American Privilege - Allen Stone

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American Privilege Lyrics

Oh it doesn't seem right
That I, I was born White
And my parents don't fight
Told me they loved me each night
I, I don't lose sleep for
The kids sewing my sheets, or
The ones stitching my sneaks

As long as I can buy 'em both cheap, well
American privilege
Is blurring my vision
Inherited sickness
American privilege
Is blurring my vision

Inherited sickness
Everyday I piss money away
I'm a material slave
Just trying to polish this ball and this chain
Cause I, I dont think twice, no
Just keep it outta my sight, oh
Bitch, don't kill my vibe, no

Bitch, don't kill my vibe, well
American privilege
Keeps blurring my vision
Inherited sickness
American privilege
Keeps blurring my vision

Inherited sickness
(Robbing Peter to pay Paul)
(Cash that paycheck, spend it all)
(Build that house up big and tall)

(Robbing Peter to pay Paul)
(Robbing Peter to pay Paul)
As long as I stay comfortable
(Cash that paycheck, spend it all)
On shit I'll throw away next fall
(Build that house up, big and tall)
Break the bank to build the wall

(Robbing Peter to pay Paul)
As long as I stay comfortable
American privilege
Keeps blurring my vision
Inherited sickness
American privilege
Keeps blurring my vision
Inherited sickness

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
From backwoods barbecues and community gatherings; Allen Stone emerges to share personal melodies, telling his tales of life after just 24 years. Getting his start singing at his father's church in small-town America; it wasn't until later when introduced to the greats of soul music (Marvin Gaye, Aretha Franklin) and then to the confessional lyrical fashion of the 60's -70's singer/ songwriters, did music begin to ignite intense passion, eventually carrying this boy to a musical home.

Stone was born in Chewelah, Washington, a small town about 45 minutes north of Spokane with a population of approximately 1,500 people. When Allen was 18, he moved from his home town to Spokane, Washington, where he attended community college for a semester followed by Bible School. Not long after, he moved to Seattle, Washington.

He has self-released two records, "Last To Speak" (2010) and the self-title sophomore release "Allen Stone" (2011).

On his self-titled sophomore album - an independent self-release which hit digital shelves October 4, Allen has pushed his sound and lyricism to a greater level of noted individuality. It touches upon a range of styles and themes. Integrating classic soul, catchy pop hooks, r&b beats and folk roots with lyrical matters of testimonial broken relationships, poisonous politics and the age-old topic of simple, pure celebration. Stone's music is notable for his finely crafted evocative songs and a fresh, smooth, soul-filled voice-one that certainly belies his age.

Allen Stone has shot up the R&B/Soul charts on iTunes, peaking at the number 2 spot, and hit #29 and #62 on the Billboard Heatseekers and R&B/Hip Hop Album charts, respectively, and has garnered national praise - USA Today called him a "pitch-perfect powerhouse" - all without any support of a label, publisher, or publicist.

Stone's soulful sound has been compared to Stevie Wonder and Prince. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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Allen Stone