
Wu-Tang Forever is a Hip-Hop album by Wu-Tang Clan, originally released in 1997. On Gatefold: 56 pressings tracked, owned by 32 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Hip-Hop
- Boom Bap
- dense
- menacing
- urban
About
Wu-Tang Clan’s first album (<i>Enter the Wu-Tang</i>) was so successful—and so successful on the group’s own terms—that by the time they made their second they could’ve done pretty much whatever they wanted. It wasn’t just the scale of <i>Wu-Tang Forever</i> that felt decadent, it was the sense of 10 talented and very different artists letting themselves burrow further into their own styles and idiosyncrasies—whether it was the way Ghostface’s wordplay could make a conventional street narrative shimmer to the point of feeling almost supernatural (“Impossible”) or the way RZA’s weird layers of grainy samples and amateurishly played synthesizers sounded both like outsider art and the vanguard of blockbuster rap (“Triumph”). He’d famously promised the rest of the group that if they gave him five years, he’d make them legends, and <i>Wu-Tang Forever</i> is when his promise came true. You can trace the influence on modern hip-hop if you want. The way “Triumph” anticipated the so-called chipmunk soul of producers Just Blaze and early Kanye West, the sprawl of big posse albums like The Diplomats’ <i>Diplomatic Immunity</i>, the RZA-style way an artist like Tyler, The Creator took music and ideas that felt totally uncommercial and made it work in the mainstream. But the reality is that there was nobody like Wu-Tang either before or since, and their weird stew of crime tales (“The M.G.M.”), surreal battle raps (behold U-God on “Bells of War”), and Afrocentric philosophy (“Wu-Revolution”) gave a broader picture of how rap could sound and feel more than any other artist at the time. Yeah, it could be a little messy and long-winded—but if you didn’t have an entire U-God track about the healing powers of a good massage (“Black Shampoo”), it wouldn’t be the Wu-Tang Clan. This is what it looks like from the top of the world.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
Side A
- A1Wu-Revolution6:17
- A2Reunited5:23
Side B
- B1For Heavens Sake4:13
- B2Cash Still Rules / Scary Hours (Still Don't Nothing Move But The Money)3:06
- B3Visionz3:09
Side C
- C1As High As Wu-Tang Get2:39
- C2Severe Punishment4:49
- C3Older Gods3:07
Side D
- D1Maria2:34
- D2A Better Tomorrow4:58
- D3It's Yourz4:15
Side E
- E1Intro2:05
- E2Triumph5:38
- E3Impossible4:28
- E4Little Ghetto Boys4:31
Side F
- F1Deadly Melody4:03
- F2The City4:07
- F3The Projects3:15
- F4Bells Of War5:12
Side G
- G1The M.G.M.2:39
- G2Dog Sh*t2:39
- G3Duck Seazon5:20
- G4Hellz Wind Staff4:52
Side H
- H1Heaterz4:19
- H2Black Shampoo3:50
- H3Second Coming4:35
- H4The Closing2:43
Credits
Performers
- Blue RaspberryBACKING VOCALS
- Popa WuFEATURING
- Uncle PeteFEATURING
- Ms. RoxyBACKING VOCALS VOCALS
- CappaDonnaFEATURING
- La The DarkmanFEATURING
- TekithaFEATURING
- Street LifeFEATURING
- RoxanneBACKING VOCALS
- GZA
- Inspectah Deck
- Ironman
- Masta Killa
- Method Man
- Ol' Dirty Bastard
- RZA
- Raekwon
- The Genius
32 collectors on Gatefold own this · 56 pressings tracked on Gatefold
