[00:00.00] 作词 : Robert Diggs/Gary E Grice/Elgin Evander Turner[00:01.00] 作曲 : Gary E. Grice/Elgin Evander Turner[00:17.64]The remedy for stress is a day and a rest[00:19.93]A bag of sess, playing chess, yes[00:22.71]My thoughts be sneaky like a crook from Brooklyn[00:24.91]When you ain't looking,[00:25.84]I take the queen with the rook then[00:28.16]I get vexed, laying phat tracks on Ampex[00:38.43]I was basically leaving the hustle life[00:41.99]You know, going to night school[00:43.98]Striving to get a diploma[00:45.53]And transitioning to a legitimate lifestyle[00:50.05]That's what my life was like at that point[00:52.38]When I met GZA.[00:54.13]He mentioned he had family and brothers[00:57.40]In Staten Island that were putting this movement together[01:00.43]This Wu-Tang thing.[01:01.80]So one day he invites me to go to the studio with him[01:05.54]I didn't go[01:06.77]Because I had to go to night school that evening[01:08.85]So the next day he had a tape of[01:11.15]What they did the night before[01:12.99]And that tape was an unfinished version of "Protect Yo Neck."[01:17.52]When I heard that,[01:19.72]Everything just became crystal clear now.[01:22.70]I never missed another studio session after that.[01:25.78]Whenever he told me he was going somewhere I was there.[01:28.78]It inspired me to sit down.[01:31.60]Let me just see if I can write something.[01:34.00]I've never written a rhyme before this.[01:38.58]So that's what I did.[01:41.08]I basically rehearsed that one rhyme,[01:45.17]That one rhyme until I mastered it.[01:50.10]"You remember the rhyme?"[01:52.17]It was the "Mystery of Chessboxin'" one.