Happy Fourth of July
Lyrics to “Brooklyn” by Mos Def Hey hey, ha ha say what say what Ha ha bust it yo Sometimes I feel like I don’t have a partner Sometimes I feel like my only friend Is the city I live in, is beautiful Brooklyn Long as I live here believe I’m on fire hey Cuz…

Lyrics to “Brooklyn” by Mos Def
Hey hey, ha ha say what say what
Ha ha bust it yo
Sometimes I feel like I don’t have a partner
Sometimes I feel like my only friend
Is the city I live in, is beautiful Brooklyn
Long as I live here believe I’m on fire hey
Cuz it’s the B-the-R-the-O-the-O-K
L-Y-N is the place where I stay
The B-the-R-the-O-the-O-K
Best in the world and all USA
It’s the B-to-the-R-the-O-the-O-K
L-Y-N is the place where I stay
The B-to-the-R-the-O-the-O-K
Place where I rest is on my born day
Bust it, sometimes I sit back and just reflect
Watch the world go by and my thought connect
I think about the time past and the time to come
Reminesce on Bed-Stuy when I was pride and young
I used to try and come, to the neighborhood function
Throw on my Izod, say a little something
When I was just a youngin, before the days of thuggin
How me and Charlie Chims (aiyyo what?) I’m only buggin
Fast forward, Nine-Now I gotta team my seed
I must proceed at God’s speed to perform my deed
Livin the now space and time, round the nine to five
For as long as I’m alive, paw I got to strive
I ain’t sittin roadside, that ain’t harder to plan
I’m out here for my fam doin all that I can
I love my city, sweet and gritty in land to outskirts
Nickname Bucktown cuz we grown to outburst
Philosophy redefine us, touch mines I touch back
Walk the streets like a sweet and get beat like drum tracks
Catch no shakes over jakes (boomp-boomp!) we bust back
Bring the marty to your face wit no place to run back
I’m from the slums that created the bass that thump back
This ain’t a game clown, play ya James Brown and jump back
What you want, Jack? Young cats stash they jums at
Draw they guns back, momma screams where she sons at
Tryin to hunt that, recurring dream of high stakes
The fourth largest, first artist, Brooklyn is the place
Settled by the judge many years ago
Three billion strong and here we go
GOOD MORNINNNNNNNNNGG VIETNAM!!!
Ha (back up back up back up back up back up) [repeated in background]
Yo sometimes I sit back, reflect on the place that I live at
Unlike any place I ever been at
The home of big gats, deep dish hammer rim caps
Have a mishap, push ya wig back
Where you go to get the fresh trim at
Four on the jake got the Timb rack
Blue collars metro carding it
Thugs mobbin it, form partnership
Increase armorment, street pharmacist
Deep consequence, when you seek sleek ornaments
You get caught, rode the white horse and can’t get off
Big dogs that trick off just get sent off
They shoebox stash is all they seeds gotta live off
It’s real yo but still yo, it’s love here
And it’s felt by anybody that come here
Out of towners take the train, plane and bus here
Must be something that they really want here
One year as a resident, deeper sentiment
Shoutout “Go Brooklyn!”, they representin it
Sittin on they front stoop sippin Guinesses
Usin native dialect in they sentences
From the treeline blocks to the tenaments
To the Mom & Pop local shop menaces
Travel all around the world in great distances
And ain’t a place that I know that bear resemblance
That’s why we it The Planet
Not a borough or a prov, it’s our style that’s uncalm
From ?sun? to the ? to the Lafayette Gardens
White ?coff guawinas? in they army jacket linings
Yo this goes out to my cats in Coney Isle
Friday night out in front The Himalaya goin wild
This goes out to Crown Heights and Smurv Village
The nighties, and all my ?yarda trenny? Brown’s Village
Parkside tennants caught, thirties, forties, and the fifties
The cats out in Starite City gettin busy
To the Hook, to the East, to the Stuy
Bushwick and Kanarcy, Farraget, Fullgreen, and Marcy
My Flatbush posse, generals of armies
When it’s time to form, just call me
And let this song be, playin loud in Long B
If you love Bucktown STRONGLY!
RAISE IT UP!
Brooklyn my habitat, the place where it happen at
Live sway and the sharp balance of the battle axe
Irons is brandished at, thugs draw they hammer back
It’s where you find the news tool crew cameras at
It’s where my fam is at, summertime jame is at
They play Big and get you open like a sandal back
Hotter than candle wax, hustlin you can’t relax
The crack babies tryin to find where they mama’s at
It’s off the handle black, wit big police scandals that
Turn into actions screenplays sold to Miramax
The type of place where they check your appearance at
And cats who know where all the hot ‘lo gear is at
The stompin grounds, where you find a pound, smoke is that
Be blazin charm that have your wave cap floatin back
The doorstep where the disposessed posted at
Dope fiends out at Franklin Ave sellin zovarax
You big ballin better keep your money folded back
Cuz once the young guns notice that it’s over, black
Brooklyn keep on takin it, worldwide we known for that
Flossy cats get it snatched like the local tax
The place I sharpen up my baritone vocals at
Where one of the greatest MC’s was a local cat
Mos Def’s Brooklyn [azlyrics]
Photo by CB Photography
Mos was great- everytime I’ve seen him with the 99% of white folks in the audience, especially when he kicked off the opening of the BAM spring season and when Marty Mark was borrowing a few lines from him during the introduction – he was keeping it real then. Don’t get me wrong- Mos is great. I even liked him when he was selling books at the store by the 78th precinct. The racial thing is soooo tired. There were plenty-o-white- folks here before the blacks folks were here before the white folks were here again and on and on…
What is all this about? What kills me is the postings that generate the most reponses are those that people take and attempt to make some sort of class/race/culture struggle or fight out of it.
The title of Mos Def’s song is “Brooklyn”
This is indeed a “brooklyn” brownstone blog. Does that infer something?
Marketing and Media take things that they wish to utilize for the benifit of promoting what ever product they are hawking. What does that have to do with someone attempting to gain street cred…
Nike once used a Mos Def song to promote sneakers (Umi Says)…. Did anyone have a problem with that? I’m sure nobody that usually blogs here did…
I actually had a problem with the fact that Nike had Mos Def change a very specific word in the add-
His song says ” I want Black People to be free… ”
Commercial says ” I want the people to be free… ”
Now what does any of this have to do with Brownstone Brooklyn?
Good Grief
I’m gonna have to take my nine down to Moutarde on 5th Ave later today so I can tear up the waiters there. Dem bitches was dishin’ up calimari last night and dat shit wasn’t crispy at all.
Gang Starr! sorry i didn’t have time to post ALL the corrections & wow, who gave “combustiblegirl” a badge? (repeat: the lyrics are WRONG, so are we still “violating” “copyright”?)
one thing apropos to the greater theme of this thread is Mos Def’s reference to
Yardies & Trinis
those who KNOW & didn’t need to comment are cool; the rest should perhaps pay closer attention to the w-i-d-e range of folks around ya’ll before criticizing Mr B’s or anyone’s motivations. real life in Brooklyn is about A LOT more than just skin colors, tho’ that’s surely important too.
regards,
The Music Director
WWIB
p/s– this is sort of the prequel to Mos Def’s “Bucktown” (that part was correct):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6KxZbLeo80
Keep posting, Peter in CG. There are some of us (certainly not most readers, for reasons already mentioned by you and others in this thread) who agree with much of what you’re saying.
Those who dissent from the majority of Brownstoner readers should NOT leave what I thought was an open forum to discuss all things Brownstone Brooklyn. The people who should read and post elsewhere are those who can’t handle open and honest dialogue.
This is a great Post Mr. B.
I grew up going to school in Ft. Greene when it wasnt nice….All of my friends and I would play ball in all the different parks throughout ft.greene, bedSty and East New York.
I began to love the Ft. Greene neighborhood and the music was a big part of it…it wasnt about black/white, money/no money. You associated with it. Playing ball on the courts Mos Def, biggie, Gangstar blasting in the background was normal!
Now whenever any of my friends get in my car they think its funny that I listen to this type of music. But I look at it as a way a grew up.
Im glad to be a part of it and I dont claim to be down or be something Im not…but its a part of who I am.
I thought the posting of Mos Defs lyrics were hot. Being born in raised in BK I feel the love that Mos song conveys.
I’ve see many Whites try to be down with the culture by trying to hard. If your down,then “YOU ARE DOWN”. you don’t have to bag or sag or swag what you are not, OR what you “THINK” we are.
Get a Clue?, Ha, You’ll never get it at all…
“dap”, 8:38 you corn ball, is a hand shake. Maybe I should of said I would “give’em five”.
Wow, did you actually pay the thousands of dollars it costs to reprint song lyrics in their entirety like that or did you just commit massive copyright infringement in order to put content on your site?