Wu-Tang
Clan
Album : Enter
the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)
Release Date : Nov 9, 1993
Label : RCA
Review :
This debut
revolutionized hip-hop (and launched half a dozen solo careers), as much for
The RZA’s raw barrage of off-kilter, off-key loops and sound effects as for
its elliptically violent lyrics. Martial arts—at least as they appear in kung
fu movies—are the Wu-Tang Clan’s favorite metaphor, but they’re also the organizing
principle of the group, a crowd of eight rappers, each with his own way-out-there
"fighting style." They created their own little self-contained culture,
with its own symbols and shifting identities, and let listeners figure it out
for themselves. Unless you’re willing to immerse yourself in its world, it can
be baffling and a little dry, but its aggression and originality are undeniable.
—Douglas Wolk
| Tracklisting : 1. Bring da Ruckus 2. Shame on a Nigga 3. Clan in da Front 4. Wu-Tang : 7th Chamber 5. Can It Be All So Simple/Intermission 6. Mystery of Chessboxin’ 7. Wu-Tang Clan Ain’t Nuthing ta F’ Wit 8. C.R.E.A.M. 9. Method Man 10. Protect Ya Neck 11. Tearz 12. Wu-Tang : 7th Chamber, Pt. 2 13. Conclusion |
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