 Yeah we on boss talk one on one. Hey man, hey this legendary for me anyway cause I'm a big fan man. And I've been listening at you for a long time and didn't even realize it. Why you always got to put that out there? It made me look bad, I mean. I remember driving on the road listening to that song, we were doing research on Renetta and that song came up with, cause he's a big PIMC fan, like huge PIMC fan. Yeah that's bad. And that song came on and he was like, no, let's look up another song of his and see. And we matching the voices to try to see if it was really you. I thought it was Ronald Izzley. That's what I thought. He could not believe it. I thought it was Ronald Izzley. I tell him what I thought. Everybody think it was Ronald Izzley. But now I'm gonna tell you something that they don't realize it was a Ronald Izzley song. Really? That's why you got me. Yeah the world don't know. So the song is called, it's on the Live It Up album. Uh huh. And the song is called Ain't I Been Good To You by Ronald Izzley. And what I did was just re-wrote the words and sung it the way that I felt, you know, that I felt like it. That you felt like it needed to be. You feel, and cause music talked to you, so if you just sit down and listen to the track, you can pretty much, you know, know pretty much what to say on the song if you're listening real good. Man, I tell you, when I first heard it, this was in 19, I believe 95. I'm gonna say 95, 94. Whenever it came out, that riding dirt out. 96. 96. I knew it was somewhere, look cause I, you know, I ain't gonna tell y'all my age, but you know, I kinda remember when rap first started, nigga, so don't even think about it. When it first started out, like when it wasn't no, you know, it was just R&B and me. I was good with that too. And when rap first started, was it Jamaican who started it? No, we don't wanna go there. This is the part I don't like right there. You know, this is what I get. They say that a Jamaican started rap. And I researched it and he said, yeah, I was mad about that man. I can might be wrong, but I thought rap came out by the audience. No, I think rap started, and this young particular man was real good. He go by the name of Curtis Mayfield. Curtis Mayfield. And he first did a, I'm your mama. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, DJ Cool Herk. Look, he's a Jamaican, DJ Cool Herk, but what you just said, come on, tell your story. When you Google it, he said it. Yeah, it's Google line. Google line. Tell me about what you about say about Curtis Mayfield. Mayfield was the one, to me, I could be wrong, but Mayfield is the one to me that really got people to kinda jumping on rap, because he kinda did singing rap. Okay. And actually I did a song over with Mayfield, but it's like, then that's when, I guess, the Sugar Hill gang and all these kind of things coming up with rap music and then boom, I think it just blow it up. But the real hip hop artist is out there. Maybe I shouldn't say it like that, but like Carol S. Warren and all that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That was real hip hop. The original. You know, the original stuff out there. So I gotta give it to the New York people. They was, they was on it. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one.