The Wu-Tang Clan finally set free their new project, more of a collection of tracks rather than an album. Sadly, there’s a few clansman missing from the tracklist.
Category: Raekwon
AZ – ‘Save Them’ feat. Raekwon & Prodigy
This dropped last night, but there was some suspect link embed shit happening.
Kool G Rap – 'Out For That Life' feat. Raekwon
Another drop from the upcoming new Return of The Don album, this time featuring a guest spot from Raekwon.
https://www.audiomack.com/embed/song/deltron-1/out-for-that-life
Raekwon – 'This Is What It Comes Too' (remix) feat. Ghostface Killah
Wu-Tang remix action, set to be included as a bonus track on the upcoming new Raekwon album, The Wild.
Method Man – ‘The Purple Tape’ feat. Raekwon & Inspectah Deck
Get ready for some good old fashioned Wu shit, as Method Man is joined by Raekwon and Inspectah Deck in the video for The Purple Tape, from his recent The Meth Lab album. Watch below.
Method Man – ‘The Meth Lab’
Method Man is back with new album The Meth Lab, and with guest spots from Inspectah Deck, Raekwon and Masta Killa, its a proper Wu-Tang Clan affair. Redman also features of course, among others. Stream and buy below, and let us know what you think. The only thing that bugs us is why make an album with a running Breaking Bad theme now, and not a few years ago when it was actually relevant?
Ghostface Killah – ’12 Reasons to Die II’ (stream)
The New York Times has bagged early streaming of the new Ghostface Killah and Adrian Younge album 12 Reasons to Die II, and you can hear it on the link below. It’s thick with RZA and Raekwon features, making this a proper Wu-Tang Clan family affair, and it sounds pretty good. Hit the link below to hear for yourself.
Listen here.
Slept-on albums in retrospect: Raekwon’s – ‘Immobilarity’
Only Built 4 Cuban Linx was always going to be difficult to top, even for one of the best artists amongst the nine men that made up the Wu-Tang Clan. By 1999, the world had already been blessed not just with Raekwon’s classic debut some four years previously, but also superior albums from Ghostface Killah, GZA, Old Dirty Bastard, Method Man and Cappadonna. The pressure on Rae to turn-in something as good as his debut must have been thick, even if no one dared to mention it.
When Immobilarity did drop, it was given something of a lukewarm reception from fans and critics alike. Listen again in 2015 however, and its actually a pretty good album, and arguably better than the genuinely disappointing proper sequel to the classic debut, 2009’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx II.
What seemed to bug people most at the time was how little this seemed like the other Wu-Tang solo albums so far. There are no guest spots from Ghostface, and in fact Method Man and Masta Killa are the only two official clansmen to appear. And perhaps most noticeably of all, there are no beats by RZA.
Looking back, this was actually a good thing. A lack of guests gave Rae the space needed to focus, and write with enough confidence and weight to carry entire tracks on his own, the way that Ghost has always been able to.
Moving from RZA production also added some variety, away from the occasionally stale beats that he was sometimes guilty of making, even if the little-known producers on the album were usually just trying to ape his style. Its no coincidence that the nicest beat is the Pete Rock produced Sneakers, hinting for the first time just how good Rae sounded over beats from skilled beatmakers outside of RZA. By Only Built 4 Cuban Linx II, the line-up of producers had become diverse enough to include everyone from Dr Dre to J Dilla, via Erick Sermon, Alchemist, Marley Marl and more.
Other standout tracks include Friday, My Favorite Dred and Live From NY, each of them filled with the same vivid imagery that helped maintain Rae’s reputation as one of the best storytellers in the game.
If you slept on this album in 2009, dust it off and have another listen. You’ll be surprised at how good it sounds.
Ghostface Killah – ‘Let The Record Spin’ feat. Raekwon
Ghost Deini is back with another single from Twelve Reasons to Die II, his upcoming sequel album with Adrian Younge. Its all the better for featuring Raekwon, but actually a little dull overall. See what you think by checking it out on the link below.
http://www.audiomack.com/embed4-large/2dbz/let-the-record-spin