Baby can't leave me alone
She been tryna' get me home
Now she wants the number to my phone
Guess I really turned her on
I say damn, put that mack down
Young dude, I put that mack down
What it do, I put that mack down
Bitch, I turn you when I put that mack down

Uh, ride me like a tea top
She give me top and bottom, now she screenshot
Your style gold like Chris drinking Ciroc
She like that dope D, I call it three rocks
Ok she down to taste it, get down, face it
Keep it on the low like what happens in Vegas
What happens in Vegas, yeah what happens in Vegas
She ain't never hit the strip but she quick to strip naked
I got a girl from the city, she be on a roll
Uh, good brains, give me honor roll
Whoa, and don't be taking too long
Wasting time and shit, you better take me home
Uh, and she say I'm a real nigga
Tell her boyfriend she don't wanna deal with him
Young nigga,? mob, that's the cell in him
707, that's the field in him, ya

I put that mack down, why you calling for a peace treaty
Say she from Atlanta and she used to work on Peach Street
Ass like her auntie, aye lil' niecey'
Playing hard to get but I got that pussy so easy
Real talk, she got camel toe
No red light, man never that, shawty' go
Her pussy fat, baby?
Let my dick sleep in the pussy like a bedbug
Shawty' so thick, yeah I might tip her
You might tip her? Oh I love them strippers
Yup, yup, boy I love them strippers
Tryna' be my face boo, but I met her on Twitter
Uh, so I hit her with a D.M.
Come to find out she my old nigga B.M.
Uh, she used to fuck with my nigga though
Well like Kilo, I'mma get that ho

About This Song

"Mack Down" is a braggadocious hip-hop track that celebrates Sage the Gemini's charisma and appeal with women, built around the central metaphor of "putting that mack down" to describe his smooth-talking abilities. The song explores themes of sexual confidence, attraction, and the power dynamics of seduction, with Sage boasting about how women can't resist his charm and constantly pursue him. Musically, it features the Bay Area rapper's characteristic laid-back flow over a minimalist, bass-heavy production typical of West Coast hip-hop from the early 2010s. The track exemplifies the hyphy movement's influence on mainstream rap, showcasing Sage's ability to craft catchy, club-ready anthems that helped establish him as a rising star in the hip-hop scene. While not as commercially successful as his hit "Gas Pedal," the song demonstrates his knack for creating memorable hooks and confident persona that would define his early career.

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