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WU-TANG QUEST 2000! : info

wu-tang clan

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The revolutionary course of hard-core rap took a sharp turn to the real in 1993. That year, the platinum debut album ENTER THE WU-TANG (36 CHAMBERS), struck a strategic, genre expanding blow for the hip-hop nation. Eternally elevating the urban art-form, it justly propelled the WU-TANG CLAN to the apex of rap music. Now bonafide superstars, Staten Island's Wu-warriors: Prince (The RZA) Rakeem, Raekwon, Ol' Dirty Bastard, Method Man, GhostFace Killah, Genius (GZA), U-God, Master Killa and Inspectah Deck, fearlessly return to rap's forefront with WU-TANG FOREVER, their aptly titled and much anticipated second Loud Records (enhanced double) CD.

  Emphasizing the point, in addition to "…Triumph," other on target, off-the-hook cuts adding to Wu-Tang's treacherous track record include: "Hellz Wind Staff," "Reunited," "Older Gods" and "MGM." Like a giant sponge, each track absorbs your brain cells into the group's complex, multi-layered world of edgy Wu-Tang ghetto-speak. Once inside, shocking scenarios, inspired revelations, tragic truths and even wall-to-wall Wu-Tang insanity take over. It's all delivered in Wu's infamous, totally unpredictable, wild verbal combat style. "We're comin' off with the crazy nigga shit that can't nobody touch," says Ol' Dirty Bastard, whose confusing, effectively surreal 1996 "Fantasy" duet with mega-pop star Mariah Carey, is an example of how far Wu-Tang's tentacles reach into music's mainstream. Yet, they still maintain respect and support from real hard-core hip-hop heads, and do so without selling-out. If anything, the mainstream brought in. Produced by the RZA, the impressive album features the lethal lead single "Second Coming - Triumph," a sonic reflection of Wu's cumulative vision, talent, skill and focus. Avowed students of the mental (or Shaolin) aspect of the martial arts and Islam, and rabid fans of kung-fu films, Wu once again attaches an Afro-Asiatic discipline to the art of rhyming. Drop kicking powerful, "Protect Ya Neck" (their first hit) type furor into the new mix, they push the lyrical envelope, plundering metaphorical gold mines in the process. "This is the bomb Wu-Tang record we wanted to make for years," advises Raekwon. "It not only gives the peeps more of what they already liked about us, it also takes us as a group, to the next level."

In all of hip-hop's history there's never been a rap aggregation like the Wu-Tang Clan. However, it didn't happen overnight. On the real, each member had his own sad street struggle story before the group blew up. Life on the cold concrete of "Gaten Island" was, and still is, haunted by crime, drugs, violence, hustling and poor people striving to survive. Living under such life devaluing conditions had most of the bad-ass brothers we now know as the Wu-Tang Clan, caught up in the thick of it. How else could the stark street images they rap about come off so genuine, so vivid, so cold, so Wu-Tang?

  "And since we share similar philosophies like that," U-God interjects, "uniting under the Wu-Tang flag was a natural thing for us to do." After all, GhostFace Killer comes forth, " we all study Islam, play chess (which sharpens their warfare skills and killer instincts), live for kung-fu flicks, read the 'Suntzu: Arts of War' every day, and are true 'Shaolin Soldiers'." "See," Method Man concludes, "we came to the game with some ill new shit nobody was ready for, but everybody had to recognize." Nonetheless, in total support of each other since day one, after the group came together and the Wu-Tang juggernaut was finally fired up in '93, there was no stopping them. They pooled their talent, resources and ideas, doggedly determined to win. The rest, as they say, is history. "Most of us had dealt with the bullshit of trying to do the solo thing without a strong crew behind us," RZA reasons. "But we realized that in numbers there is strength, and numbers are very important to us. For instance the 36 vital points (or 36 chambers) in the body, that when multiplied by 10 degrees, equal 360 degrees of complete perfection, which we always strive for." - info from: Loud Records



The Wu Q 2000!
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