WU-TANG CLAN Compilation '95-99 (non-album cuts)

Reminisce about the golden era of hip-hop.

Moderators: TheBigSleep, djfilthyrich

claaa7
Posts: 676
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:59 am

WU-TANG CLAN Compilation '95-99 (non-album cuts)

Post by claaa7 »

i made this for my blog The Lost Tapes (link in my sig if anyone's interested) and posted it over at The Wu-Tang Corp forums where it was appreciated but i think this will be better suited here since those guys mostly already have anything by the Clan.

i put together 16 songs of non-album material recorded by the Wu-Tang Clan more or less as a group between 1995 and 1999; soundtrack joints, B-side, one official RZA remix and mixtapes. in my opinion it came out banging and i've been playing it alot. there's also two solo tracks by Wu members here (just like they use to do on their albums), in this case ODB and Inspectah Deck. other than that, there's at least two Wu guys on all tracks but three or more on most. all songs are full versions and in good quality and i think the sequencing came off real nice. i also did a little write-up giving a little background and my thoughts on all featured songs. download at the bottom of the page (two links, both 4shared and ShareBeast). SUUUUUUUUUUU!!!!!!


Image

01. "Lay Your Hammer"
Recorded in the "Wu-Tang Forever" sessions, "Lay Your Hammer" was scrapped from the LP and passed on to Funkmaster Flex who included it on his "Mixtape Vol. III: 60 Minutes of Funk". On an energetic RZA beat, close to the entire Wu-Tang Clan kicks outstanding verses in less than two minutes. Fuck a hook!

02. "America" (Ft. Killah Priest)
Classic Wu-Tang cut, lifted from the '96 compilation "America is Dying Slowly", the acronym which also makes up the hook for this one. "America" stands out for a couple of reasons; it's possibly the last released Wu-Tang Clan song featuring RZA's original sample based production style, before he started studying music theory in prepraration of "Wu-Tang Forever". It's also the only released apperance of Killah Priest on a joint billed to the Clan. Anyone who's heavily into the first round of RZA produced solo albums will be amazed by this track.

03. "Semi-Automatic: Full Rap Metal Jacket" (Ft. StreetLife)
"Semi-Automatic" is one of two RZA produced Wu-Tang cuts released on the soundtrack to "High School High" in 1996. U-God and StreetLife throws memorable performances here but the real star of this joint is The Rebel INS who was just unstoppable by the time '96 came around. It's possible this was something recorded for a Deck album, I heard somewhere that they actually had started working on a solo joint for him but unfortunately lost most of the material in a Staten Island flood. I've got a prepared version of Deck's debut album featuring a lot of stuff from "Uncontrolled Substance" coupled with additional songs like this, "Let Me At Them", "Tres Leches" and "Night Shift". Maybe I'll drop it here one day cuz it's truly fantastic and unlike his retail albums actually makes his talents justice.

04. "Dirty the Moocher"
I can't make a '90s Wu-Tang Clan compilation without including one solo joint from Ol' Dirty Bastard, right?! "Dirty the Moocher" is one of the most underrated joints in his catalouge. RZA (behind the boards) and Dirt gives it a straight 1930s Chicago gangsta vibe when sampling and paying homage to legendary jazz musician Cab Calloway and his immortal "Minnie the Moocher". Not a suprising choice for sample source considering this was made for the "Hoodlum" OST back in '96. The main part of the song has to have one of the grittiest and most rugged backing tracks Ol' Dirty Bastard ever rhymed over.

05. "Who's The Champion"
"Who's The Champion" was most likely an outtake from the "Ironman" sessions as it appeared on the soundtrack to "Great White Hype" in 1996. RZA and Ghostface Killah was always superb as an emcee duo as proven by several album tracks between 1993 and 2000 and this is another great statement from the two generals. Especially Ghostface hypes up this track good, finding himself in full-blown storytelling mode similiar to his performance on "Motherless Child". Raekwon appears for the chorus which all the more makes it sound like an "Ironman" outtake; produced by The RZA.

06. "And You Don't Stop"
This track was originally released in 1998 on Def Jam's soundtrack for "Rush Hour" and it's a pretty cool track considering it doesn't really sound anything like a Wu-Tang Clan cut at the time. Not suprisingly, this is not produced by The RZA but rather Dame Grease who was a popular producer at the time, working on albums from Jay-Z and Nas. Grease is clearly trying to compliment the vibe of the flick here, as the synthesizers creates an asiatic sounding theme for the Clan members to spit over. Also stands out as it's one of the rare times Ol' Dirty Bastard appears on a non-album cut billed to the Wu-Tang Clan.

07. "Box in Hand" (Ft. StreetLife)
The original version of "Box in Hand" by Ghostface Killah has been floating around for a long, long time by now. This is nothing short of vintage Wu-Tang right here, with RZA in full sampling mode, Ghost, Street and Meth spraying deadly dartz all over the place and a classic Method Man sing-song style hook that's just as addictive as it is simple. Most likely this song was cut at last minute from the "Ironman" album when they come up with the song that replaced it. The actual track appearing as #8 on the LP is probably totally unrelated to "Box in Hand" although most people obviously calls it by that title since the cover (probably) still refers to the song on this compilation.

08. "One More to Go (Earthquake)" (Ft. Deadly Venomz & StreetLife)
Deadly Venoms was the only female group to emerge from the "W"-umbrella when the Killa Beez started flooding the market in the late '90s. The crew was made up of four emcees including N-Tyce, Lin Que and Champ MC who all had previous record deals in the early '90s and dropped records as solo artists. They never took off as Deadly Venoms although they actually had a lot of talent and fat beats from Protect Ya Neck label in-house producer Ruzz Press. The #1 stand out song from this crew was "One More to Go (Earthquake)", a hard hitting, sinister posse cut featuring all four rappers of the gorup going head to head with GZA, Inspectah Deck, Method Man, StreetLife and Cappadonna. GZA kicks a terrific verse here but they are all killing it.

09. "Sucker MC's"
"Sucker MC's" is of course an homage to Run-DMC as Method Man, RZA and Ol' Dirty Bastard throw down their own version of the original Queen's trio's classic B-side. After a superb opening interlude (featuring some hilarious off-key singing by the immortal ODB), the song follows the original version closely as far as production goes and there's a lot of quotes from the OG as well. This originally appeared on a 1997 rap compilation called "In Tha Beginning... There Was Rap" which had the most popular artists of the day remaking old school classics by the likes of Doug E. Fresh, Boogie Down Productions, Too Short, etc. Look it up if you ain't heard it!

10. "The Abduction"
Lifted from Tony Touch's immaculate album format mixtape "The Piece Maker", released on Tommy Boy Music in 2000. True Master stands behind the beat on this which is real thumping in his vintage chopped up/broken style and is laced with dark strings. Featuring excellent verses by RZA, Deck, Method Man, GZA and Ghostface Killah so this is a true posse cut, Wu-Tang style.

11. "Shaolin Worldwide"
The earliest Wu-Tang Clan song credited to Allah Mathematic's on production and it's real slamming. This up tempo joint includes turntable work and an addictive synthesizer melody doubling the bass line and is overall a predecessor to "Rules" from the "Iron Flag" album. "Shaolin Worldwide" originally appeared on the 1999 soundtrack to the "Next Friday" movie.

12. "Wu-Wear: The Garnment Renaissance"
Only RZA could hook up a beat like this! There's lots of different parts coming together to form this joint but it never sounds the least cluttered. This was right when the Clan was coming strong with their Wu-Wear gear and "The Garnment Renaissance" is the anthem celebrating that. Was released as a single but recorded for the "High School High Soundtrack". Method Man delivers another one of his classic choruses and any '96 Cappadonna is great Cappa.

13. "Let Me At Them"
"Let Me At Them" was Inspectah Deck's first ever released solo joint and is a mindblowing piece of hardcore hip-hop. An album from Deck in '96 and aggresive beats like this could have put him right on top of the game as he probably had the strongest flow in the Clan at this point. The song appeared on the "Tales From the Hood" OST in 1995 and billed as a Wu-Tang Clan track, produced by Inspectah Deck. R. Diggs got a co-writer credit and if you listen to this and believe that Prince Rakeem didn't have a lot to do with the production you're fooling yourself.

14. "Windpipe"
Released in early 1998 on the "Belly" soundtrack, "Windpipe" premiered a new direction in RZA's production and lyrics as it is probably the earliest released Bobby Digital joint. Fans of "In Stereo" will love this as well and fans of ODB owes it to themeselves to hear his crazy performance on here. RZA on his Bobby Digital steez, Ghost in Supreme Clientele mode and Dirt being Dirt - what a fucking nuts combination!

15. "Wu Gambinos" [Hidden Chambers Remix]
RZA remixed the Wu-Tang Clan masterpiece "Wu-Gambinos" for the B-side of the "Triumph" single two years after the original mix appeared on Raekwon's '95 debut. The vocals are the same and RZA keeps the entire rhythm track from the original but loops up a lone trombone from some old jazz record which gives the entire song a total remake. Very cool, yet relatively unknown RZA remix.

16. "Diesel"
I know a lot of people who hold "Diesel" as their probable favorite Clan non-album cut of all time, and I can definitely see where they are coming from. Why didn't make "Wu-Tang Forever" is still beyond me as it was recorded in those sessions but only made it to the B-side of the "Reunited at the forefront. This production technique was used all over "Wu-Tang Forever" to great effect although a lot of people missed RZA's sample heavy sound. I personally think that album represented most of the Wu Generals lyrical peak and they are going full throttle on here as well where most of them are featured. Ol' Dirty Bastard rips this track in half, kicking several verses." 12" and later the Greatest Hits compilation on Sony/BMG. RZA contributes another one of his intense beats that's so ill yet very minimal with basically only drums and a bassline to really put the emcees Listen to the long instrumental outro in headphones and check out all the tricks RZA pulls from his bag to build up a truly sinister atmosphere. Imagine an instrumental album from this guy at his peak?!

WU-TANG CLAN - "SHAOLIN WORLDWIDE" V.1


MIRROR LINK
http://www.claaa7.blogspot.com

^ best compilations on the net, daily updates with news, singles, rarities, all True School hip-hop ^

shadowmaster
Posts: 1398
Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2007 10:46 pm

Post by shadowmaster »

Thanks, will have to check this out to see the quality of the tracks. Is there any reason you didn't put 'Rocksteady' from the Tony Touch Piecemaker 2 on there?


You never really find out the whole truth but I think they said the original Box in Hand sounded too soft, or something.


Regarding America, what confuses me to this day is that the whole LP is on an anti AIDS safe sex vibe, and so is the track, except for Rza's verse which just seems odd.
Kool Keith: I wore a straw hat with a feather to the last Source Awards. When I got to Madison Square Garden everybody was looking at me. When I got back home I seen everybody and their mother in their video wearing a fuckinג€™ straw hat with a feather in it.

Tim Dog: ג€œWhat Kool Keith gonna wear? Iג€™m gonna do that shit in my video. Iג€™m gonna wear that shit really quick. Whatג€™s Tim Dog gonna wear?ג€

Verge
Posts: 11009
Joined: Sun Jun 15, 2008 3:38 pm
Location: New Jeruz
Contact:

Post by Verge »

thanks for the comp Claaa7.

This is the record of Box In Hand I've had for years, it's labeled "Deadly Darts" but obviously its not.
http://www.discogs.com/Wu-Tang-Clan-Pre ... ase/703615
then on the youtube clip in the intro they call it "Deadly Darts - The Original version Of Box In Hand"
<object width="420" height="315"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/CXQXbdPhy2c?ve ... ram><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/CXQXbdPhy2c?version=3&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="420" height="315" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object>
The b-side, Rza's Sunshower is a banger too.

don't forget the og Let Me At Em. Big ups fatboybrandon still, I appreciate this joint, like i had said, I had it on a tape in like 94 or 95 for like a week and had been looking for it ever since.
Might seem like a very minor difference but letting the pianos flush in the beat makes it so much iller, imo:
http://soundcloud.com/cratesorjr-blogsp ... ectah-deck

i fixed up the dead space back then and just had to post at the TROY blog cause the demo was such a big deal to me:
http://www.thetroyblog.com/2010/04/03/i ... o-version/
dl the fixed version at the troyblog and the og rip at CratesOfJr's soundcloud page i linked above.

claaa7
Posts: 676
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:59 am

Post by claaa7 »

shadowmaster wrote:Thanks, will have to check this out to see the quality of the tracks. Is there any reason you didn't put 'Rocksteady' from the Tony Touch Piecemaker 2 on there?

You never really find out the whole truth but I think they said the original Box in Hand sounded too soft, or something.
about "Rocksteady" i didn't include it because it's a later song as far as i know, it uses the same beat as one of the joints on "World According to RZA" which was released in 2001 and it first appeared in 2004 on an album. i wanted to keep it '95 - 1999. thx for the info on "Box in Hand", never heard that before but i guess that could have been one of the reasons for sure since it is lighter than the rest of "Ironman"

some other interesting trivia about "Ironman" is that RZA and Ghost was dying for Y-Kim's "Blessed Are Those" beat (the original that I posted in the "Heavy Mentwo"/Killah Priest thread). Y-Kim wanted to sell them to them on one condition, they would let Timbo King (who was in Royal Fam together with Y-Kim then) on to spit a guest verse on that song. they declined... no clue why because Bo King is crazy and been on alot of RZA albums since.
Verge wrote:thanks for the comp Claaa7.

This is the record of Box In Hand I've had for years, it's labeled "Deadly Darts" but obviously its not.
http://www.discogs.com/Wu-Tang-Clan-Pre ... ase/703615
then on the youtube clip in the intro they call it "Deadly Darts - The Original version Of Box In Hand"
<object width="420" height="315"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/CXQXbdPhy2c?ve ... ram><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/CXQXbdPhy2c?version=3&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="420" height="315" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object>
The b-side, Rza's Sunshower is a banger too.
yeah that's the one that's included on the compilation as well, from what I heard that's a bootleg record made to look like an official Wu-Tang Records joint. they used the name "Deadly Dartz" there but it's not any official title. co-sign on the B-side, "Sunshower" was long one of my favorites on "Wu-Tang Forever" then I lost my CD and had to buy a new, but on later pressings even here in Europe those two bonus tracks have been deleted and Disc 1 is no longer enhanced. oh well...
don't forget the og Let Me At Em. Big ups fatboybrandon still, I appreciate this joint, like i had said, I had it on a tape in like 94 or 95 for like a week and had been looking for it ever since.
Might seem like a very minor difference but letting the pianos flush in the beat makes it so much iller, imo:
http://soundcloud.com/cratesorjr-blogsp ... ectah-deck

i fixed up the dead space back then and just had to post at the TROY blog cause the demo was such a big deal to me:
http://www.thetroyblog.com/2010/04/03/i ... o-version/
dl the fixed version at the troyblog and the og rip at CratesOfJr's soundcloud page i linked above.
yeah i remember the OG "Let Me At Them", that's crazy.. i think Brandon might have posted it on Wu Corp too, but i know i've heard it somewhere on a forum. like you say, it's only a minimal changes but i agree, it does make it even iller.

speaking on "Let Me At Them", y'all hear that's a RZA beat right?? i mean it's credited to Deck but then it says written by R. Diggs and J. Hunter .. i'm sure Deck was part of the production but just by listening to it i can tell that RZA should have been credited to.

if anyone wants to look up writing credits but you don't have the album/single or the credits aren't mentioned check out the sites of BMI and ASCAP and use their search function. that's how I learned that RZA produced the version of "Ghost Deini" that's on all versions of "Supreme Clientele" except the Canadian, for example. other RZA beats he did not get credit for are "R.E.C. Room" (Deck) and "South Of The Border" (Cappa).

but on the other hand, it goes both way - True Master produced "Fat Lady Sings" on CL2 and Mathematic's produced "It Must Be Bobby" from RZA's "Digital Bullet" LP.
http://www.claaa7.blogspot.com

^ best compilations on the net, daily updates with news, singles, rarities, all True School hip-hop ^

claaa7
Posts: 676
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:59 am

Post by claaa7 »

wooooo, i finally got my hands on "Wu-Tang Cream Team Line Up" CDQ which i've been looking for forever. i only had it on Funk Flex's tape and never came across the 12", but this was a song i wanted to include on the comp but decided not to because of the mixtape qualities and all that. thx to RGU2002 at Wu Corp. DJ Scratch came through on the production, i'ma save this for a DJ Scratch production compilation:

http://www.sharebeast.com/n6xhcv0b2z4u
http://www.claaa7.blogspot.com

^ best compilations on the net, daily updates with news, singles, rarities, all True School hip-hop ^

shadowmaster
Posts: 1398
Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2007 10:46 pm

Post by shadowmaster »

claaa7 wrote: about "Rocksteady" i didn't include it because it's a later song as far as i know, it uses the same beat as one of the joints on "World According to RZA" which was released in 2001 and it first appeared in 2004 on an album. i wanted to keep it '95 - 1999. thx for the info on "Box in Hand", never heard that before but i guess that could have been one of the reasons for sure since it is lighter than the rest of "Ironman"

Memories do play up, but I am almost 100% certain it was on a wu mixtape around 1998. Someone might pop up and disagree, but I remember it vividly because of the beat and an old friend of mine would just repeat bits of Raekwon's verse over and over.


BTW-which track from World According to Rza has that beat, and does an instrumental exist?

claaa7
Posts: 676
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:59 am

Post by claaa7 »

^ that's cool, never heard that before but that could very well be so i'll take your word for it.. there's alot of crazy beats on "W.A.R." which makes you wonder why the hell RZA didn't use some of these for "Iron Flag" instead. the Clan would have sounded fucking insane over some of those... if y'all have never heard the "W.A.R." album i strongly recommend it, even if you can't understand parts of it (much is in english too tho), it's worth it for the production and some of the guys sounds great, others not so much haha.

the song with the "Rock Steady" beat is one of the best songs on the LP, RZA and legendary French crew IAM on "Seul Face a Lui" and yes it's available on the "W.A.R." instrumentals Think Differently released (it's missing some other songs tho). there's also a song on "W.A.R." with a German rapper that uses the same beat as the title track to Wu's "Iron Flag".

http://www.amazon.com/World-According-R ... B000XYBPU2


here's the song on YouTube. if anyone want mp3 i can upload it later, but i don't have time to rip my CD and upload right now:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rnzvo39r-c8
http://www.claaa7.blogspot.com

^ best compilations on the net, daily updates with news, singles, rarities, all True School hip-hop ^

dirt_dog
Posts: 695
Joined: Tue Apr 07, 2009 12:18 pm

Post by dirt_dog »

Nice comp. Thanks. Brings back a lot of great memories.

I have the promo cd single of "Wu-Tang Cream Team Line-Up" if you want me to rip it for your collection.

1. Radio Version
2. Album Version
3. Instrumental
4. A Cappella
Last edited by dirt_dog on Fri Mar 30, 2012 2:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.

dirt_dog
Posts: 695
Joined: Tue Apr 07, 2009 12:18 pm

Post by dirt_dog »

and no disrespect, but I put in a couple minutes on a new cover:

Image

Verge
Posts: 11009
Joined: Sun Jun 15, 2008 3:38 pm
Location: New Jeruz
Contact:

Post by Verge »

dope work dirt.

Claaa7, thanks for clarifying that Let Me At 'Em production. I was actually surprised that Deck did the beat when i first learned of it, cause I thought it sounded so Rza. So now we learn Rza did actually at least have a hand in it, possibly did the whole beat. Good research, thanks for the BMI/ASCAP tip.

Ghost Dog had some phenomenal production too. I remember my friend had the soundtrack CD and when he got it was pissed cause all them little interludes from the movie weren't on there.

Years later, I cop this double LP of Ghost Dog that does have the interludes but it is bootleg as hell, sound quality is some of the worst I've ever heard on vinyl, literally.

Maybe we could sort this mess out too and get the highest quality of everything possible from that endeavor.

shadowmaster
Posts: 1398
Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2007 10:46 pm

Post by shadowmaster »

claaa7 wrote:
the song with the "Rock Steady" beat is one of the best songs on the LP, RZA and legendary French crew IAM on "Seul Face a Lui" and yes it's available on the "W.A.R." instrumentals Think Differently released (it's missing some other songs tho). there's also a song on "W.A.R." with a German rapper that uses the same beat as the title track to Wu's "Iron Flag".

http://www.amazon.com/World-According-R ... B000XYBPU2

Thanks man, I've been after that beat for years. I'll have to buy that release some day, found a weak rip, but I'm cautious about buying Think Differently releases since I've been burnt by them before.

drunkmonk36
Posts: 235
Joined: Fri May 15, 2009 9:26 am

Post by drunkmonk36 »

awesome man! looking forward to hearing this! appreciate your work.

Jaz
Ease Up
Posts: 21579
Joined: Thu May 20, 2004 10:33 pm
Location: Wellington, New Zealand

Re: WU-TANG CLAN Compilation '95-99 (non-album cuts)

Post by Jaz »

claaa7 wrote:i made this for my blog The Lost Tapes (link in my sig if anyone's interested) and posted it over at The Wu-Tang Corp forums where it was appreciated but i think this will be better suited here since those guys mostly already have anything by the Clan.

i put together 16 songs of non-album material recorded by the Wu-Tang Clan more or less as a group between 1995 and 1999; soundtrack joints, B-side, one official RZA remix and mixtapes. in my opinion it came out banging and i've been playing it alot. there's also two solo tracks by Wu members here (just like they use to do on their albums), in this case ODB and Inspectah Deck. other than that, there's at least two Wu guys on all tracks but three or more on most. all songs are full versions and in good quality and i think the sequencing came off real nice. i also did a little write-up giving a little background and my thoughts on all featured songs. download at the bottom of the page (two links, both 4shared and ShareBeast). SUUUUUUUUUUU!!!!!!


Image

01. "Lay Your Hammer"
Recorded in the "Wu-Tang Forever" sessions, "Lay Your Hammer" was scrapped from the LP and passed on to Funkmaster Flex who included it on his "Mixtape Vol. III: 60 Minutes of Funk". On an energetic RZA beat, close to the entire Wu-Tang Clan kicks outstanding verses in less than two minutes. Fuck a hook!

02. "America" (Ft. Killah Priest)
Classic Wu-Tang cut, lifted from the '96 compilation "America is Dying Slowly", the acronym which also makes up the hook for this one. "America" stands out for a couple of reasons; it's possibly the last released Wu-Tang Clan song featuring RZA's original sample based production style, before he started studying music theory in prepraration of "Wu-Tang Forever". It's also the only released apperance of Killah Priest on a joint billed to the Clan. Anyone who's heavily into the first round of RZA produced solo albums will be amazed by this track.

03. "Semi-Automatic: Full Rap Metal Jacket" (Ft. StreetLife)
"Semi-Automatic" is one of two RZA produced Wu-Tang cuts released on the soundtrack to "High School High" in 1996. U-God and StreetLife throws memorable performances here but the real star of this joint is The Rebel INS who was just unstoppable by the time '96 came around. It's possible this was something recorded for a Deck album, I heard somewhere that they actually had started working on a solo joint for him but unfortunately lost most of the material in a Staten Island flood. I've got a prepared version of Deck's debut album featuring a lot of stuff from "Uncontrolled Substance" coupled with additional songs like this, "Let Me At Them", "Tres Leches" and "Night Shift". Maybe I'll drop it here one day cuz it's truly fantastic and unlike his retail albums actually makes his talents justice.

04. "Dirty the Moocher"
I can't make a '90s Wu-Tang Clan compilation without including one solo joint from Ol' Dirty Bastard, right?! "Dirty the Moocher" is one of the most underrated joints in his catalouge. RZA (behind the boards) and Dirt gives it a straight 1930s Chicago gangsta vibe when sampling and paying homage to legendary jazz musician Cab Calloway and his immortal "Minnie the Moocher". Not a suprising choice for sample source considering this was made for the "Hoodlum" OST back in '96. The main part of the song has to have one of the grittiest and most rugged backing tracks Ol' Dirty Bastard ever rhymed over.

05. "Who's The Champion"
"Who's The Champion" was most likely an outtake from the "Ironman" sessions as it appeared on the soundtrack to "Great White Hype" in 1996. RZA and Ghostface Killah was always superb as an emcee duo as proven by several album tracks between 1993 and 2000 and this is another great statement from the two generals. Especially Ghostface hypes up this track good, finding himself in full-blown storytelling mode similiar to his performance on "Motherless Child". Raekwon appears for the chorus which all the more makes it sound like an "Ironman" outtake; produced by The RZA.

06. "And You Don't Stop"
This track was originally released in 1998 on Def Jam's soundtrack for "Rush Hour" and it's a pretty cool track considering it doesn't really sound anything like a Wu-Tang Clan cut at the time. Not suprisingly, this is not produced by The RZA but rather Dame Grease who was a popular producer at the time, working on albums from Jay-Z and Nas. Grease is clearly trying to compliment the vibe of the flick here, as the synthesizers creates an asiatic sounding theme for the Clan members to spit over. Also stands out as it's one of the rare times Ol' Dirty Bastard appears on a non-album cut billed to the Wu-Tang Clan.

07. "Box in Hand" (Ft. StreetLife)
The original version of "Box in Hand" by Ghostface Killah has been floating around for a long, long time by now. This is nothing short of vintage Wu-Tang right here, with RZA in full sampling mode, Ghost, Street and Meth spraying deadly dartz all over the place and a classic Method Man sing-song style hook that's just as addictive as it is simple. Most likely this song was cut at last minute from the "Ironman" album when they come up with the song that replaced it. The actual track appearing as #8 on the LP is probably totally unrelated to "Box in Hand" although most people obviously calls it by that title since the cover (probably) still refers to the song on this compilation.

08. "One More to Go (Earthquake)" (Ft. Deadly Venomz & StreetLife)
Deadly Venoms was the only female group to emerge from the "W"-umbrella when the Killa Beez started flooding the market in the late '90s. The crew was made up of four emcees including N-Tyce, Lin Que and Champ MC who all had previous record deals in the early '90s and dropped records as solo artists. They never took off as Deadly Venoms although they actually had a lot of talent and fat beats from Protect Ya Neck label in-house producer Ruzz Press. The #1 stand out song from this crew was "One More to Go (Earthquake)", a hard hitting, sinister posse cut featuring all four rappers of the gorup going head to head with GZA, Inspectah Deck, Method Man, StreetLife and Cappadonna. GZA kicks a terrific verse here but they are all killing it.

09. "Sucker MC's"
"Sucker MC's" is of course an homage to Run-DMC as Method Man, RZA and Ol' Dirty Bastard throw down their own version of the original Queen's trio's classic B-side. After a superb opening interlude (featuring some hilarious off-key singing by the immortal ODB), the song follows the original version closely as far as production goes and there's a lot of quotes from the OG as well. This originally appeared on a 1997 rap compilation called "In Tha Beginning... There Was Rap" which had the most popular artists of the day remaking old school classics by the likes of Doug E. Fresh, Boogie Down Productions, Too Short, etc. Look it up if you ain't heard it!

10. "The Abduction"
Lifted from Tony Touch's immaculate album format mixtape "The Piece Maker", released on Tommy Boy Music in 2000. True Master stands behind the beat on this which is real thumping in his vintage chopped up/broken style and is laced with dark strings. Featuring excellent verses by RZA, Deck, Method Man, GZA and Ghostface Killah so this is a true posse cut, Wu-Tang style.

11. "Shaolin Worldwide"
The earliest Wu-Tang Clan song credited to Allah Mathematic's on production and it's real slamming. This up tempo joint includes turntable work and an addictive synthesizer melody doubling the bass line and is overall a predecessor to "Rules" from the "Iron Flag" album. "Shaolin Worldwide" originally appeared on the 1999 soundtrack to the "Next Friday" movie.

12. "Wu-Wear: The Garnment Renaissance"
Only RZA could hook up a beat like this! There's lots of different parts coming together to form this joint but it never sounds the least cluttered. This was right when the Clan was coming strong with their Wu-Wear gear and "The Garnment Renaissance" is the anthem celebrating that. Was released as a single but recorded for the "High School High Soundtrack". Method Man delivers another one of his classic choruses and any '96 Cappadonna is great Cappa.

13. "Let Me At Them"
"Let Me At Them" was Inspectah Deck's first ever released solo joint and is a mindblowing piece of hardcore hip-hop. An album from Deck in '96 and aggresive beats like this could have put him right on top of the game as he probably had the strongest flow in the Clan at this point. The song appeared on the "Tales From the Hood" OST in 1995 and billed as a Wu-Tang Clan track, produced by Inspectah Deck. R. Diggs got a co-writer credit and if you listen to this and believe that Prince Rakeem didn't have a lot to do with the production you're fooling yourself.

14. "Windpipe"
Released in early 1998 on the "Belly" soundtrack, "Windpipe" premiered a new direction in RZA's production and lyrics as it is probably the earliest released Bobby Digital joint. Fans of "In Stereo" will love this as well and fans of ODB owes it to themeselves to hear his crazy performance on here. RZA on his Bobby Digital steez, Ghost in Supreme Clientele mode and Dirt being Dirt - what a fucking nuts combination!

15. "Wu Gambinos" [Hidden Chambers Remix]
RZA remixed the Wu-Tang Clan masterpiece "Wu-Gambinos" for the B-side of the "Triumph" single two years after the original mix appeared on Raekwon's '95 debut. The vocals are the same and RZA keeps the entire rhythm track from the original but loops up a lone trombone from some old jazz record which gives the entire song a total remake. Very cool, yet relatively unknown RZA remix.

16. "Diesel"
I know a lot of people who hold "Diesel" as their probable favorite Clan non-album cut of all time, and I can definitely see where they are coming from. Why didn't make "Wu-Tang Forever" is still beyond me as it was recorded in those sessions but only made it to the B-side of the "Reunited at the forefront. This production technique was used all over "Wu-Tang Forever" to great effect although a lot of people missed RZA's sample heavy sound. I personally think that album represented most of the Wu Generals lyrical peak and they are going full throttle on here as well where most of them are featured. Ol' Dirty Bastard rips this track in half, kicking several verses." 12" and later the Greatest Hits compilation on Sony/BMG. RZA contributes another one of his intense beats that's so ill yet very minimal with basically only drums and a bassline to really put the emcees Listen to the long instrumental outro in headphones and check out all the tricks RZA pulls from his bag to build up a truly sinister atmosphere. Imagine an instrumental album from this guy at his peak?!

WU-TANG CLAN - "SHAOLIN WORLDWIDE" V.1


MIRROR LINK
dope.

claaa7
Posts: 676
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:59 am

Post by claaa7 »

dirt_dog wrote:and no disrespect, but I put in a couple minutes on a new cover:

Image
thanks for that Dirt Dog, i'm really not good with Photoshop. i know some basic stuff only, but what Font did you use for those letters? looks really good, i'm gonna use this.. usually i just throw something together so it at least have a cover bc it's better than nothing but the main issue is of course the music and the writing for me. peace
Verge wrote: Ghost Dog had some phenomenal production too. I remember my friend had the soundtrack CD and when he got it was pissed cause all them little interludes from the movie weren't on there.

Years later, I cop this double LP of Ghost Dog that does have the interludes but it is bootleg as hell, sound quality is some of the worst I've ever heard on vinyl, literally.

Maybe we could sort this mess out too and get the highest quality of everything possible from that endeavor.
word man, "Ghost Dog: The Album" is almost a classic to me.. i remember at the time, I was buying every Wu album that dropped but i was never real 100% satisfied and other Wu heads felt the same. the albums like "T2: Judgement Day", Deck's debut, U-God's debut, Raekwon's second, ODB's second, Bobby Digital "In Stereo" (which i hold as a masterpiece today but didn't really understand at first), etc. all these were good albums for sure but they couldn't fuck with the first round of solos and the two Wu-Tang Clan albums that precedeed them.

then Ghostface comes with "Supreme Clientele"!! i rememeber picking that up in the store when it comes out, coming home, press play and being BLOWN AWAY.. WOW!!!! it was just the feeling when you heard "Ob4cl" and "Ironman" and all them classics for the first time right. and then comes the "Ghost Dog" soundtrack and "The W" album and it was a Wu-Tang Renaissance for real hahah.. 2000 is one of the best years for the Wu-Tang cos of that.... 1995 is the all time best though of course (ODB, Rae, GZA).

the thing is that there are two versions of the "Ghost Dog" OST like you say. in Japan they released the actual score and features all the instrumental that was used in the movie plus "Samurai Showdown" and two versions of "Fast Shadow" (one short and one that's the same as on the other version of G.D.). this was released in great, mastered quality in Japan but not anywhere else but dodgy bootlegs has been made... i got a great rip of this, give me a couple of days because i'm gonna do a post on this for The Lost Tapes i was thinking and i'll post it here right away.
http://www.claaa7.blogspot.com

^ best compilations on the net, daily updates with news, singles, rarities, all True School hip-hop ^

CRASH DDZ
Posts: 9471
Joined: Sat Mar 27, 2004 10:17 pm
Location: Loserville Kentucky
Contact:

Post by CRASH DDZ »

incredible posts in here/ thanks.

kartman
Posts: 401
Joined: Tue Mar 09, 2010 11:34 am
Location: Thessaloniki, Greece

Post by kartman »

C7, you should really consider rallying as a candidate for the next president election!
:bow: :bow: :bow: :bow: :bow:

mega montana
Posts: 38
Joined: Mon Mar 21, 2005 11:44 pm

Post by mega montana »

some really good tracks on that compilation c7, great job!

B. Ware tha Siniq
Posts: 12589
Joined: Thu Feb 19, 2004 3:50 am
Location: Nowhere For Very Long

Post by B. Ware tha Siniq »

I remember I did one of these a few years back. Mostly the same, but I think included a few other random things. One of which was:

<object width="420" height="315"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/i_z05nbJSjM?ve ... ram><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/i_z05nbJSjM?version=3&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="420" height="315" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object>
https://soundcloud.com/jay-beware/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Verge
Posts: 11009
Joined: Sun Jun 15, 2008 3:38 pm
Location: New Jeruz
Contact:

Post by Verge »

Dope, now that reminds me of that Raekwon(?) joint where he repeats "still selling crack, still selling crack" a few times but it's not the name of the song i don't think. And it could be Meth, anybody? I think it was from a think differently or J Love cd.

Jaz
Ease Up
Posts: 21579
Joined: Thu May 20, 2004 10:33 pm
Location: Wellington, New Zealand

Post by Jaz »

Not sure sorry Verge, this is really dope C7 you should check out my KRS samples compilation if you haven't.

shadowmaster
Posts: 1398
Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2007 10:46 pm

Post by shadowmaster »

Verge wrote:Dope, now that reminds me of that Raekwon(?) joint where he repeats "still selling crack, still selling crack" a few times but it's not the name of the song i don't think. And it could be Meth, anybody? I think it was from a think differently or J Love cd.
You sure it's not the Rock Steady track?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1W9S2VPmBM8


Listen to the second part of Rae's verse.

Verge
Posts: 11009
Joined: Sun Jun 15, 2008 3:38 pm
Location: New Jeruz
Contact:

Post by Verge »

shadowmaster wrote:
Verge wrote:Dope, now that reminds me of that Raekwon(?) joint where he repeats "still selling crack, still selling crack" a few times but it's not the name of the song i don't think. And it could be Meth, anybody? I think it was from a think differently or J Love cd.
You sure it's not the Rock Steady track?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1W9S2VPmBM8


Listen to the second part of Rae's verse.
Oh yeah, as soon as the beat came on i know thats it, thanks! Was this just on a mixtape or one Tony Touch's LPs or was it on any 12"s do you know?
EDIT: nm.. The Piecemaker 2.

shadowmaster
Posts: 1398
Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2007 10:46 pm

Post by shadowmaster »

Yeah, great beat too, it's discussed earlier in this thread.
Kool Keith: I wore a straw hat with a feather to the last Source Awards. When I got to Madison Square Garden everybody was looking at me. When I got back home I seen everybody and their mother in their video wearing a fuckinג€™ straw hat with a feather in it.

Tim Dog: ג€œWhat Kool Keith gonna wear? Iג€™m gonna do that shit in my video. Iג€™m gonna wear that shit really quick. Whatג€™s Tim Dog gonna wear?ג€

Verge
Posts: 11009
Joined: Sun Jun 15, 2008 3:38 pm
Location: New Jeruz
Contact:

Post by Verge »

shadowmaster wrote:Yeah, great beat too, it's discussed earlier in this thread.
:oops: hard walking around with my head up my ass sometimes, pause.

shadowmaster
Posts: 1398
Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2007 10:46 pm

Post by shadowmaster »

Nah man, I often scan through a thread and wonder about something which probably came up in the same thread. It happens. Actually about that track, I wish it had come out on a 12, since a Think Differently release won't be the best source quality wise for the inst.
Kool Keith: I wore a straw hat with a feather to the last Source Awards. When I got to Madison Square Garden everybody was looking at me. When I got back home I seen everybody and their mother in their video wearing a fuckinג€™ straw hat with a feather in it.

Tim Dog: ג€œWhat Kool Keith gonna wear? Iג€™m gonna do that shit in my video. Iג€™m gonna wear that shit really quick. Whatג€™s Tim Dog gonna wear?ג€

claaa7
Posts: 676
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:59 am

Post by claaa7 »

Jaz wrote:Not sure sorry Verge, this is really dope C7 you should check out my KRS samples compilation if you haven't.
thanks, downloading now but looking at that tracklist i can see it's a heavyhitter. krs got one of the strongest voices ever so sampling him always sparks up a joint a little extra imo...
http://www.claaa7.blogspot.com

^ best compilations on the net, daily updates with news, singles, rarities, all True School hip-hop ^

Jaz
Ease Up
Posts: 21579
Joined: Thu May 20, 2004 10:33 pm
Location: Wellington, New Zealand

Post by Jaz »

claaa7 wrote:
Jaz wrote:Not sure sorry Verge, this is really dope C7 you should check out my KRS samples compilation if you haven't.
thanks, downloading now but looking at that tracklist i can see it's a heavyhitter. krs got one of the strongest voices ever so sampling him always sparks up a joint a little extra imo...
Agreed and thanks fam, really enjoyed the Wu comp :cheers:

claaa7
Posts: 676
Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:59 am

Post by claaa7 »

as Verge requested, i uploaded the complete version of the Japanese import of the "Ghost Dog" score on The Lost Tapes. most versions you'll find out there only has 14 tracks, but both the '99 CD and LP from Japan has 16 songs...

of course The Lost Tapes got the 16 tracks version, and I also added a crazy RZA instrumental as a bonus called "Ninjastep;. this appeared as a hidden track on the US/EU 2xLP verison of "Ghost Dog".

i also did a long write-up on it which i think came off real good and informative so please check it out -

http://claaa7.blogspot.se/2012/04/rza-g ... mport.html
http://www.claaa7.blogspot.com

^ best compilations on the net, daily updates with news, singles, rarities, all True School hip-hop ^

shadowmaster
Posts: 1398
Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2007 10:46 pm

Post by shadowmaster »

Thanks for all your comps and all the music you've shared.
Kool Keith: I wore a straw hat with a feather to the last Source Awards. When I got to Madison Square Garden everybody was looking at me. When I got back home I seen everybody and their mother in their video wearing a fuckinג€™ straw hat with a feather in it.

Tim Dog: ג€œWhat Kool Keith gonna wear? Iג€™m gonna do that shit in my video. Iג€™m gonna wear that shit really quick. Whatג€™s Tim Dog gonna wear?ג€

KITFUNK
Posts: 973
Joined: Mon Jul 06, 2009 5:29 pm

Post by KITFUNK »

Dope shit. Have any unreleased Iron Flag shit?

Post Reply