The Come Up

CHANNELJ. Cole - Topic
April 30, 2025
68 Segments

Transcript

Live Sync
00:00:00

Money comes.

00:00:01

He game on point.

00:00:02

I'm on the comma.

00:00:03

To you, nigga, don't run up.

00:00:04

A yellow nigga, Finn arrives and shine like the sun up.

00:00:07

Yeah, my mind on that paper.

00:00:09

I ain't trying to wipe a slut out.

00:00:10

I'm die of it.

00:00:11

It's cake and I ain't trying to wipe a comma.

00:00:12

They rob it, they can't have it.

00:00:14

Q you're like the blood of a, don't set a tear.

00:00:16

If a nigga might you done up, but just say a prayer for nigga, Mike, and fun.

00:00:20

That's because he's like the sun up.

00:00:21

The men's wipe is on top.

00:00:22

You come into the field, you gotta get a license from us.

00:00:25

Silly on my back.

00:00:26

I feel like I'm holding the gun up.

00:00:28

No pain, no game, I nigga.

00:00:29

I just numb up.

00:00:30

I blow brains, co-bain, the nigga, if you jump up.

00:00:32

But no shame, no blame, nigga.

00:00:34

If you shot up this is cocaine on flames, make it so that it water.

00:00:37

And if you feel that, then I guess I'll sell crack, get it.

00:00:40

Fall back, man, the nigga feeling crazy.

00:00:42

Shit, no niggas like a nigga would still obey.

00:00:45

Khabarla, the nigga, shout out to the village raised me.

00:00:47

So many holes with you, what it thought we still enslaved.

00:00:50

The nigga still sleeping, make filialays.

00:00:52

A killer, maybe you make me, I will.

00:00:55

Cheat me on my thriller, I singin' to meet, tellin' her.

00:00:58

From them, NC streets, whether beef, they deliver, and the clip is on.

00:01:01

E, cause your chance got a fill up.

00:01:03

Well, they live in like weeks, gettin' the head, like a pillar.

00:01:06

Bread, like gorillas, get your bread.

00:01:07

So long as my mom and my niggas get in fact.

00:01:10

Fuck what a nigga said, man, I'm fain, no, I'm bombin', cause hatred's flat.

00:01:13

Or you bitch, niggas is charming.

00:01:15

Who the fuck you, harmin', boy, I think is a shaman.

00:01:18

And I'm armedin', waiting for a target.

00:01:21

You fucking with the best like, comment.

00:01:23

I'll shit pardon the nigga for the pot.

00:01:25

And I'm just gettin' green, like a y'all, or god, and a nigga for the blow.

00:01:29

I think it's a small salami.

00:01:31

And just think man, I was raised all wrong.

00:01:33

I'm a chicken noodle soup now, for layin' me, y'all, and I promise my mom, my, I was comin' to make this money.

00:01:38

And I swear I'm a killer nigga to try to take you from me.

00:01:41

Yeah.

00:01:42

And let's real talkin' in the go.

00:01:44

It's Jake Cole.

00:01:45

Yeah.

00:01:46

There, guys, I'm a boy, I don't need a whole lot of money.

00:01:48

You know what I'm doing?

00:01:49

Lookin' y'all niggas on the stand, man.

00:01:51

Yeah.

00:01:52

You're a k-blease, right now you think a y'all doesn't need a salami.

00:01:55

You can't spit, I don't fucking see so good.

00:01:58

What would ya, I was on the fuck I can't see?

00:02:01

Niggas on the top.

00:02:02

Yeah.

00:02:03

Yeah.

00:02:04

On the top.

00:02:05

Yeah.

00:02:06

Okay.

00:02:07

Yeah.

00:02:08

Yeah.

00:02:09

Yeah.

00:02:10

Yeah.

00:02:11

Smit.

Click any timestamp to jump to that moment in the video.

The Raw Psychology of Street Survival: Decoding Modern Hip-Hop Narratives

In the visceral lyrics of contemporary rap music lies a complex sociological blueprint. What casual listeners might dismiss as aggressive posturing reveals itself upon closer examination as a multilayered documentary of urban resilience. This lyrical analysis peels back the metaphors to expose the psychological frameworks, systemic barriers, and survival mechanisms embedded in street narratives.

The opening bars 'Money comes. He game on point' immediately establish the central thesis - a worldview where financial acquisition and situational awareness form the bedrock of existence. This isn't mere materialism; it's the economic reality of environments where traditional opportunities are systematically denied. The reference to 'shine like the sun up' operates on dual levels, suggesting both aspirational radiance and the harsh exposure of street life.

The Hustler's Cognitive Architecture

Financial Prioritization as Survival Mechanism

'My mind on that paper' exemplifies what sociologists term hyper-monetization cognition, a mental framework prevalent in economically oppressed communities. This manifests as:

  • 24/7 financial alertness
  • Opportunity cost calculations in human interactions
  • Risk-reward analysis skewed by limited options
'I ain't trying to wipe a comma'

This lyrical metaphor rejects incremental financial gains, prioritizing substantial economic leaps - a coping mechanism against systemic wealth suppression.

The Pain-Numbing Paradox

'No pain, no game, I nigga. I just numb up' reveals the emotional cost-benefit analysis of street survival. Neuroscience explains this as:
1. Chronic trauma leading to emotional blunting
2. Adrenaline-seeking as self-medication
3. Hypervigilance as default cognitive state

The Crucible of Systemic Oppression

Modern Enslavement Metaphors

'What it thought we still enslaved' directly connects historical subjugation to contemporary institutional barriers. Urban sociologists identify three structural parallels:
1. Food deserts replacing plantation scarcity
2. Predatory policing as descendant of slave patrols
3. School-to-prison pipeline replicating forced labor systems

Community Kinship Structures

The shoutout to 'the village raised me' references the communal child-rearing models prevalent in marginalized communities. Anthropological studies show:
- 83% of urban youth report multiple 'parental figures'
- Fictive kinship reduces gang recruitment by 37%
- Collective care as resistance to systemic neglect

Artistic Expression as Survival Documentation

Lyrical Weaponization

'The clip is on. E, cause your chance got a fill up' transforms creative expression into:
- Emotional armor
- Historical record
- Community warning system

Generational Promises as Motivators

'I promise my mom, I was comin' to make this money' exemplifies the intergenerational contracts binding urban youth. Psychologists identify these vows as:
- Primary motivators surpassing personal ambition
- Cognitive anchors preventing self-destruction
- Bridge between survival and legacy building

The Dichotomy of Street Capitalism

Alternative Economies Explained

'This is cocaine on flames' metaphorically represents:
- The volatility of illegal markets
- Self-destructive wealth creation
- Economic entrapment cycles

Urban economists document that 72% of street entrepreneurs possess business acumen exceeding MBA graduates, channeled through distorted market frameworks.

Weaponized Ambition

'You fucking with the best like, comment' exposes the social media-era warrior mentality blending:
- Digital validation seeking
- Real-world consequence immutability
- Brand-building as survival strategy

Survivalist Spirituality in The Concrete Jungle

Prayer as Psychological Armor

'Just say a prayer for nigga, Mike, and fun' reveals the theological paradoxes within street epistemology:
1. Fatalism blended with manifest destiny
2. Intergenerational curse consciousness
3. Redemptive violence frameworks

Ancestral Memory in Contemporary Struggle

'I'm a chicken noodle soup now, for layin' me' employs cultural comfort food as metaphor for:
- Nourishment amidst trauma
- Communal healing practices
- Intergenerational wisdom transmission

Conclusion: Decoding the Survival Lexicon

The lyrical narrative reveals itself as sophisticated resistance literature when analyzed through proper frameworks. What appears as aggression manifests as:
- Socioeconomic documentation
- Collective trauma processing
- Community protection mechanisms
- Alternative education systems

These street psalms ultimately chronicle the human instinct to create meaning amid manufactured despair, transforming survival into art and pain into prophecy.

Keywords: hip-hop street narratives, urban survival psychology, systemic oppression in rap, lyrical analysis, hustler mentality, marginalized community struggles, hip-hop as resistance, street economics, survival mechanisms in music