More That Meets The Eye

50 Cent · Other Songs - 50 Cent

The Transformers More Than Meets The Eye

Autobots wage their battle to Destroy the evil forces of the Decepticons

The Transformers More Than Meets The Skies



Lil Wayne:

Yeah, Look I got one in the back,

I got one in the front,

I make em do what I say.

They tell me say what I want

I tell em

get your money girl or just stop breathing...

cause if it aint about that dough Ii aint about it neither

see a gangster like myself I get my paper from woman

man your woman probably out there with some paper to give me

Listen, your looking at a real pimp ask my old women

and there tell you no remote, I control women

I'm a whole load put me in the game women

if he aint paying then he shouldn't be playing I'm saying

broke dudes only make jokes funny

I make more then I can fit in this quote honey

Unquote come sun soak with me ma

fly you down here and lay you up in my beach house

and if you smile at my girl, I'll make her smile back



Jadakiss:

Powerful impact, Boom from the cannon

I'm strong in the hood, I'm aight on the scanning

figure my next joint should do at least double

but right now I'm trying to get at mami with the bubble

she know who the God his, she seen the Charpard kid,

no security guard so I'm easy to target but

bring it back, if you coming for war then bring your AK

if you coming to gamble then bring a stack

and I don't even need that nonsense

I'm trying to watch honey bring it back like a DJ contest

so I just blew the lizm

then I started division

her hip thighs and ass are coming out of them true religions

here ma, want a cup?

it's D-Block and wanna know what?

MH my niggas gun em up

and we aint trying to carry it

we just trying to put something hot up in your stomach baby

and slide to the maverick

More That Meets The Eye

Released in 2005, 'More That Meets The Eye' stands as a defining track in the evolution of 50 Cent's sound, bridging the gap between his gritty West Coast roots and his emerging mainstream pop-rap dominance. The song features a distinct production style that blends hard-hitting drums with melodic hooks, characteristic of the mid-2000s hip-hop landscape. It showcases the artist's signature vocal delivery, characterized by a confident, rhythmic cadence that emphasizes lyrical precision over complex rhyme schemes. As a standalone recording, it highlights the versatility of 50 Cent's discography, demonstrating his ability to craft catchy, radio-friendly anthems while maintaining the raw energy that defined his earlier work. The track remains a staple in discussions about the era's shift toward more polished, yet aggressive, urban music.