The Saga Continues

Showing posts with label Genius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genius. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Deconstructing Inspectah Deck's Verse On Wu-Tang Clan's "Triumph" | Check The Rhyme


Back in 1997, Wu-Tang Clan dropped “Triumph” as the lead single for their sophomore album Wu-Tang Forever. The track features all nine members of Wu-Tang Clan plus Cappadonna, and it (along with its famous, Brett Ratner-directed video) remains a high point in the group’s catalog. The RZA-produced “Triumph” kicks off with an iconic verse from Inspectah Deck, featuring a complex rhyme scheme that is often cited as one of the best rap verses of all time. 

Check out Genius contributor @Flegmatik’s color-coded breakdown of Inspectah Deck’s rhyme scheme from the song’s first verse in the video above, and read all the lyrics to Wu-Tang Clan’s “Triumph” on Genius now. 

Read all the lyrics to "Triumph" on Genius: https://genius.com/Wu-tang-clan-trium...




Saturday, June 17, 2017

GZA Once Sliced Apart A Dre Beat Using His Verbal Liquid Swords (Video)

In 2002, GZA was fast at work on his fourth solo album (the third since the ’93 sonic-boom of the Wu-Tang Clan). At the time, 1995’s Liquid Swords was well on its way to eventual platinum status, while 1999’s Beneath The Surface was his second consecutive Top 10 release, grabbing gold. The Genius’ label, MCA/Geffen Records was restructuring, and the lyrical shogun within the Clan followed Nas, as he did with Stillmatic, as one of the artists willing to re-visit his classic catalog in moving forward. The Legend Of The Liquid Sword is not a definitive sequel album per se. But in the minds of faithful Clan fans, it made a big wager, simply by using the hallowed name.

RZA, who put down some of his finest drum programming and filthiest sampling back in ’95, would contribute just “Rough Cut.” In his place, Cypress Hill’s DJ Muggs (who eventually collaborated with GZA at an album level), Roc-A-Fella’s Bink!, and Jay Z mentor Jaz-O stepped in. The Genius even slid behind the boards for a cut too.

Friday, February 19, 2016

How the Wu-Tang Clan Rose Up Out of GZA's 'Words From the Genius' Debut


It may be hard to imagine nowadays, but in the late ’70s to late ’80s, rap was mostly seen as a fad by corporate America, if it was even noticed at all. With hip­-hop being left alone to build its own infrastructure, it seemed like anyone who was plain dope enough had a shot at making a name in this game of rap. One of the many young men dreaming of leaving his mark as a rapper wasRobert Diggs, who learned to rhyme from his cousin Gary Grice in the summer of 1980. He would go on to pass those lessons to another cousin of his by the name of Russell Jones, and the three would eventually form a group called All in Together Now. Born in 1969, Robert came of age during those formative years in the 1980s when rap did well, but when he and his cousin Gary were finally granted a turn to rock mics themselves in 1991, something in the hip-­hop landscape had dramatically shifted: Money had entered into the equation.


Continue reading over on COMPLEX

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

GZA Gives Wu-Tang Clan First Platinum Album In More Than A Decade

(Photo by Fergus McDonald/Getty Images)

It may have taken nearly twenty years, but a heralded hip-hop classic has finally caught up saleswise to its platinum reputation. Yesterday, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) announced that Liquid Swords, the sophomore album from the New York City rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member GZA, had officially crossed the threshold of one million units sold as of September 15th.

As one of the best known and most respected hip-hop groups ever, the Wu-Tang Clan are no strangers to gold records and platinum plaques. Several of their albums, as well as the solo efforts of its multiple lyrically adept members, have sold at RIAA award levels. Yet the group’s last certifications came in 2004, with a gold nod to Method Man’s Tical 0: The Prequel and a platinum one for Ghostface Killah’s Ironman, thus making Liquid Swords the first Wu-Tang Clan project to reach RIAA platinum status in more than a decade.

Born Gary Grice, GZA’s rap career precedes his involvement in the Wu-Tang Clan. In 1991, he released an album for seminal rap label Cold Chillin’ Records under the moniker The Genius. While the album failed to catapult him into stardom, he retained that name in a hybridized form (Genius/GZA) for his next effort, released two years after the group’s platinum selling Loud Records debut Enter The Wu-Tang. First released in November of 1995, Liquid Swords peaked at #9 on the Billboard 200 album charts and was certified gold the following January. It capped off an impressive year of solo wins from his fellow Clansmen, including gold awards for Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s Return To The 36 Chambers and Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx, as well as a platinum one for Method Man’s Tical.

GZA’s follow-up Beneath The Surface went gold in 1999. Like 1995, it was a banner year for Wu-Tang Clan in terms of RIAA awards, with gold status for new albums from Ol’ Dirty Bastard (N**** Please), Raekwon (Immobilarity), and RZA (Bobby Digital In Stereo) in addition to GZA. The certifications continued on the other side of the millennium, with platinum plaques for the group’s third full-length The W and Method Man’s collaborative Blackout album with New Jersey native Redman, both honored in 2000. That same year, Ghostface Killah’s Supreme Clientele went gold within a month of its release. The group’s fourth outing, 2001′s Iron Flag, did so as well.
Though it doesn’t match the Wu-Tang Clan’s sales king, the quadruple platinum Wu-Tang Forever, GZA’s Liquid Swords remains one a favorite among hip-hop fans and critics alike. Featuring a dozen beats from producer RZA, the album proved a logical extension of the group’s signature sound, blending samples from old kung fu movies and dusty records into gritty albeit robust instrumentals designed to support GZA’s dextrous wordplay. Arguably the Wu-Tang Clan’s most verbose emcee, GZA graciously shares the mic here with each of the group’s members, making for rap classics like “4th Chamber” and “Shadowboxin’.”

[via FORBES]

Monday, April 15, 2013

Wu-Tang Clan Announce Title Of 20th Anniversary Album "A Better Tomorrow"



Wu Tang Clan are set to release their brand new album, 'A Better Tomorrow', in July.

They will support the release of the record with shows at Manchester O2 Apollo on July 25 and London's O2 Academy Brixton on July 26.

Last month Method Man said that the band were working on a new release to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their classic debut LP 'Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)' - and then, in an interview with Radio.com, Cappadonna confirmed that "recording has begun" on a new LP.

"I already spoke to the RZA," he said. "We've been texting each other. We're definitely concentrating on more positivity and teachings and trying to put that back into the original recipe for this next Wu-Tang album."

He went on to add: "The recording has begun... It's all being done in the secret Wu-Tang Bat chamber. RZA has all the tracks lined up. There are recordings taking place in New York, LA and perhaps at the Wu mansion in New Jersey."

Wu-Tang Clan released 'Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)' in 1993. Their last studio album, '8 Diagrams', was released in 2007 following a six-year gap after their 2001 LP 'Iron Flag'.

The hip-hop group are set to play this weekend’s Coachella Festival in California as well as this summer's Primavera Sound festival in Barcelona.
Read more at http://www.nme.com/news/wu-tang-clan/69693#qLqatxgRcyl1muCO.99

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

GZA Interview at Chess Forum with Brooklyn Bound


GZA spoke with the Fader for the latest installment of Brooklyn Bound in conjunction with Converse. Choosing to meet at the Chess Forum in Greenwich Village, GZA spoke on his fascination for the board game. Saying that he initially played for the first time as a nine-year old, he only got into the game as a twenty-one year old hanging out with Masta Killa, True Master, Jeru the Damaja, and Afu-Ra, all of whom enjoyed playing chess outdoors in the summertime. Later on in the interview, GZA explains how he is currently stuck at the same skill level in chess but is working to improve further over time, and explains that to teach someone chess he would start with the basics. He also mentions that he is currently working on his new album, tentatively titled Dark Matter, an album rooted in his interest in science. No word yet on a release date.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

GZA/Genius Raps & Rhyme With Neil Degrasse Tyson


First, RZA writes and directs a blockbuster Kung-Fu film, now GZA is getting into the astrophysics game. Watch below as Gary Grice discusses with the world's coolest nerd, Neil deGrasse Tyson, how certain scientific terms are more accessible in hip-hop than others.

It's a full episode, so you might have to skip around a bit.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Wu-Wednesday: GZA Recalls The Origins Of The Cover Art Of "Liquid Swords"


GZA Recalls The Origins Of The Cover Art Of "Liquid Swords"
by SEAN RYON

GZA recalls when he first came up with the idea for the cover of his seminal "Liquid Swords" LP.
Perhaps one of the most iconic pieces of Hip Hop art comes from the comic book cover art of GZA's seminal Liquid Swords. Now, in a recent interview with the Bishop Chronicles podcast, the Genius explains the origins of the artwork.

GZA explained that the image first came to his mind while playing a heated chess series against fellow Wu-Tang Clan alum Masta Killa. He said that the two had played upwards of 30 games while smoking weed when the vision of the chess pieces coming to life and battling one another first came to him. He added that he was thinking about propositioning it for the single art for "Da Mystery of Chessboxing," but decided to save it for Liquid Swords.



"That [cover art] was something that I came up with, that was in 1992 - that was three years before the album," recalled GZA. "I was actually playing Masta Killa in a game of chess, and around that time, he used to beat up on me a lot 'cus I had just started playing again. I learned how to play when I was younger, then I didn't start playing again until around that time [in] the early days of Wu. I would play with Killa, Jeru the Damaja, Afu-Ra, and all the brothers from East New York from Killa's neighborhood. We were playing a game, and we may have played like 30 games that night, and the game was still in a checkmate position…and I was smoking weed, and you know how you smoke weed, you start really get[ting] all these thoughts and you start analyzing shit, and I started drawing the pieces how they were on the board like in that position…then I just started imagining how, 'What if this night had a guillotine in his hand? What if this person had this sword swinging?' And I just thought of this whole war scene on the chessboard."
He added, "I actually thought about presenting it for the 'Chessboxing' [single] cover…and then I thought like it was bigger than a single, so we used it for [Liquid Swords]."

Friday, November 23, 2012

Wu-Art Thursday #26

Every Thursday we will be posting up pics of Wu-Tang artwork from fans, artists and aliens. If you have artwork you would like to share, please email us at: WuArtTats@gmail.com 


By KOPSKY

By Billionaire Girl

By Lucky Sham


By Emmanuel Estrada

By Luciano Filicetti

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Wu-Tang’s GZA Using Rap to Teach Science in NYC Schools



Columbia University Professor Christopher Emdin has adopted the age-old idea of meeting students where they are.

Just as “Sesame Street” and “Barney” use sing-alongs to help kids learn, the professor is applying the same logic to high schools, helping teens to remember science terms with the help of music which connects with their age and cultural demographic.
Along with Emdin, Wu-Tang member GZA and the founders of the hip-hop lyrics website Rap Genius will announce a program that utilizes hip-hop to teach science in 10 New York City public schools.
“Everything has already been tried,” said Emdin, an assistant professor of science at Columbia’s Teachers College. “We’ve already done a pilot, and it was successful.”
According to Emdin, during the project’s trial period, attendance, interest and graduation rates all rose after hip-hop was introduced into the classroom.

Science has been one of the harder subjects to teach to black and Latino students, who make up 70% of the city’s rolls, according to New York’s Independent Budget Office. The 2009 National Assessment of Education Progress said only 4% of African-American seniors were proficient in sciences, compared with 27% of whites.

All of the schools participating are predominately African-American and/or Latino, Emdin said.
While Emdin and GZA will attend a few schools on a regular basis to check progress, science teachers will learn how to incorporate hip-hop into the lesson plan.
The process is simple, Emdin said. After learning the material, students will have to create rap songs relaying the material back to the teacher. This can be done individually or in groups known as cyphers, where people stand in a circle and take turns rapping.

“A hip-hop cypher is the perfect pedagogical moment, where someone’s at the helm of a conversation, and then one person stops and another picks up,” Emdin said in an interview with The New York Times. “There’s equal turns at talking. When somebody has a great line, the whole audience makes a ‘whoo,’ which is positive reinforcement.

However, this isn’t a place for nursery school rhymes. According to Emdin, GZA says “the rhymes can’t be corny or wack.” Students will have to show that they not only know the curriculum, but also that they can create intelligible rap lyrics out of the material.
Along with other grades for the class, students will be graded on the content, lyrics, storytelling ability, flow and the complexity of their metaphors.

“The teachers will be trained on the cultural hip-hop,” Emdin said. “They’re open to anything that will help the students improve and learn the material.”
However, the project is about more than trying to teach the students science. It’s also about relating to the urban youth’s interests and keeping them engaged.

“It’s already a win-win because we know it works,” Emdin said.
As he explained, it’s not so much about grades increasing but keeping the students in school using a tool “that most of them have used all their lives.”
According to The Times, GZA will look over the students’ raps. The best ones will be posted on the Rap Genius website for the hip-hop community to see.
Rap Genius received a $15 million investment last month by Silicon Valley venture capitalists who want to see the site’s Wiki format applied to other musical genres and historic texts, including “poetry, literature, the Bible, political speeches, legal texts, science papers,” a post on Rap Genius states.
The project, which will target grades 9-12, will cover sciences ranging from biology to physics.
According to Emdin, all the boroughs of New York City will be represented with the exception of Staten Island, which is ironic because most of Wu-Tang’s members, including GZA, are from the borough.
GZA, who was born Gary Grice, also goes by the nickname “Genius” because of his deep lyrics and heavy reliance on metaphors. His band mates have referred to him as “a fountain of wisdom,” and he was invited to speak at Harvard University’s Black Men’s Forum last year.  He also spoke at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology earlier this year.
The official announcement for the program will be next month, and the program will start during the spring semester in January 2013.
More on Professor Christopher Emdin’s efforts to teach science through hip hop below. (Or watch the video here for better sound quality.)

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Wu-Art Thursday #14

Every Thursday we will be posting up pics of Wu-Tang artwork from fans, artists and aliens. If you have artwork you would like to share, please email us at: WuArtTats@gmail.com











Artwork by Alex Kern

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Throw Back Saturdays: The Genius Radio Interview 1991


The Genius (pre-GZA) hit San Francisco with his manager, Melquan (the same Melquan that Just-Ice said "peace" to) the Funky President, to promote his first album, Words From the Genius, on Warner Bros/Cold Chillin'. I believe this was in January or February of 1991. He made a promo/autograph signing appearance at 520 4th Street (old Trocadero Transfer, now Glas Kat), and one of his radio stops was at KPOO-FM 89.5 on the "Soulful Sundays" show with KK Baby. This is a recording of that interview.

Genius Interview - San Francisco 1991
During this visit, he told us (a group of friends including Stacey Holmes and Adisa Banjoko) about his cousin Rakeem, and talked about how hip-hop would soon be taken over, and changed forever, by their crew. Two years later we realized he had been talking about the Wu-Tang Clan.
' I knew I had this tape somewhere. Thanks to my husband Serg finding it, it's here for all to enjoy.

- ' By Dj Stef'

Found & Compiled by Dark 7 Invader (Wu-International)

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Wu-Wednesday Video: GZA Speaks On Upcoming Album & Graphic Novel Project


Interview with GZA in Philadelphia for the Step Into The Black Music Series presented by The FADER and Captain Morgan Black Spiced Rum. He speaks briefly on his upcoming album Dark Matter, but more about his new graphic novel, Chlorine.

Friday, August 3, 2012

GZA/Genius - The 64 Squares Tour


Wu-Tang's GZA will strike out on his own this fall as he embarks on 'The 64 Squares' Tour. The 14-date run, named after his affinity for chess, will kick off on September 14 at The Town Ballroom in Buffalo, NY, and go through Detroit, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and more before ending on October 18 at New York's Irving Plaza. Along the way, he'll be joined by Killer Mike, Bear Hands, and Sweet Valley, a side of Wavves' Nathan Williams. Williams is said to be joining the Genius onstage as a guitarist during the tour. Check out all the tour dates below.

GZA Tour Dates

09/14/12 Fri     The Town Ballroom Buffalo, NY
09/16/12 Sun     Saint Andrews Hall Detroit, MI
09/17/12 Mon     Altar Bar Pittsburgh, PA
09/18/12 Tue     Grog Shop Cleveland, OH
09/19/12 Wed     Metro Chicago, IL
09/20/12 Thu     First Avenue Minneapolis, MN
09/22/12 Sat     Summit Music Hall Denver, CO
09/25/12 Tue     The Fillmore San Francisco, CA
09/26/12 Wed     Ace of Spades Sacramento, CA
09/28/12 Fri     The Observatory Santa Ana, CA
09/29/12 Sat     El Rey Theatre Los Angeles, CA
09/30/12 Sun     Belly Up Tavern Solana Beach, CA
10/02/12 Tue     Marquee Theatre Tempe, AZ
10/18/12 Thu     Irving Plaza New York, NY

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Win passes to see Wu Legends



Wu Tang’s GZA, Raekwon, Masta Killa and Ghostface Killah will all appear as Wu Legends in The Button Factory, on Sunday July 15th, for a show that was only announced a week ago.

Tickets are on sale now, a steel at €33. We have two pairs up for grabs, just mail your details to giveaway@state.ie and we will be in touch tomorrow afternoon.

Here they are doing ‘Criminology’ in Greece a couple of weeks back.


Friday, June 15, 2012

GZA Steps Into The Black in Philadelphia



Last night, GZA was at the famous Sigma Sound studios in Philadelphia, where both David Bowie and the O’Jays have recorded. A set from 107.9′s DJ Caesar kicked off the night while party-goers sampled Captain Morgan Black Spiced Rum and grilled cheese sandwiches from the Say Cheese food truck. GZA/Genius put on a unique performance with a fresh-from-Bonnaroo 8-piece band, Grupo Fantasma. Between tracks like “Triumph” and “Ain’t Nuthing Ta Fuck Wit,” GZA told stories about him and RZA on stage.
 
 
 
 

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