is that you can't make no money from it. The Military and the Monetary, they get together whenever they think its necessary, they've turned our brothers and sisters into mercenaries, they are turning the planet, into a cemetery. Got to work for Peace, Peace ain't coming this way. We should not allow ourselves to be mislead, by talk of entering a time of Peace, Peace is not the absence of war, it is the absence of the rules of war and the threats of war and the preparation for war. Peace is not the absence of war, it is the time when we will all bring ourselves closer to each other, closer to building a structure that is unique within ourselves because we have finally come to Peace within ourselves. The Military and the Monetary, The Military and the Monetary, The Military and the Monetary. Get together whenever they think its necessary, they've turned our brothers and sisters into mercenaries, they are turning parts of the planet, into a cemetery. The Military and the Monetary, The Military and the Monetary, We hounded the Ayatollah religiously, Bombed Libya and killed Quadafi's son hideously. We turned our back on our allies the Panamanians, and saw Ollie North selling guns to the Iranians. Watched Gorbachev slaughtering Lithuanians, We better warn the Amish, they may bomb the Pennsylvanians. The Military and the Monetary, get together whenever they think its necessary, they have turned our brothers and sisters into mercenaries, they are turning the planet, into a cemetery. I don't want to sound like no late night commercial, but its a matter of fact that there are thousands of children all over the world in Asia and Africa and in South America who need our help. When they start talking about 55 cents a day and 70 cents a day, I know a lot of folks feel as though that, thats not really any kind of contribution to make, but we had to give up a dollar and a half just to get in the subway nowadays. So this is a song about tommorrow and about how tommorrow can be better. if we all, "Each one reach one, Each one try to teach one". Nobody can do everything, but everybody can do something, everyone must play a part, everyone got to go to work, Work for Peace. Spirit Say Work, Work for Peace If you believe the things you say, go to work. If you believe in Peace, time to go to work. Cant be wavin your head no more, go to work. |
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2:36 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
We deal in too many externals, brother.
Always afros, handshakes, and dashikis. Never can a man build a working structure for black capitalism. Always does the man read Mao or Fanon. I think I know you would-be black revolutionaries too well. Standing on a box on a corner, talking about blowing the white boy away. That's not where it's at, yet, brother. Calling this man an Uncle Tom, And telling this woman to get an afro, But you won't speak to her if she looks like hell, will you, brother? Some of us been checking you act out kinda closely. And by now it's looking kinda shaky, the way you been rushing people with your super-black bag. Jumping down on some black men with both feet because they are after their B.A. But you're never around when your B.A. is in danger. I mean your black ASS. I think it was a little too easy for you to forget that you were a negro before Malcolm. You drove your white girl through the village every Friday night, While the grass roots stared in envy and drank wine. Do you remember? You need get your memory banks organized, brother. Show that man you call an Uncle Tom just where he is wrong. Show that woman that you are a sincere black man. All we need to do is see you SHUT UP AND BE BLACK. Help that woman. Help that man. That's what brothers are for, brother. |
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4:27 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995) | |||||
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4:16 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
it was not enough that we were bought and brought to this home as the slave, locked in the bowels of a floating shithouse, watching those we love eaten away by plauge and insanity, flesh falling like strips of bark from a termite-infested tree, bones rotting turning first to brittle ivory then to resin.
that was not enough. it was not enough that we were chained to leg irons, black on black with a piss stained wall forced to heed nature's call through and inside of tattered rags that strained our privates, and evidently years of slavery did not appease your need to be superior to something like a crazed lion hung up on being the king of his corner of the cage, backs bent under the wieght of being everything and having nothing, minds too like bomerrangs curving back into themselves kicked and carved by the face-straining smiles that saved my life. that was not enough. somehow i can not believe that it would be enough for me to melt with you and integrate without the thoughts of rape and murder. i cannot conceive of peace on earth until i have given you a piece of lead or pipe to end your worthless motherfucking exitence. imagine your nightmares of my sneaking into a vieled of satin bedroom and attacking your daughter, wife and mother at once ripping open their bowels sexually like a wishbone. imagine that magnified a million times when you realize that the blinders have been stripped from my eyes and I realize that slavery was no smiling happy-fizzy party. your ancestors raped my foremothers and i will not forget. i will not forget that Yale or Harvard or Princeton or In-Hell because you are on my mind. i see you everytime my woman walks down the street with her ass on her shoulders. i see you everytime i look in the mirror and think about the times that i would pat myself on the back for not being too black afterall. i think of you morning, noon and night and i wonder, "just exactly what in hell is enough?" everytime i see a rope or gun i remember, and to top it all of you ain't through yet. over fifty you have killed in mississippi since 1963. that doesn't even begin to begin all of those you have maimed, hit and run over, blinded, poisoned, starved, or castrated. i hope you do not think that a vote for John Kennedy took you off my shit-list because in the street there will only be black and white. there will be no Democrats, Republicans, Liberals, Conservatives, Moderates, or any other of the rest of that shit you have used to make me forget to hate. there ain't no enough. there ain't no surrender. there is only plot and plan, move and groove, kill. there is no promise land. there is only the promise. the promise is not vowel until we have been nerve gassed, shot down and murdered, or done some of the same ourselves. look over your shoulder motherfucker, i am coming. |
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4:30 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
Mmmmm
I can't seem to find the words to say (to say) I don't have strength to play the games you need to play (to play) Every day I seem to be running from the truth I ask myself questions but it just ain't no use 'Cause it seems no matter, no matter, what I try to do I'm still loving and living, lying and losing Every day (Yeah, every day) I've got a job And to say the least It don't mean a thing (it don't mean a thing) It don't begin to compare With the hurt and pair that I've seen (I've seen) Sometimes I know I can't tell wrong from right I don't seem to know day from night It's no wonder that the whole world uptight They're just loving and living, lying and losing Every day (Yeah, every day) Stop on the way home From work to have a drink Just to give myself a little time to think 'Cause it seems that more and more I start to realize That the truth that I wanted The love that I needed Has somehow disappeared before my eyes I can't seem to find the words I need to say (to say) I can't find strength enough to play the games you need, you need to play (to play) 'Cause every day you got me, got me running from the truth And no matter, no matter what I try to do It seems that somehow it just ain't no use I'm still loving and living, lying and losing Can't seem to remember God it's so confusing I'm still loving and living, lying and losing Every day (Yeah, every day) |
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3:21 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995) | |||||
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3:22 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995) | |||||
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1:46 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
A giant eye zapped across the screen,
With tentacle type feeler type thin roots, Reaching for someone maybe me, With large black block letters, Chiseled into the white around the pupils screaming, R e v o l u t i o n, Revolution, And as the eye giant and green, Sort of oozed with no obvious locomotion, Closer and closer until it was like this on my screen, It split and blood flowed down each side of the street, Washing away things that we didn't need to see, Just like beer cans peanut shells and copies of the daily news, And then laying there, bleeding like a stuck pig, Was a stuck pig, Get the point? |
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0:34 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
Picture a man of nearly thirty
Who seems twice as old with clothes torn and dirty Give him a job shining shoes Or cleaning out toilets with bus station crews Give him six children with nothing to eat Expose them to life on a ghetto street Tie an old rag around his wife's head And have her pregnant and lying in bed Stuff them all in a Harlem house And then tell them how bad things are down South. |
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2:54 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
Glad to get high and see the slow motion world.
Just to reach, and touch, the half notes floating. Worlds spinning orbit quicker than 9/8ths Dave Brubeck. We come now, frantically searching for Thomas Moore, rainbow villages. Up on suddenly, Charlie Mingus and our man Abdul Malik, to add bass, to a bottomless pit of insecurity. You may be plastic because you never meditate, about the bottom of glasses, The third side of your universe. Add on Alice Coltrane and her cosmic strains. Still no vocal on blue black horizons. Your plasticity is tested by a formless assault. The sun can answer questions in tune, to all your sacrifices. But why would our new jazz age give us no more mind expanding puzzles? Enter John. Blow from under, always, and never, so that the morning, the sun, may scream of brain bending saxophones. The third world arrives, with Yusef Lateef, and Pharaoh Saunders. With oboes straining to touch the core of your unknown soul. Ravi Shankar comes, with strings attached, prepared to stabilize your seventh sense, Your black rhythm. Up and down a silly ladder run the notes, without the words. Words are important for the mind, but the notes are for the soul. Miles Davis, So what? Cannonball, Fiddler, Mercy. Dexter Gordon, One Flight Up. Donald Byrd, playing Cristo, but what about words? Would you like to survive on sadness? Call on Ella and Jose Happiness. Drift with Smokey, Bill Medley, Bobby Taylor, and Otis Redding. Soul music where frustrations are washed by drums, Nina and Miriam. Congo, Mongo, Beat me, senseless, bongo, Tonto. Flash through dream worlds of STP and LSD. Speed kills and sometimes musics call, is frustrated. And the black man is confused. Our speed is our life pace, much too fast, not good. I beg you to escape, and live, and hear all of the real. Until a call comes for you to cry elsewhere. We must all cry, but tell me. Must our tears be white? |
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1:21 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
This is just like listening
to a conversation being held by the many people who congregate on one of the most popular blocks in the largest area of black America Did you ever eat cornbread and black eye peas Or watermelon and mustard greens? Get high as you can on Saturday night Go to church on Sunday to set things right Listen I seen Miss Blake after Willy yesterday She'd've killed anybody who got in her way Hey look I got a TV for a pound on the head And Jimmy Jean got the best Panamanian Red No I ain't got on no underclothes But we all got to get through this gypsy rose I think Clay got his very good points You say a trade bag with thirteen joints? Who cares if LBJ is in town? Up with Stokely and H. Rap Brown I don't know if the riots is wrong But whitey's been kickin' my ass for too long I was s'posed to baby but they held my pay. Did you hear what the number was yesterday? Junkies is all right when they ain't broke They leaves you alone when they high on dope Damn, but I wish I could get up and move Shut up. Hell you know that ain't true. |
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3:12 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
The subject was faggots
and the quote was "ain't nothin' happenin' but faggots and dope" Faggots and dope, faggots and faggots and faggots who line dot dot dot dot dot Like that, 34th street and 8th avenue Giggling and grinning and prancing and shit Trying their best to see to see the misses and misery and miscellaneous misfits who attend the faggot ball faggots who have come to ball faggots who have come to ball faggots who were balling because they couldn't get their balls inside the faggot hall Balling, balling, ball-less faggots cutie cootie and snoodie faggots I mean you just had to dig it to dig it the crowning attraction being the arrival of Ms Brooklyn looking like a half-back in a mini-skirt with swan feathers covering his err hers a it's pectoral and balls and he err she or it prepared to enter the faggot ball but sitting on the corner digging all that I did as I did long long, black limousines and long flowin' evening gowns had there been no sign on the door saying "faggot ball" I might have entered, and god only knows just what would've happened |
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4:32 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
Standing in the ruins
Of another Black man's life, or flying through the valley They're separating day and night. "I am death," cried the Vulture. "For the people of the light." Charon brought his raft and came from the sea that sails on souls, And saw the scavenger departing, taking warm hearts to the cold. He knew the ghetto was the haven for the meanest creature ever known. In a wilderness of heartbreak and a desert of despair, Evil's clarion of justice shrieks a cry of naked terror. He's taking babies from their mommas and leaving grief beyond compare. So if you see the Vulture coming, he's flying circles in your mind, Remember there is no escaping for he will follow close behind. Only promised me a battle, battle for your soul and mine. He taking babies from their momas And he's leaving Leaving Leaving Leaving Leaving |
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2:00 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
A rat done bit my sister Nell
With Whitey on the moon Her face and arms began to swell And Whitey's on the moon I can't pay no doctor bills But Whitey's on the moon Ten years from now I'll be paying still While Whitey's on the moon You know, the man just upped my rent last night Cause Whitey's on the moon No hot water, no toilets, no lights But Whitey's on the moon I wonder why he's uppin' me? Cause Whitey's on the moon? Well i was already given him fifty a week And now Whitey's on the moon Taxes takin' my whole damn check The junkies make me a nervous wreck The price of food is goin up And if all that crap wasn't enough A rat done bit my sister nell With Whitey on the moon Her face and arms began to swell And Whitey's on the moon With all that money i made last year For Whitey on the moon How come I ain't got no money here? Hmm, Whitey's on the moon You know I just about had my fill Of Whitey on the moon I think I'll send these doctor bills airmail special (To Whitey on the moon) |
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5:15 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Small Talk At 125Th And Lenox (1995)
Many suggestions
And documents written. Many directions For the end that was given. They gave us Pieces of silver and pieces of gold. Tell me, Who'll pay reparations on my soul? Many fine speeches (oh yeah) From the White House desk (uh huh) Written on the cue cards That were never really there. Yes, But the heat and the summer were there And the freezing winter's cold. Now Tell me, Who'll pay reparations on my soul? Call my brother a junkie 'cause he ain't got no job (no job, no job). Told my old man to leave me when times got hard (so hard). Told my mother she got to carry me all by herself. And now that I want to be a man (be a man) who can depend on no one else (oh yeah). What about the red man Who met you at the coast? You never dig sharing; Always had to have the most. And what about Mississippi, The boundary of old? Tell me, Who'll pay reparations on my soul? Call my brother a junkie 'cause he ain't got no job Told my old man to leave me when times got hard (so hard). Told my mother she got to carry me all by herself. Wanna be a man that can depend on no one else (oh yeah). What about the red man, Who met you at the coast? You never dig sharing; Always had to have the most. And what about Mississippi, The boundaries of old? Tell me, Who'll pay reparations on my soul? Many fine speeches (oh yeah) From the White House desk (uh huh) Written on the cue cards That were never really there. Yes, But the heat and the summer were there And the freezing winter's cold. Tell me, Who'll pay reparations on my soul? Who'll pay reparations, ‘Cause I don't dig segregation, but I can't get integration I got to take it to the United Nations, Someone to help me away from this nation. Tell me, Who'll pay reparations on my soul? |
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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3:20 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995)
A junkie walking through the twilight
I'm on my way home I left three days ago, but no one seems to know I'm gone Home is where the hatred is Home is filled with pain and it, Might not be such a bad idea if I never, never went home again Stand as far away from me as you can and ask me why Hang on to your rosary beads Close your eyes to watch me die You keep saying, kick it, quit it, kick it, quit it God, but did you ever try To turn your sick soul inside out So that the world, so that the world Can watch you die Home is where I live inside my white powder dreams Home was once an empty vacuum that's filled now with my silent screams Home is where the needle marks Try to heal my broken heart And it might not be such a bad idea if I never, if I never went home again Home again Home again Home again Kick it, quit it Kick it, quit it Kick it, quit it Kick it, can't go home again |
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995)
If you're driving through the country on a lazy afternoon
Or you're watching your children playin' after school They seem to be so unaware of I know I know The things that they soon have to take care of We got to do something yeah to save the children Soon it will be their test to try and save the world Right now they seem to play such a small part of The things that they soon be right at the heart of My little Tommy he said he wants to be a fireman And little Mary she said she got to teach at school If we know or we say we know about the problems ohohoh Why can't we do something to try and solve them We got to do something yeah to save the children Soon it will be their test to try and save the world We got to do something yeah to save the children To save the children To save the children |
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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3:07 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995)
You will not be able to stay home brother
you will not be able to plug in, turn on and drop out you will not be able to lose yourself on skag and skip skip out for beer during commercials Because the revolution will not be televised The revolution will not be televised the revolution will not be brought to you by xerox in 4 parts without commercial interruption The revolution will not show you pictures of Nixon blowing a bugle and leading a charge by John Mitchell, General Abrams and Spiro Agnew to eat hog moss confiscated from a Harlem sanctuary The revolution will not be televised The revolution will not be brought to you by the Schaefer Award Theatre and will not star Natalie Wood and Steve McQueen or Bullwinkle and Julia The revolution will not give your mouth sex appeal The revolution will not get rid of the nubs The revolution will not make you look five pounds thinner because The revolution will not be televised brother There will be no pictures of you and Willie Mays pushing that cart down the block on the dead run or trying to slide that color television into a stolen ambulance NBC will not be able to predict the winner at 8:32 or the count from 29 districts The revolution will not be televised There will be no pictures of pigs shooting down brothers in the instant replay There will be no pictures of young being run out of Harlem a rail with a brand new process There will be no slow motion or still life of Roy Wilkens strolling through Watts in a red, black and green liberation jumpsuit that he had been saving for just the right occasion Green Acres, The Beverly Hillbillies and Hooterville Junction will no longer be so damned relevant and women will not care of Dick finally gets down with Jane on Search for Tomorrow because black people will be in the street looking for a brighter day The revolution will not be televised there will be no highlights on the eleven o'clock news and no pictures of hairy armed women liberationists and Jackie Onassis blowing her nose The theme song will not be written by Jim Webb, Francis Scott Key nor sung by Glen Campbell, Tom Jones, Johnny Cash, Engelbert Humperdinck of The Rare Earth The revolution will not be televised The revolution will not be right back after a message about a white tornado, white lightning, or white people You will not have to worry about a germ in your bedroom, the tiger in your tank, or the giant in you toilet bowl The revolution will not go better with Coke The revolution will not fight germs that can cause bad breath The revolution WILL put you in the driver's seat The revolution will not be televised, will no be televised will not be televised The revolution will be no re-run brothers The revolution will be live-- 27569 |
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from Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of A Man (1995) | |||||
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3:32 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999) | |||||
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4:32 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999) | |||||
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3:16 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999) | |||||
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1:34 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999)
The economy is in an uproar
The whole damn countries is in the red Taxi fares are going up You say, "Billy Green is dead"? The government can't decide on bussin' or at least thats what they said Yea I heard you, when you told me You said, "Billy Green was dead" But let me tell you bout these hot-pants that this big legged sister wore when i partied with the alphas what? Billy took an overdose well now junkies will be junkies but did you see Gunsmoke last night? man they had themselves a shootout and folks was dyin' left and right At the end when Matt was cornerd i had damn near give up hope What you? Why you keep on interrupting me? you say, My son is taking dope? Call the law and call the doctor! What you mean i shouldn't scream? My only son is taking dope? Should i sit here like I'm pleased? Is that familiar anybody? Check out whats inside your head Because it never seems to matter when it's Billy Green who's dead |
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1:31 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999)
The economy is in an uproar
The whole damn countries is in the red Taxi fares are going up You say, "Billy Green is dead"? The government can't decide on bussin' or at least thats what they said Yea I heard you, when you told me You said, "Billy Green was dead" But let me tell you bout these hot-pants that this big legged sister wore when i partied with the alphas what? Billy took an overdose well now junkies will be junkies but did you see Gunsmoke last night? man they had themselves a shootout and folks was dyin' left and right At the end when Matt was cornerd i had damn near give up hope What you? Why you keep on interrupting me? you say, My son is taking dope? Call the law and call the doctor! What you mean i shouldn't scream? My only son is taking dope? Should i sit here like I'm pleased? Is that familiar anybody? Check out whats inside your head Because it never seems to matter when it's Billy Green who's dead |
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3:31 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999) | |||||
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3:17 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999)
Find a shadow cast by rainbows
There you’ll meet the sage. Feeding rabbits bits of lettuce or cleaning out the cage. He can give you more direction than you’ve ever known. Show you your bronzed baby shoes Now, my how you have grown! Ain’t it nice to fly? You’re waving as soft clouds go by, But Peace won’t be still of its own free will. Say you want to go exploring; you got to find some truth. Can’t stand one more day of Christians shouting down at you. You say you don’t dig politics that never was your bag. People who could run for office wave their private flag. Ain’t it nice to fly? You’re waving as soft clouds go by, But peace won’t be still of its own free will Ain’t it nice to fly? You’re waving as soft clouds go by, But peace won’t be still of its own free will. |
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4:20 | ||||
from Gil Scott-Heron - Free Will (1999)
Find a shadow cast by rainbows
There you’ll meet the sage. Feeding rabbits bits of lettuce or cleaning out the cage. He can give you more direction than you’ve ever known. Show you your bronzed baby shoes Now, my how you have grown! Ain’t it nice to fly? You’re waving as soft clouds go by, But Peace won’t be still of its own free will. Say you want to go exploring; you got to find some truth. Can’t stand one more day of Christians shouting down at you. You say you don’t dig politics that never was your bag. People who could run for office wave their private flag. Ain’t it nice to fly? You’re waving as soft clouds go by, But peace won’t be still of its own free will Ain’t it nice to fly? You’re waving as soft clouds go by, But peace won’t be still of its own free will. |