Gotta Know (feat. Benjah) - Lecrae

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Gotta Know (feat. Benjah) Lyrics

You just gotta know
You ever feel like life just coming at ya a million miles an hour?
You just gotta know, you just gotta know
Somebody's holding it all together

Life is like an elevator, a lot of ups and downs
People pushing your buttons and getting jerked around
I used to lurk around town trying to work around
Working so that I could hit the ground with the perfect sound

Even perfect sound sounds like work
When you spend your time flirting with the crown in the perp
I was bound for berzerk with a layover in crazy
A lazy Jay-Z hoping rock-a-fellas paid me

Or rocking ladies were caught me a Mercedes
But that whole dream was in '80's, baby
Missed that shot like the cop that's crooked
TV goes off, third eye still looking

Mom's still cooking, I can always go home
Even though I'm five years past grown
Here I go again, I'm still chasing the wind, I can't win
When it gets hot, it boils down to sin
If heaven ain't a gift, then I ain't getting in, man

I can't even find the words for the way I feel
So I paint a picture, I paint a picture
I've been going down this road, seen some crazy things
So I paint a picture, you gots to see it

You just gotta know, you just gotta know
You just gotta know, you just gotta know

Yeah, I sit and hear the guitars play
Wonder if they could, what would stars say?
Or Venus and Mars say, or say that we want it our way
Stars so desperate to shine that they go on living the hard way

The intellect to travel to Mars but so blind
We worship Venus but she don't even know who we are
And she never cared why? 'Cause she wasn't there
When I was trying to drown my sorrows in a pool of despair

I ain't perfect, sometimes I feel worthless
Worthless than that is the image that I'da purchased
Man, from the shades to the shirt, to the shoes
Just another fool trying to cover he's confused, that ain't cool

Sometimes I hate the man in the mirror
'Cause I know he's a liar and a cheater and a killer
People say they love him but they love what he can give 'em
But deep inside he knows that there's a reason for him living

I can't even find the words for the way I feel
So I paint a picture, I paint a picture
I've been going down this road, seen some crazy things
So I paint a picture, you gots to see it

You just gotta know, you just gotta know
You just gotta know, you just gotta know

Uh, you know I need you like Aqua
Day without ya got me so nauseous
If I ain't cautious, I'm gonna self-inflict my sickness
You know it's true, you as my witness

At how you witness, my inconsistent
Yes, the ovation when I need your assistance
And I just gotta know that even though I'm a misfit
I'm still worth more than calamity's French kiss

Yes, I'm loved and I'm pursued
And though I can't feel it, still I know that it's true
Somebody woke me up and yeah, I know it was you
And yet I keep trying to steer clear of your view

'Cause if you get me, I know that you got me
But I'm so insecure I can't believe that you want me
But then I heard you went on your way to adopt me
Well, you can have my all if you swear you won't drop me
'Cause I gotta know, yeah

You just gotta know, gotta know, gotta know
You just gotta know, gotta know, gotta know that it's real
You just gotta know, gotta know, gotta know that it's real
You just gotta know, gotta know that it's real

You just gotta know, gotta know, gotta know
You just gotta know, gotta know, gotta know that it's real
You just gotta know, gotta know, gotta know that it's real
You just gotta know, gotta know that it's real

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
“History does not happen in a straight line…” -Barack Obama

Neither does hip hop nor its prolific breakout rhymist/activist/author/voice of conscience Lecrae.

Never afraid to move the needle, few would argue that his much anticipated Columbia Records debut album (due out this summer) comes at a pivotal moment for the artist, as hip hop’s torrent now moves to him.

Surging or insurgent - depending on your point of view - he’s blessed with a visionary verbal arsenal and an abiding faith that’s piloted a unique career trajectory defying the typical hip hop storyline. ‘The system may not have planned for this,’ wrote Vibe about Lecrae, ‘but it’s definitely coming around.’ “More caught than taught,” is how the artist describes his incredible journey that includes two Grammys, a history-making #1 album with his masterful 2014 offering, Anomaly (topped multiple categories, including the Billboard 200 and is RIAA Gold certified), and a compelling live resume, most recently notching a headlining 2016 ‘Destination’ tour which Lecrae says was about “real unity, not pretend unity.” He continues to thoughtfully engage the culture, reeling off a NY Times Bestseller (last year’s riveting memoir ‘Unashamed’) and a breakthrough spoken word performance at the BET Hip Hop Awards last fall that had the twittersphere heralding his arrival as truth-telling firebrand. BET hailed it as an “epic poem,” of “necessary affirmations.”

Lecrae relishes his purpose-driven career arc as inspired ‘catalyzer’ - going “from artist to architect” on the new album, widening the close-knit comfort zone of Reach Records (the label he co-founded) by partnering with Columbia Records and expanding his creative outreach. “I sought influences and collaborators I never imagined I’d have the opportunity to work with,” he says. The patient growth process was born out of a “gumbo” of more than 50 songs, “some to just get off my chest,” he says - “I don’t know if they were all meant to be heard but I know they were meant to be written.”

One song that has already seen the light of day is the powerfully uplifting “Blessings,” (featuring Ty Dolla $ign) which iHeartRadio chose for their ‘On The Verge’ platform which connects breaking artists with new listeners. Lecrae cites a refreshed perspective throughout the making of the new album after surviving one of the most tumultuous years he’s experienced since his turbulent teens. Among the hardships was the passing of his longtime friend and collaborator DJ Official, some “painful personal” ramifications after the publication of the unvarnished‘Unashamed,’ trusting friendships that went south, andchronic social media sparring from those attacking Lecrae for his candid and heartfelt perspective in response to theheartbreaking social justice issues making headlines in 2016. “Some people felt that maybe I shouldn’t be articulating the pain when it comes to the structural and systemic issues that have created barriers and disparity in regard to race,” he says. “But I came out of it feeling more confident in making this album then at any other time in my life.”



With trusted friend and Grammy winning producer S1 serving as a key production contributor, Lecrae says it was healing for him to weave some of the more nuanced, complex themes of the new album and come out the other side. “It’s about giving hope to people that they can overcome the fear and the insecurity when things do fall apart,” he says. “The before and after of it all. It may get ugly in your life, but there’s a point of rediscovery where the fear can actually drive the faith and restore you. Sometimes you have to acknowledge where you are at before it can get better.”

Such authenticity has been the hallmark of his 7 studio albums and multiple mixtapes, now nearing the 2 million mark in sales, with the acclaimed artist winning a Billboard Music Award, multiple BET, Soul Train, and Dove awards and even an Honorary Doctorate of music to go along with his 2 Grammy wins. Past signature songs like the ultra-relatable “Church Clothes,” and the prophetic, multi-perspective of “Welcome To America” revealed a Lecrae exploring the plight of the disconnected in all of us. Critics have praised the sociological component of his work and his heightened sensitivity toward the disenfranchised.

On the upcoming album, Lecrae hints he’s still mindful of the outsider role that’s enabled him to work the edges of hip hop stardom, but also conscious of the world coming into his space, now. “I don’t fit in to any one category,” he says. “The BET performance showed I can compete on the highest level and excel at it. I’ve already proven I’m part of the hip hop narrative. On this album I’m taking liberties.” 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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Lecrae