Shinehead (rap-reggae) lyric question

Shinehead was a Jamaican/New Yorker rap/reggae singer, somewhat popular in the late 80s and early 90s.

On his wonderful album Unity, in a song “Do It With Ease,” there is a four-syllable falsetto phrase I’ve never understood. He says it twice, around 2:10 and 2:53. It’s one of his several end-of-a-line “tags” (not sure if that’s the word), which are typical of the genre (and of the dub and dance-hall styles) – another one in this song is “follow me now.”

All the lyric sites I found avoid/omit the phrase (and only this phrase), interestingly.

Any thoughts?

Using up my one bump.
Dopers, help me out! You don’t need to be a reggae (or rap) fan, nor to ever have heard the song (nor of Shinehead).

Just a moment of your perceptive ears, is all I ask.

I listened, not bad, but not for me and I like reggae.

ETA: I fixed the title, it said Shinhead, not Shinehead. Someone else flagged it.

Thanks for trying, and for fixing the title.
The song has some humor: “Poconos…rent some skis…wrong size…had to squeeze…”. :slight_smile:

His lyrics tended to be positive: “Gimme No Crack,” “Unity” (admonishes jerkish rap lyrics), “Hello Y’All” (maybe my favorite: celebrates the history of reggae and dub, with a happy bass riff), and “Ragamuffin” - pleasant sounding, old style rhythm, suitable for children or Harry Belafonte.

I cannot decipher it. Sorry.

Oh, well. To me, it sounds perhaps like “pollination” – but I doubt that’s it!