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Wu-Tang Clan Presents:
WU-TANG IRON FLAG
Debuting in 1993 with the seminal classic, Enter the
Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), Staten Island’s WU-TANG CLAN’s RZA, GZA/Genius, Old
Dirty Bastard, Method Man, Raekwon the Chef, Ghostface Killah, Inspectah Deck,
U-God and Masta Killa introduced the world to a rhyme syndicate vacuum packed
with ping-ponging emotion, larger-than-life personalities, eccentric genius,
around-the-way commonality, urban gravitas and brooding menace. It wasn’t
long before the Clan reshaped the hip-hop industry in their own image; seemingly
overnight, multiple aliases, the super-group motif, the new vision of a solo
album, the contracts for solo artists, the family-orientation and countless
other Wu-inventions became staples of the rap game. Nine years later, trends
have changed, rap families have formed and broken up, movements have come
and go, the Sun has set on countless crews, and labels have fallen off, but
after selling over 15 million copies of their own albums in the U.S. alone
the WU-TANG CLAN is still here.
"Money could never break us up," says Ghostface Killah. Adds U-God:
"We’ve made money together, we’ve made money separately and we still
come back together."
Hip-hop’s first family is back together again for their fourth album, the
superb WU-TANG IRON FLAG, which comes a year after 2000’s critically acclaimed,
platinum selling The W. "This is the first time we ever came back [with
a follow-up group album] in a year’s time," notes Clan head and producer,
the inimitable RZA. "I think the fans put there really need love the
brotherhood that we share. I think it’s important for kids and other artist
to always see us banding together. When we come together, we come together
for a cause, and that cause is to show that united we must stand."
Ghostface is a bit more blunt: "If there is a message to this album,
it’s that we the kings of this shit." And U-God agrees. "This album
was made to show who’s the greatest," he says.
WU-TANG IRON FLAG, the crew’s first album to be recorded in New York in almost
a decade (1997’s Wu-Tang Forever and last year’s The W were recorded in Los
Angeles), is a blend of idiosyncratic noise from collages of atonal sounds
and anti-rhythmic tendencies. The first single serviced to mix show DJ’s only,
"Pinky Ring (Uzi)" is a reintroduction to the Clan’s witty, unpredictable
talent and natural game, creates music from splices of jubilant horns. "In
the Hood" is authentic ghetto reportage aided by the sounds of sirens,
gunshots, and truck horns. "Soul Power (Black Jungle)," which features
Public Enemy’s Flavor Flav, is powered by ambient conversation, a lilting
flute and African drums. The freestyle assault "Radioactive (Four Assassins)"
rides on frequency modulations, snake rattles and a lopsided drum pattern.
"As artists, we got to experiment with the music," says U-God. "We
ain’t just gonna cater to one sound and have that be Wu. We’re global so for
us to stay with one particular sound, we can’t do that. Come out we sounding
the same every time? We ain’t them type of niggas."
On IRON FLAG, the WTC also experiment, for the first time, with outside producers.
"On The W album, we had a lot of emcees, so with this album we thought,
‘Let’s get a few producers and break bread with them,’" says RZA. "We
don’t need nobody and don’t nobody need us, but it’s like a respect thing.
We respect what other brothers accomplish and we thought we should let them
know that."
Super-producers the Trackmasters create a sickly soulful
lick on "Back in the Game," which features the sublime crooning
of Ron Isley of the Isley Brothers. The RZA-produced "Chrome Wheels"
is a blast of vintage West Coast riding music. RZA also expands his already
vast arsenal by making reclined bluesy jazz on the socially aware "Babies."
"When I first made the beat, I knew I needed Ghost, Deck, and Rae to
rip it. And they just ripped it."
Lyrically, the Clan is supposed to representand they do. Where many rap crews
share one flow, WU-TANG members come together like fruit cocktailthere’s Ghostface’s
emotional roller coasters, U-God’s word cubes, Method Man’s ring-around-the-rosy
twirls, RZA’s breathless pearl necklaces, Inspectah Deck’s metaphoric house
of cards . . . and the list goes on. And anything is fair game for a rhyme
topic lions, tigers, bears, friends, Romans, countrymen, stars and garters
can make their way onto a Wu rhyme at any given moment.
"Brothers gotta understand that WU-TANG is not gonna keep on saying the
same things," says Raekwon.
Wu-Tang Iron Flag comes amid a flurry of WU-TANG activity. "We flooding
them right now," says Ghostface Killah, whose Bulletproof Wallets was
released in November. December 2001, will also see the release of Method Man
and Redman’s "How High" movie and soundtrack. RZA’s Bobby Digital
in Stereo was released in August, while Raekwon’s RAGU and the incarcerated
Old Dirty Bastard’s The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones are set for
releases in March 2002.
"As long as we stand together and represent this WU-TANG sound, no matter
how many artists come and sell 5, 10 million records, we’re still a reliable
source of information," says RZA. " But if we waited another 2 or
3 years, the kids may not even have any idea of what we’re trying to inject.
I feel sorry for a lot of people out there because we’ve been real humble
and real passive over the years, but right now the uzi’s back and you’re gonna
hear that."