The Movement

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The Movement album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 58:49

eMusic Features

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Icon: Wu-Tang Clan

By Hua Hsu, eMusic Contributor

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 deals under the… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Compared to his partners in Wu-Tang Clan, Inspectah Deck usually keeps a low profile; besides his features on Wu LPs or solo projects from GZA or Killa Beez, he surfaces only when he’s finished an album. Four years after a debut that reportedly took four years to reach the stores, The Movement also dropped on a new label. Sporting few features and only a pair of main producers (Hassan from UMC and Ayatollah), Deck certainly isn’t out to break the Top Ten. In fact, sporting a message to “protest the radio stations,” he’s out to take hip-hop back from the crossover artists. Fortunately, he’s clever enough to know that the music is what matters and that if he simply makes a great rap album the fans will follow. The Movement has plenty of what Wu-Tang fans know and love: first and foremost, the smooth flow but also the scarred soul samples. Versatility is the name of the game, from laid-back blaxploitation funk on “The Stereotype” to harder material like “U Wanna Be.” One of the best moments comes with a tag-team between two of the best hardcore rappers of the past ten years — Deck and Kool G Rap — on “Framed.” – John Bush

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