![]() ![]() These bars are so hard that people still tweet them out constantly. When you think of iconic Lil Wayne lyrics, you probably think of something from this song. "A Milli" might be a better display of all-out rap prowess and flow, but "6 Foot 7 Foot" coined more quotables. Over the years, his writing here has held up as more memorable than just about anywhere else. But although "6 Foot 7 Foot" doesn't necessarily win points for musical innovation, it does stand as a library of some of Lil Wayne's best punchlines. At the time, I certainly interpreted it that way. Of course, the fact that those terms were a near-literal remake of "A Milli"-it has the same producer, Bangladesh, the same featured guest, Cory Gunz, and the same formula of rapid-fire rap broken up by a sample-did not bode particularly well for originality. In the same way that "A Milli" declared his intentions for Tha Carter III, this song laid out the terms of Lil Wayne's comeback. It served as Lil Wayne's announcement of his return from jail, the first song off a promised Carter IV and the first song he'd recorded since he was released. Yet while real Gs move in silence like lasagna, this song was anything but quiet. They are still studying it in laboratories to understand its potency. ![]() It is the sickest rap punchline known to man. "Real Gs move in silence like lasagna": It's since taken on a life as a saying of its own. Just the fact that Lil Wayne would bring lasagna into the song is kind of wacky the fact that he would make a joke about the way lasagna is spelled is pretty crazy the fact that the joke is a riff on the statement you previously heard and dismissed as run of the mill is fucking galaxy-brain, mind-expanding, consciousness-altering rewiring of what is possible with the English language. You'll never hear a song about the Geico caveman ads unless you listen to Lil Wayne (maybe you would if you were at a Geico company party circa 2005 I guess I don't know your life). ![]() What Lil Wayne fans love most of all about Lil Wayne is the way his mind creates a wild free-associative map of references that never come up anywhere else in music. And then the finisher lands, twisting the whole focus of the line: "like lasagna." The line leading up to this one is a solid punchline-"paper chasin', tell that paper 'look, I'm right behind ya'"-so there's not much pressure on this one. It's grounded in a structure anyone could recognize, one that has probably popped up, without additional commentary needed, in a hundred other rap songs: "real gangsters move in silence." OK, the listener thinks, here's Lil Wayne completing his bar with some standard Lil Wayne tough talk, and that always feels good. It encapsulates exactly what makes Lil Wayne so distinctively good. It's the one that casual fans can recite back and the one that serious fans point to when proving his genius. Of all the flashes of brilliance that Lil Wayne has shown in his career, there is none more electrifying, none more worthy to be remembered by, none more objectively perfect than "real Gs move in silence like lasagna."Įveryone knows that this is the best Lil Wayne lyric. The best Lil Wayne song is "6 Foot 7 Foot." The reason for this is simple. ![]()
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