View Full Version : Post your favorite lines by
the pm
06-30-2004, 01:47 PM
http://www.the411online.com/willied.jpg
"and if it get cold you gon sneeze
cause i aint givin you my coat so i can freeze"
I gotta go with pretty much any line on "I wanna fuck your Mama"
That is Willie D, right?
LBFam
06-30-2004, 02:01 PM
'rodney king, god damn sell-out..
on tv crying for a cop..
the same mufuckas who beat the hell out ya..
now i wish they would've shot ya'
'i wanna fuck your mama, girl..
and have that pussy drippin like a wet jeri curl'
'you gotta let a hoe be a hoe'
'i might laugh, giggle, or grin..
you could say willie d is out to win..
people say my manners are minimum..
im from the ghetto hoe..
im not a muthafuckin gentleman..'
Lefty Rose
06-30-2004, 03:25 PM
"...Or is it the one the beat for 5 thousand dollas?
Thought he had cane but it was gold medal flour..."
"....And what I saw would make you start gigglin'
3 blind crazy and crippled senior citizens..."
My Minds Playin' Tricks on Me was the JOINT!!!
the pm
06-30-2004, 03:47 PM
"some of yall are still gonna try to show off
and git bust in ya goddamn mouf"
"if you dont got no pussy i dont even wanna be bothered"
"you say you like my new jacket
jealous muthafucka even sound sarcastic"
off the timeless classic
Homie Dont Play That
"i sold a lot of recprds and a lot of people know me
so wheres my god damn trophy"
"your whole vocabulary is BABY BABY BABY
thats why you so god damn crazy"
taken from the selection
Trophy
"Wille D is the gangsta of love
some of my boys sell drugs
I sell the knowledge you cant get ahold of
cause the game is sold not told"
http://www.artistdirect.com/Images/Sources/AMGCOVERS/music/cover200/drc600/c625/c6252555nq9.jpg
if anyone has this cd let me know
Amirah
06-30-2004, 03:57 PM
talib kweli - get by
i think about a struggle and i find the strength in myself
Ipatch
06-30-2004, 04:07 PM
"This ass says exit only!"
LBFam
06-30-2004, 05:00 PM
Originally posted by the pm
http://www.artistdirect.com/Images/Sources/AMGCOVERS/music/cover200/drc600/c625/c6252555nq9.jpg
if anyone has this cd let me know
let me look for it..i think i have it here at the house..if its not here, my brother has it..
LBFam
06-30-2004, 05:02 PM
Originally posted by Amirah
talib kweli - get by
i think about a struggle and i find the strength in myself
please http://www.accesshiphop.com/forums/images/edit.gif then "delete"..we would appreciate it..
skibadee
06-30-2004, 10:58 PM
"I'm a mother fucker, I put a bitch through a test
if she don't pass, she don't get blessed.
If the test consists, of fuckin my whole crew,
well bitch god damn thats what you gotta do!!"
Best Geto Boys album hands down!
http://www.artistdirect.com/Images/Sources/AMGCOVERS/music/cover200/drd100/d126/d12633m3edg.jpg
LBFam
07-07-2004, 04:06 PM
"the mufuckas are sick..
constipated, co' full of shit..
they tried to keep us off the market..
straight up hoe shit, they had to stock it"
gokarma
07-07-2004, 04:23 PM
one world die's off then it moves on to the next.
LBFam
07-07-2004, 05:28 PM
Originally posted by gokarma
one world die's off then it moves on to the next.
Originally posted by LBFam
please http://www.accesshiphop.com/forums/images/edit.gif then "delete"..we would appreciate it..
the pm
07-07-2004, 05:36 PM
thanks lb cause i was sittin here like
what the fuck is that from
gokarma
07-07-2004, 09:16 PM
what you talkin about. speak up
verbal kint
07-08-2004, 09:32 AM
Originally posted by gokarma
what you talkin about. speak up
this thread is dedicated to lines by willie d from geto boys.
the pm
09-01-2004, 02:12 PM
Geto Boys member Willie D. said that a new, untitled album by the group was recently finished.
The new album features all three original group members and will be released before the end of the year.
"You know, I can’t let the cat out the bag, but the one thing I can say is that I’m very satisfied with it," Willie D. told AllHipHop.com. "The Geto Boys is essentially a business relationship. Aint no sense in getting out here and faking the s**t. One thing I cant stand it when mother f***ers get out here and say, 'Yeah, everything is beautiful and we ain’t gonna break up.' And they know that they have already split up. They lying to try and protect their image, their careers. They already might shoot videos with new members and s**t. It is what it is."
The Geto Boys started in 1989 and were one of the first groups from the South to find major success in Hip-Hop.
In addition to his business as a Geto Boy, the rapper recently moved to Baku, Azerbaijan, which is close to Baghdad in Iraq.
"Business opportunities made me move," Willie D. said. "I was messing with the real estate. The world is bigger than the United States and if there is an opportunity abroad, that’s where I am going."
While the opportunities for business were ripe, Willie D. said that doing business in the country was different than doing business in the United States.
"Things like making a phone call is a bitch," the rapper complained. "They charge you about $6 a minute and about $100 for two hours on the internet. The government takes all that money and squeezes out anybody that comes in. You can’t just come in there [and start a business]."
While it may be difficult to start a business in Azerbaijan, Willie D. did give some advice for aspiring business executives in the U.S.
"Our people need to find some real estate. Its way more stable than the music game. Cats keep taking all their street money and putting it in the rap game. Ninety-five percent of them are going to fail and lose all that they have. You gotta be a dumb mother f***er to fail in real estate. Real estate has a 91 percent success ratio."
the pm
12-08-2004, 12:55 PM
"yo flav i give a fuck about a goddamn grammy/
but them muthafuckin hoes wont have me one/
at least you was invited by the bigots/
the muthafuckas told me to buy a ticket"
skibadee
12-08-2004, 02:57 PM
I saw the new video yesterday... I'm sure there's a link around somewhere.
the pm
12-08-2004, 03:06 PM
"Yes Yes Yall" video (link) (http://search.launch.yahoo.com/search/lsearch/video?p=geto+boys)
Hacksaw Jim
12-08-2004, 03:13 PM
that songs dope havent seent the vid yet
the pm
01-05-2005, 02:01 PM
(taken from hiphopdx.com)
http://www.hiphopdx.com/images/features/281204FAWD5555.jpg
Willie D: Knuckle Up
Wednesday - December 29, 2004
Bayer L. Mack
Somewhere in Texas, southern rap legend Willie D of the Geto Boys is riding in a Cadillac with his attorney. They’re discussing the assault charges he’s facing. On the radio, Aaron Neville’s soft melodic voice is purring from the car’s speakers.“Turn it up a little bit,” he tells his lawyer. They continue to go over the details of his case. “Turn it up some more,” says Willie. Despite the seriousness of the allegations against him (D is also a part time professional boxer, thereby making his hands a lethal weapon), the rapper seems more interested in hearing the soothing sound of soul music than the “legalese” coming from the driver’s set. That scene, as described by Willie D, is a perfect representation of the man himself. He’s part guerrilla; part gentleman. He’s the conflicted street soldier torn between right and wrong as evidenced on his solo projects I’m Goin' Out Like A Soldier, Play Witcha Mama and most recently Loved By Few, Hated By Many. With the release of the Geto Boys ninth album, War & Peace on Jan. 25th, Willie will once again bring his unique perspective on life to the masses.
You’ve said that the Geto Boys are still “championing the cause of the underserved.” Who are the underserved?
"The poor and the uneducated. They don’t really have a voice. Don’t get it twisted though. There are some educated folks that fell on hard times for one reason or another and find themselves in these situations too. The elderly. They don’t have the strength to fight anymore. They don’t know where to go and find out different things about this program or that program. Those are the underserved."
What more can be said in gangsta rap that hasn’t already been said?
"Keep saying some more shit. Keep saying it louder. I know it’s not that easy when you’re getting pressure from the record label. They’re like, ‘hey we feel you about these issues, but maybe we should tone it down.’"
Who do you see out there speaking about real issues today?
"Of course Geto Boys, but there are some other people like Common, Kanye West...thank God for Kanye West and Queen Latifah. It’s actually unfair to name people because there are so many you forget.
Those artists are more…
"Mainstream."
Right. I’m talking about artists that are more hardcore like Geto Boys, bringing the social and political commentary with it.
"It’s like that boxer out there no one knows about. He just ain’t surfaced yet. I don’t know who they are, but they out there."
So, basically… there isn’t anyone in the market right now? What about Eminem? He’s been mixing in a lot of real issues into his music...like his attack on President Bush in “Mosh.”
"I think he deserves credit for that. Anytime you take a chance on jeopardizing your finances...you know. People jeopardize they life all the time, but seldom jeopardize they finances. He’s coming after the president...someone who could put a contract out on him. But he gets away with a lot more because of all the other stuff he does...cross-dressing and all that. People don’t know if he’s serious or not. It’s like’s he’s on the fence.
Who are you listening to right now? What are you playing in the ride?
"I don’t listen to rap music. I listen to 70’s R&B, 80’s R&B; James Taylor is always in my CD deck and The Police."
The new generation was raised on rap music. They haven’t really been exposed to
white artists who were making popular music in the late 70’s and 80’s. Do you think
they’re lacking some of that musical diversity the original Hip-Hop generation had?
"Good music has a way of finding its way to your heart. It found me in jail. When I was 18...actually like 17, I listened to white artists [for the first time] in jail. I had no knowledge of being around white people.
I was under the impression white folks couldn’t sing and didn’t have no rhythm. That was just my ignorance. But, anyway there was a show called Video Jukebox that we used to watch in jail and this music video by John Cougar Mellencamp came on called “Jack and Diane.” I turned the channel as soon as it came on. I wasn’t trying to hear that shit, but my man was like, let me watch that before you turn it. I was like naw. We kept going back and forth like that until we was about to get into it. I was like, damn this nigga want to fight me over this music video? He know I‘m cold with these hands. So I just sat there and listened to it and it was hot, but I didn’t let him know. After that, I just wanted more and more. When I got out of jail, I started dating women who had been exposed to different things than me. They exposed me to a lot too… like that James Taylor. Right now, there’s nothing you can play [musically] that I can’t get down with."
Would you describe your relationship with Scarface and Bushwick Bill as friendly or is it strictly business?
"It’s business. If it wasn’t about business, we’d all be rich."
So, if you guys were really cool, you’d all be eating the same.
"Dig what I’m saying!?!"
Understood. So, what’s the recording process like between the three of you?
"Get in that muthafucka and get in where you fit in. Basically, the structure is
unstructured. I’m not with the lying. I’m not going to [sugar coat] it. We should be as big as the Grateful Dead or The Police. Don’t blame it on the label when you don’t do what you’re supposed to do. Don’t give the label an excuse not to promote you. You missing interviews. You missing photo shoots and meetings. Don’t make the label come looking for you. Don’t have them wondering, is he gonna help promote the album? Or is he gonna hang out in Jamaica? You can’t blame that on the label."
When was the last time you heard something on a record that shocked you or caused you to raise an eyebrow?
"Juvenile say some crazy shit, but he say shit that I would say. Like on his new album with UTP he say ‘Order a drink and sit yo black ass down.’ That’s some real shit. I love how he put regular conversation in the rap."
My next question deals with something I’ve always wondered about. Southern rap music is running things right now. Why didn’t Rap-A-Lot sew up the South?
"In my opinion, I don’t think the vision was there. James "Lil J" Smith had in his mind this is what I’m gonna do and if I make something out of it [great.] He’s real. He takes careful steps before making a [business] move. Personally, it’s helped his
fortune by not losing money. On the other hand, you have to take chances. There’s
really no limit to what you can [achieve.] But yeah… we could have sewn up the whole
South."
Do you think that lack of initiative after "We Can’t Be Stopped" blew up caused you guys to seek out solo projects?
"We Can’t Be Stopped exceeded all of our expectations. There was no ingenuity behind a “Mind Playing Tricks On Me.” We just made that record, sent it to the radio and it blew up. Stuff like that only happens once in a lifetime."
It’s kinda like lightning in a bottle.
"Exactly."
So when do we get another Willie D special?
"Oh… I’m coming. Best believe that. I’m coming."
klemson*msg*atx
01-05-2005, 06:41 PM
5th Ward. H-Town Represent. Texas.
mad$een
01-05-2005, 08:35 PM
"are you the type that wont put a ho in front of a trigga?then you'z a ho ass nigga":p
Dee Ran
01-05-2005, 09:26 PM
"Balls to the walls and no holds barred,
I'm the charred remains of a Barbeque'd retard."
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