Lil Wayne | Lyrics

Lil Wayne earned the title of "Best Rapper Alive" through his complex lyrical dexterity, playful tongue-tying and sheer force of will. The New Orleans-hailing rapper's fourth LP, 2004's The Carter, established Wayne -- born Dwayne...

Song Lyrics Album Video Year
Way of Life 500 Degreez   2002
Look at Me 500 Degreez   2002
What Does Life Mean to Me 500 Degreez   2002
We Want Weezy Carter Files   2007
I'm the Best Rapper Alive Dedication 2   2006
Way of Life Happy Father's Day   2008
Grown Man Lights Out   2000
I'm Me Lil Wayne & Friends, Vol. 2   2008
You Aint Know Lyrical Homicide   2007
Enemy Turf Tha Block Is Hot   1999
Intro Tha Block Is Hot   1999
Earthquake Tha Carter   2004
Carter II Tha Carter II   2005
Tha Mobb Tha Carter II   2005
Hit Em Up Tha Carter II   2005
Mo Fire Tha Carter II   2005
Feel Me Tha Carter II   2005
Receipt Tha Carter II   2005
Get Over Tha Carter II   2005
Oh No Tha Carter II   2005
Grown Man Tha Carter II   2005
Fly Out Tha Carter II   2005
Best Rapper Alive Tha Carter II   2005
Shooter Tha Carter II   2005
Weezy Baby Tha Carter II   2005
Hustler Musik Tha Carter II   2005
I'm a Dboy Tha Carter II   2005
Fireman Tha Carter II   2005
Money on My Mind Tha Carter II   2005
Fly In Tha Carter II   2005
Milli The Drought Is Over: Grand Closing   2008
Lollipop The Drought Is Over: Grand Closing   2008
I'm Me We the Best   2008
This Is Why I'm Hot When the North & South Collide   2007

Full Description

Lil Wayne earned the title of "Best Rapper Alive" through his complex lyrical dexterity, playful tongue-tying and sheer force of will. The New Orleans-hailing rapper's fourth LP, 2004's The Carter, established Wayne -- born Dwayne Michael Carter, but known as Weezy F. Baby to fans -- as a wordsmith and first-rate bragger; "Best rapper alive since the best rapper retired," he proclaimed on "Bring it Back," referencing Jay-Z's "retirement" of eight months earlier.

Critics said Wayne's rhymes were all style, no substance -- "Weezy, allergic to wintertime hot," he memorably boasted on 2005's "Fireman" -- but that changed when Hurricane Katrina wiped out his home town and he responded with "Georgia ... Bush," from 2006's Dedication 2 mixtape. Over a simple drum loop and a sample of Ray Charles' "Georgia on My Mind," Wayne dropped the bravado and showed heart and vulnerability, two qualities he had previously rarely displayed in his lyrics. "What happened to the levees, why wasn't they steady, why wasn't they able to control this?/I know some folk that live by the levees, they keep on tellin' me they heard explosions," he spat through his signature frog-in-throat delivery, building up to the song's half-sung chorus. "We from a town where/everybody drowned and/everybody died but/baby, I'm still prayin' wit'cha."

Keeping up with Wayne's lyrical output has been a full-time job, as new material trickles out weekly. But Wayne's flow is thrilling, crackling with wit and effortless in its delivery. Fitting his hometown, Wayne ain't big, but he makes it look easy.

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