Nardo Wick – Me or Sum Lyrics
[Part I]
[Intro: Future]
Drop your location, she think she me or sum’ (Hendrix)
Put on my chains, now she think she me or sum’
She keep a Glock in her bag, she think …
[Part I]
[Intro: Future]
Drop your location, she think she me or sum’ (Hendrix)
Put on my chains, now she think she me or sum’
She keep a Glock in her bag, she think …
[Verse 1]
You said, “Speak from your mind
The words that it finds
Come out of your soul, a part of the whole”
You said, “What does it change?
Both of us know
After tonight, there …
[TONY]
Maria…
The most beautiful sound I’ve ever heard:
Maria, Maria, Maria, Maria…
All the beautiful sounds of the world in a single word:
Maria, Maria, Maria, Maria…
Maria, Maria…
Maria!
I’ve just met a girl named Maria
And …
[Verse 1]
What happens in dreams where we fly?
Never been as high as tonight
Staring through a window in time
For someone to show me what I’m like
He said, “Hello”, it’s like a …
[Verse 1]
Oh-oh-oh, every little smile hides a little lie
Could cut the silence with a knife
Subatomic bliss is nothing left to miss
It’s just empty Russian roulette
[Pre-Chorus]
Try to brush it off my …
I know my heart better than you may think1
It swells but keeps on the bank of a May creek2
And when we see it all
And the exit sign3
We build our scrape past the moors on Cliff-Keep
The bottom line: out of stone I will seep4
We look up: Neverending Fountain5
My wings are pure and forever sounding6
The sky, my hub, and harken: crowning7
Where basins boom and my heart is bounding8
And when we see it all
And the exit sign9
Where cool creeks collide
Of the true and the tried10
I will be home, hawk-eyed
Searching, patient
Searching, patient
Searching, patient
Searching, patient11
S. Carey explains that he knows what he desires.
Although sometimes S. Carey has a desire for other things, his heart ultimately belongs to nature.
“When we see it all / and the exit sign” is a lyric which in this song refers to home.
S. Carey recalls treks deep into the desolate wild.
The “Neverending Fountain” refers to a hawk seen in this desolate wilderness.
The hawk flies in such a way that makes it seem to own the area, as though no harm can ever be done to it.
While S. Carey feels somewhat out of place in this desolate area, the hawk feels comfortably at home.
This lyric refers to the place that S. Carey calls home.
Certain landmarks on the roadside indicate to S. Carey that he has returned home from a distant journey.
S. Carey’s home is a place in the wilderness. It is a place of physical labor, and it is not conducive to laziness.
S. Carey sings this song about desire. He concludes by relating himself to the hawk predator, which patiently seeks an opportunity to capture what it wants to satisfy some kind of ego.
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