Industry - Cormega

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Industry Lyrics

Exaterating tell our husteler, we quit to pay judgement
And feel our brothers instead talk aboutlove and hate
Talk about love and skill, truth be told
Dam will never be a guller and don't talk about me
You profit is down man
For the rise and hit man and they saw a kidn of hit man
It's crazy that's way we ain't gush
Rappers hate each other not the lable thet got it
Don't care about culture, they onyl want profit
Give your able all set slow bitch you get drop quick
You too wander what is on the end of the street is toxic,
For reference check out and BDP set all
This time I will make high and was playing all day
this time will made all black
and didn't get enough play,
I guess they have a problem with anything positive
Doens'make sense Id theydoen't make dollars

Those that manage us, those that are our agents,
Those that are our accounters
Those that were in reckel executives
Those that was the owners of the wrekele able
You never got true accounting with nothign that you did

Was a deal beteel lable and pimping
Use it yourslef, they tell you how to spend it
Well slow down listen, here's play your mind with no abition
They keep you fly, images promotions
They keep you high so they isn't focus
You living in the moment, feeling yourself
They live in the lus hold, live with succes
And what's swag, I don't care how you dress or what you drive
I walk hard that really impress,
You say it's all about money do you even invest?
Anytime in your rhymes let me guess
You so on and you're right it's just comes to you
Cuz you the issue now you just do it
I lyricly abuse any rapper will choose
Two steps to me I will bring it right to you

How do you think you are,
But a piece of me then you're only availble as your last get something
And when you make no more hit songs
No body cares when you're no more

Meat a lot women like numbers can't be count
To look high, she ain't hold thist hate taken
The better youself the better future for your children
Controversal sells so they support ...
Makes more progress means more profit
And all they get killl, they say they so sorry
Me while they tell you the day it was the next project
What a life, death made more profit,
Ruggy companies get pay for your drama
And beaf DVD-s on BIT so every artist how was on it, was beating for free
While the royalty is going to kill the three
He quit thet Jones song
Well he know bout beaf
No disrespect pretending i know we got beat
Is for the dee know how to risk it
Pay on fife grif

And every one of our great artist they died with nothin
While the record companies executives were rich
Sending their children to college
You are not stupit you are briliant
But the question is: Can you put your briliant in your song?
Can you put conditions of the world in a song and ispire young people all over the world?

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Cory McKay (March 2, 1973), better known by his stage name Cormega often abbreviated to Mega, is an American rapper from Queens, New York. Cormega’s streetwise poetics and perseverance has made him one of the most respected East Coast lyricists.

Cormega was raised in Long Island City, Queens, forming childhood friendships with future rappers such as Nas, AZ, Nature, and Capone-N-Noreaga.

1980s
He was featured on Hot Day's "Going Straight Up" from his album "It's My Turn". He was also featured on Blaq Poet & DJ Hot Day's track "Set It Off" from their album "Without Warning" in 1991.

1990s
Cormega was sentenced to 5–15 years in prison for armed robbery in 1991. Despite his incarceration, Cormega gained some attention following a shout-out from Nas on his song "One Love", from the critically acclaimed Illmatic album.

Cormega was released from prison on appeal after serving almost 4 years in New York's Mid-State Correctional Facility. Following his release in 1995, Cormega became determined to pursue rapping. Nas included him on a song entitled "Affirmative Action" for his second album It Was Written. The song also featured AZ and Foxy Brown, and became The Firm's first appearance. Based on his performance, he was signed to Def Jam and recorded an album called The Testament. Based on the buzz from "Affirmative Action," Nas, his manager Steve Stoute and producers Dr. Dre and Trackmasters joined to produce The Firm. Cormega was replaced with another artist, Nature, because either he would not sign a contract with Stoute or Stoute felt Nature was a better rapper. This led to an alleged altercation between Cormega and Nature. Cormega's dispute with Stoute also ended his friendship with Nas. Following the end of his membership in The Firm, Alex Trojano contributed in producing his album The Testament. Meanwhile, following a falling-out over creative differences with his manager Chris Lighty and Def-Jam imprint Violator Records, his debut album The Testament was indefinitely shelved. During the recording for The Testament Cormega responded to Nas' "One Love" in the form of a letter also entitled "One Love".

2000s
In 2000, he was released from his contract and he started his own record company, Legal Hustle Records. Cormega vented his disappointment with Nas and The Firm in a mixtape song titled "Never Personal".This song was never directly pointed to Nas, but the media made it look like that. In 2001, he released his new debut album, The Realness, which was acclaimed by critics. Many of the songs share a theme of betrayal. Nas responded to Cormega on his song "Destroy and Rebuild" from his album Stillmatic. Cormega retaliated with more mixtape tracks, "A Slick Response" and "Realmatic". Nas revisited the Cormega beef in his song "The Cross" on the album God's Son. In reference to Cormega, Nas rapped "What I've discovered is my brother's tryin to be/The next me, yeah I support him but he's blinded I see/ Jealousy he love me to death and I'm buggin I love him for life/ We both still mournin on our mother's life" (referencing the fact that Cormega's mother was murdered when he was four).

Cormega's follow-up album, The True Meaning won the Source Magazine's prestigious Underground Album of the Year Award. In 2004, he followed up with Legal Hustle (a compilation album showcasing his label's artists) and other talented hip-hop lyricists such as Ghostface Killah, Large Professor, AZ, Kurupt, Jayo Felony, and several others. This album is considered by some as more of a project than an actual solo album; nonetheless it was well received. In 2005, he was able to release The Testament on his own label, which saw good reviews and sales and featured the original banned version of "Dead Man Walking" as a hidden track.

In early September 2005, Cormega posted a statement on his website that he and Nas had spoken and ended their feud. Cormega explained that their conversation had come about due to the death of Cormega's grandmother. Both rappers have stated the possibility of a collaboration. On December 22, 2006 at the Nokia Theatre Times Square, Cormega appeared on stage at a Nas concert and went on to perform with Nas (and Foxy Brown as well), further evidence that their feud is over.

The feud was settled in Cormega's home in early December 2005, when Cormega and Nas realized that it was destructive for each of them. It is not known who was responsible for their meeting but both artists are now working alone. In the mid-2000s Cormega helped produce a few albums and was featured on several songs with The Jacka and the Mob Figaz.

An album collaboration with Lakey The Kid entitled My Brother's Keeper was released independently on August 22, 2006. On November 20, 2007, Cormega finally released his DVD in-the-making Who am I?. The DVD took over four years of filming of Cormega in all aspects of his life and what others thought of Cormega, unedited. The DVD was released as a soundtrack plus DVD. Cormega intended to release an album which was to be entitled Urban Legend before T.I.'s album of the same name was released (Cormega mentions this on the Who Am I DVD, dated circa 2003); the new title is Born and Raised. The album was released October 20, 2009. The first single is called "Journey."

2010s
Cormega has stated his desire to work with a variety of artists including Scarface, Lauryn Hill, Slick Rick, as well as past collaborators M.O.P., Mobb Deep, and tha Dogg Pound.
Cormega's Album "Raw Forever" was released on 2011.

His latest work is the Album Mega Philosophy. It was produced by Large Professor and released on July 22, 2014. 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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