Whut Goes Around (feat. Miss Jones) - Das EFX

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Whut Goes Around (feat. Miss Jones) Lyrics

One time

/ Das EFX, miss jones

Aiyo (yo), whut go around, no doubt come around
Comes around, comes around
Das EFX we goin out, so yo bust the way it's comin down
Another day, another plot to scheme
Stock to cream, kiggity-can't stop my team
Can't stop my team

One: Dray, Skoob

Well iggity-open up, let me in so I could begin
Roll film at the slim trim ready to win
I got the (what?), head rocker, getcha tipsy like vodka
Don't mean to shock ya but I operate like a doctor
Show 'n' tell, excell past the start
(Makin grand with my man) Pushin luxury cars
Rock an ill rap (word), still strapped wit the rhymes
Diggy Das blow your mind, no doubt, one of a kind

Niggity-no digga, the tiggity-tongue flipper, the funk ripper
The bum sticker, d'??? what nigga
I'm iggity-out to make a bundle in all spots
Like the tiggity-tunnel, we start bleedin from the concrete
Jiggity-jungle, we holdin it down, son, no diggedy
Niggas be wettin the flow, wet the flow, slippery
Hickory dickory, what up doc? We bust shots
Niggity-nuff props to all my people prayin up top

Two: Dray, Skoob

Yo
It's miggity-me Dray, what can I say? The flow's tight
See we do it all night just to keep the crowd high
By the side off the richter, get the spot rockin
No, we're never stoppin, higgity-hip-hoppin
The Hit Squad, takin charge, no diggy
Riggity-rip the flow and ya know we gets busy (kid)
When we come thru, miggity 1-2 mic check
So Boogie Bang diggity-drop your slang, they can't stretch

Yeah, yo, yo
I'm figgity-from the illest part of town, we get down to get found
So swim or drown, kid, kiggity-come up short or hold it down
Biggity-been to mad places, seen all these changin faces
Court cases, and riggity-rip shows for all races
Son, I diggity-do my thing for the CREAM, the higgity-hip-hop fiend
Kiggity-call me The Dream like Hakeem
Figgity-finger on the trigger, vision on the sparrow
The diggy dark shadow, holdin it down and camouflage your town

Three: Skoob, Dray

Higgity-hungry man like Swanson, get rough like Charles Bronson
And giggity-guess it's just the things I do like Tina Thompson
Got these hookers car hoppin, and stiggity-star gazin
Keep em movin, I'm wiggity-with my mans and that needs no provin??????? P-E-T, see me on B-E-T
I roll with PMD, and see we D-I-P, my stee-
Lo, stiggty-stay in a diggy-day out
I keep it way out, it's Diggy Das, kid, never played out

*missjones crooning to fade*
*Das EFX giving shout outs*

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
The duo “Das EFX” emerged in 1991 from the well-established East Coast Hip-Hop scene. The group is composed of Willie “Skoob” Hines and Andre “Krazy Drayz” Weston. With their first album “Dead serious” released in 1992, the group creates a mini-revolution by using an ultra-fast rap associated with funky beats. The album was a commercial success. The following year, Das EFX released their second LP “Straight up Sewaside", “Hold it down” in 1995, and “Generation EFX” in 1998. Their last album was "How We Do" which was released in 2003.
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Das EFX's wildly playful, rapid-fire stuttering -- dense with rhymes and nonsense words -- was one of the most distinctive and influential lyrical styles in early-'90s hip-hop. While the duo completely rewrote the MC rule book, they themselves were increasingly pegged as a one-dimensional novelty the longer their career progressed, despite watching elements of their style creep into countless rappers' bags of tricks. Krazy Drazyz (born Andre Weston; Teaneck, NJ) and Skoob (born Willie Hines) were both raised in Brooklyn, but didn't begin performing together until they met at Virginia State University in 1988. Removed from an active music scene, the two were free to develop their most idiosyncratic tendencies; they started making up gibberish words (anything ending in "-iggity" was a favorite) that added loads of extra syllables to their lines, and wove plenty of pop-cultural references into the tongue-twisting lyrical gymnastics that resulted. Das EFX caught their big break when they performed at a talent show judged by EPMD; though they didn't win, EPMD was impressed enough to offer them a deal, and the duo became part of the Hit Squad crew of protégés.

Signing to the East West label, Das EFX began work on their debut album, commuting between Virginia and New York and mailing tapes to EPMD (then touring the country) for guidance. Upon its release in 1992, Dead Serious caused an immediate sensation, and is still considered something of a landmark in hip-hop circles. The first single, the instantly memorable signature song "They Want EFX," was a Top 40 pop hit and a Top Ten R&B hit, and helped push sales of Dead Serious past the platinum mark. Wary of being pigeonholed by repeating themselves, the duo slowed down their lyrical flow and downplayed the surrealistic side of their interplay on the follow-up album, 1993's Straight Up Sewaside, which went gold. Around the time of 1995's disappointing Hold It Down, Das EFX found themselves caught in the middle of EPMD's ugly breakup; it led to a three-year absence from recording. By the time they returned in 1998 with Generation EFX, the group was playing more to a devoted but narrower cult audience; they have remained largely silent since. Steve Huey, All Music Guide 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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