The W

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Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 55:19

eMusic Features

Active Child Talks Classic Hip-Hop

By Hua Hsu

With his strident falsetto and taste for grandiose, imposing production, it is easy to hear the influence of Pat Grossi's training as a choir singer on his debut album, You Are All I See. What might be less obvious is the influence of 1990s hip-hop, a moment Grossi witnessed firsthand as the son of Priority Records' Vice President of Sales. "(My dad) was the one who was somewhat wheeling and dealing the albums out," Grossi… more »

Icon: Wu-Tang Clan

By Hua Hsu

About halfway through their game-changing 1993 debut, Enter the Wu-Tang, a radio interviewer asks Method Man, Raekwon and Ghostface about the Clan's "ultimate goal." They jockey for the privilege to answer. "Can I say this one?" Rae thirstily begs, before Meth offers a simple "domination." "This is longevity right here," Ghost cuts in. "We gon 'keep it raw." Mission: accomplished. From their Staten Island-as-Shaolin self-mythologizing to their inventive business model - separate solo… more »

They Say All Media Guide

After a host of disappointing solo albums and quickly diminishing celebrity (most of the latter devoted to the continuing extra-legal saga of Ol’ Dirty Bastard), Wu-Tang Clan returned, very quietly, with 2000′s The W. The lack of hype was fitting, for this is a very spartan work, especially compared to its predecessor, the sprawling and overblown Wu-Tang Forever. While the trademark sound is still much in force, group mastermind RZA jettisoned the elaborate beat symphonies and carefully placed strings of Forever in favor of tight productions with little more than scarred soul samples and tight, tough beats. The back-to-basics approach works well, not only because it rightly puts the focus back on the best cadre of rappers in the world of hip-hop, but also because RZA’s immense trackmaster talents can’t help but shine through anyway. Paranoid kung fu samples and bizarre found sounds drive the fantastic streets-is-watching nightmare “Careful (Click, Click).” Unfortunately, though, The W isn’t quite the masterpiece it sounds like after the first few tracks. It falls prey to the same inconsistency as Forever, resulting in half-formed tracks like “Conditioner,” with Snoop Dogg barely saving Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s lone appearance on the LP, a phoned-in vocal (in terms of sound and quality). When they’re hitting on all cylinders though, Wu-Tang Clan are nearly invincible; “Let My Niggas Live,” a feature with Nas, isn’t just claustrophobic and dense but positively strangling, and singles material like “Protect Ya Neck (The Jump Off)” and “Do You Really (Thang, Thang)” are punishing tracks. Paring down Wu-Tang Forever — nearly a two-hour set — to the 60-minute work found here was a good start, but the Wu could probably create another masterpiece worthy of their debut if they spent even more time in the editing room. – John Bush

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