Liquid Swords 20th Anniversary Thread Nov 7 1995-2015

Billy Ocean

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A father to his idolizing, but petulant son.

I done sonned you too many times. I'm not even your father at this point. I'm your great granddaddy.

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Me showing the Coli that you're a lying b!tch in this thread again is indicative of my sonning f@ggot n!ggas acumen.

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It's time you give it up. One more month before the Coli blesses you with that WOAT banner.

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SirBiatch

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I done sonned you too many times. I'm not even your father at this point. I'm your great granddaddy.

ciAa4O3.jpg


Me showing the Coli that you're a lying b!tch in this thread again is indicative of my sonning f@ggot n!ggas acumen.

ciAa4O3.jpg


It's time you give it up. One more month before the Coli blesses you with that WOAT banner.

ciAa4O3.jpg

you need help. stop jerkin to my picture. Just follow my comments like a good stan
 

Billy Ocean

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you need help. stop jerkin to my picture. Just follow my comments like a good stan


Translation: "Ok, you got me again. I'm a lying f@ggot that gets on the internet begging for attention. I'll just call you a stan and say some gay sh!t and keep it moving instead of continuing making my self look like the clown that I am."
 

mson

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20 Years, 20 Questions: GZA Revisits ‘Liquid Swords’

On September 15, 2015, nearly 20 years after it was first released, GZA finally received a platinum record in the mail from the RIAA for his seminal ‘90s masterpiece Liquid Swords. “It’s a good feeling,” he said of the honor. “It took a while.” No kidding.

When it debuted in November of 1995, Liquid Swords was part and parcel of a larger plan put into place by the members of the mighty Staten Island-based rap collective known as the Wu-Tang Clan (and its leader, RZA) to take over the rap game. It all began with the collective’s 1993 full-length debut, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), and was expanded over the next few years with the solo releases of Method Man’s Tical, Ol’ Dirty b*stard’s Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version, and Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx… All three of those solo albums clearly have their own signature flavors and motifs, but hardly any of them could match the cinematic flair, the tight and cohesive thematic strain, or the dense lyrical verbiage of Liquid Swords — the best-remembered LP from the group’s most famously verbose member, familiarly known as the Genius.
n honor of Liquid Swords’ 20th anniversary, SPIN recently hopped on the phone with GZA, an MC with one of the most formidable arsenals of words in hip-hop history, to talk about how the record came together, and to walk us through the process of creating his singular rhymes.

Liquid Swords was your second solo record, but your first after solidifying the Wu-Tang Clan and releasing Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers). How did your approach change between Words From the Genius in 1991 to this record in 1995?

I don’t think that the approach had really changed at all. I just think that the subject matter had broadened.

What was on your mind at the time that you were making Liquid Swords?

Everything. I get inspired by many different things. It can be an object, it can be a person; there were many things on my mind when I started working on this album. I really, really wanted to show my lyrical ability and my storytelling style and it felt like I had certain things to prove because of [promotional issues] in the past from the prior label I was on [Cold Chillin’ Records]. So I felt that I needed to just slash back.

You’ve been credited as having one of the largest vocabularies in rap history by unique word count. Do you make a conscious effort to try and incorporate a lot of different words into your writing or does that just come naturally?

It’s just kind of me. It’s always been like that since we were teenagers when we formed our first group called All in Together with RZA, [Ol’] Dirty [b*stard], and myself. Emceeing has always been about making the most intellectual, most creative, wittiest rhyme as possible regardless of any subject. It was always about bringing the best out of yourself.


There’s always been this competitive spirit within the Wu-Tang Clan. How has that impacted the way your write and record?

In different ways… I mean, when you have nine members within a group and they’re all in the studio writing to the beat, there’s a lot of pressure, so the competition is always there and it helps you advance. Sometimes you might hear a rhyme like, you know, for instance, when I heard [Inspectah] Deck’s verse on “Triumph” [from Forever in 1997] it was hard to follow that.

RZA has mentioned in past interviews about his vision for the Clan to reach different sets of demographics with each of the individual solo records and mentioned that Liquid Swords was an effort to reach the college crowd. Did you buy into that?

No. He may have said that, but that just wasn’t my aim, to get college kids. I mean, I think as an artist the overall goal is to teach and educate no matter what the song is about. Somewhere where a listener can get something out of it, something that can give them help to move forward, help them learn something, analyze something in a different way, or think about something.

It may just have been that college kids were more interested in learning and dissecting and researching and trying to figure it out. That’s just how it unfolded, but that wasn’t really part of the plan. I strive to get everyone.

Is there a group of people that you think this record doesn’t really speak to?

With the profanity on it, I would say that it’s not suitable for children or young kids… You know, at one time I stopped using profanity on lyrics. I mean, it was many, many years ago, but I had a line off 2002’s Legend of the Liquid Sword album where I said, “I’m the obscene slang kicker, with no parental sticker / Advising y’all that wise words are much slicker.” It would be a universal record as far as hip-hop though, with the beats and the way the rhymes are put together and the style of it and the certain things I’m speaking about.

What was it about the film Shogun Assassin, which was sampled for the opening of the record that resonated so much with you? When did you first see that one?

You might be surprised by this answer, but I don’t think that I watched the movie until after the Liquid Swords album [was released].

So including the dialogue from that film came purely from RZA, then?

Yeah, RZA did that in the last stages of the album. We were actually beyond mixing the album, the album was mixed already and we were mastering the album and he sent the engineer out or someone from the studio and said, “Bring me back Shogun Assassin,” and threw it on the album. That came at the very last minute.

Can you talk about your relationship with RZA, how you two collaborate as writers and how he approaches you as a producer?

I think the chemistry is great. Before RZA started producing he was a DJ… well, a DJ, an MC, and a beatboxer. So was Dirty. As far as myself, I was just an MC and I did a little graffiti back in the day, but I wasn’t one of the great artists who had their name and work walls posted all over the neighborhood and stuff. But before RZA was a producer, he was an MC, then he became a producer but he was also a human beat box specialist.

Plus we were in a group together as teenagers. We were always rhyming and battling so we kind of knew each other’s style and flow well. He was aware of that going into this project and the chemistry is great. And him being an MC, he would sometimes ask me to switch a rhyme around, throw a line in there, ask me if I could say something in a different way or if I could change the flow of it. I understood a majority of the time where he was coming from.


You have a unique and frankly dense storytelling method. How do you put together something like “Gold,” which is about coming up through the criminal underground? There’s a lot of metaphor in that song.

It’s just an urban street tale and when I want to tell an urban street tale, I try and tell it from a different perspective than the average way you would hear a story. I have different ways of doing it, like on “Clan in Da Front.” I’m not a sports person, but every now and then I incorporate sports in my rhymes because I’m always grabbing from certain things and getting inspired by something whether I’m totally involved in it or not. So on “Clan in Da Front” there’s a line where I say, “I’m on the mound, G, and it’s a no-hitter / And my DJ the catcher, he’s my man…” That’s more braggadocios.

But on “Gold” I’m like, “I’m deep down in the back streets, in the heart of Medina / About to set off something more deep than a misdemeanor…” So it’s really about hustling and street activity, but it’s just told in a different way.

Speaking about doing songs in a different way, how did you get the idea to open “Cold World” in a “Night Before Christmas” framework?

That’s just how my mind thinks. The great thing about writing is that you create your own world and you bring listeners into your world depending on what you write. I’m always hearing something or seeing something that has some sort of inspiration in it. Even if it’s not so good, I can try and pull the good or the beauty out of it. I just thought it was a cool start for that story.

Every single member of the Wu-Tang Clan is present on Liquid Swords in one way or another. Was there a conscious effort made to include everyone?

It’s always great to have the help and support from your brothers, especially within the Clan… I was always open to having anyone and it was the early stage of Wu, and thought it would be great to have a member on the album, but I didn’t necessarily want to depend on that to complete an album. You know, nowadays artists put out albums and they have 50 different features or guest appearances on the album and it kind of overshadows them sometimes. As an MC for so long, we were used to holding our own weight.

The album I did before Liquid Swords, Words from the Genius, didn’t have any Clan members on it even though they existed at that time. RZA wasn’t on it, Dirty wasn’t on it. I approached the album with open space for any of my Clan brothers to get on, but if not, I had to be able to fill that space.
 

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How collaborative are you as a writer?

There are certain lines that I’ve taken from other artists. I mean, on “Living in the World Today,” the second verse, some of that came from RZA. Like, “My preliminary attack keep cemeteries packed,” that came from RZA. Then on “Cold World,” there’s a line where I say, “And it does sound ill like wars in Brownsville / Or fatal robberies in Red Hook where Feds look.” I got “Red Hook” and “Feds look” and “Brownsville” and “sounds of steel” from [Killa] Priest and then I happened to put them into a sentence. I’ve taken little lines and pieces from some of my brothers.

You know there’s a saying that two heads are better than one. I’m used to writing alone, but a lot of times it helps out if you have another MC around you because he can feed stuff to you.

Liquid Swords is very cohesive, both in theme and overall sound. Was that more of a byproduct of your headspace at the time or did it end up like that from RZA’s input as the producer?

It was a combination of both… the beats have to complement the rhymes, and the rhymes have to complement the beats. It’s just my job to make it cohesive lyrically and make everything fit, not just telling a story, but weaving a tale. That’s just my approach to lyrics in general. I’m always trying to make it tighter and tighter, draft and draft, then re-draft and re-draft over and over. I change sentences; I change words until I feel it’s right. And then, even after I feel it’s right, several years later I revisit it and say, “Well, I could have said that like this,” because I’m always growing and developing.

You’ve described this album in the past as being cinematic in scope, and you’ve used cinematic terms when describing it. You also directed music videos for four of the songs off Liquid Swords. What is it about the medium of film that inspires you musically and makes you think about it from that level?

Well, film is a visual thing, you know? And rap is a visual language. It’s about creating the most visual rhyme you can create because when someone is listening they have to be able to draw pictures in their own head. You just strive to make the rhyme as visual as possible. You want to make it cinematic.

When people talk about this record — as well as a lot of those other great mid-‘90s Wu-Tang records — the word that comes up a lot is “gritty.” What do you think it is about that sound and the themes you guys mined that has endured in the minds of so many people for so many years?

Timing was one. It was something new and something fresh. Something unheard of in that way. I mean, there’s nothing new under the sun, but there’s always different ways of approaching something or revising something. I think the grittiness is just a part of where we come from. You know, rough, rugged around the edges. It’s rap and maybe not nowadays, but the origin of it was rugged and rigid and gritty.



What songs off of Liquid Swords do you think hold up the most for you today and what songs do you like performing the most live?

I like performing “Liquid Swords.” I like performing “Duel of the Iron Mic.” That’s one of my favorites. “4th Chamber” because of its energy and the guitars and the whole crazy-sounding rock sort of thing. That’s one of the songs we perform whether I’m solo or with Wu. It’s maybe one of two or three songs that the crowd is at its hypest and sometimes we stop it after ten seconds and play it back just to get more of a reaction from the crowd.

It’s been reported for years that you ghostwrote a lot of the verses to Ol’ Dirty b*stard’s record Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version. Is there any truth to that?

There is. I mean, I’ve used a little bit of Dirty’s stuff also, but the thing with the rhymes that were on Dirty’s album was that these were rhymes that were written when I was a teenager and those rhymes didn’t really suit or fit me at the time and Dirty had a way of taking stuff and making it his own. It just fit him more than it fit me. One of the rhymes [from “Don’t You Know”] he says, “Sittin’ in my class at a quarter to ten / Waiting patiently for the class to begin / The teacher says student please open your texts / And read the first paragraph on oral sex.” I wrote that as a teenager! So by the time I was doing Words from the Genius or Liquid Swords, I didn’t want to be kicking those rhymes. It would have been more of a Fresh Prince thing to me. Not to take from him or disrespect him, but that was his kind of style.

After you released Liquid Swords you shortly thereafter started working on Wu-Tang Forever with the whole Clan and then went on the infamous tour with Rage Against the Machine in 1997 that ended rather abruptly. What happened that caused that particular tour to break up before the end?

I don’t really know what it was. We were on tour and then we were doing the Summer Jam concert and we had to miss a show and…we didn’t have to leave the tour but we had to miss a show or two to do the Summer Jam thing. We voted on it and some of us said we shouldn’t do it, and some of us thought we should do it, and we ended up doing that. It ended up turning out to be a disaster in one way for us to even do that show but somehow we didn’t go back on the Rage tour. For what reason I do not know. We weren’t kicked off the tour, it was our decision to not… I mean, not mine personally because I just would have stayed on tour and kept rocking. We were rocking in front of big crowds, there was great response and you know, it was just the decision and it didn’t work out.

What can you say at the moment about your upcoming record, Dark Matter? You posted a photo on Instagram recently in the studio with Vangelis, the composer of Chariots of Fire.

I think that this is going to be a very, very great one, maybe the strongest by far. Lyrically, definitely. I’m still working on it, but the musical approach is quite different now that Vangelis is in the picture.

20 Years, 20 Questions: GZA Revisits ‘Liquid Swords’ | SPIN
 

SirBiatch

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Translation: "Ok, you got me again. I'm a lying f@ggot that gets on the internet begging for attention. I'll just call you a stan and say some gay sh!t and keep it moving instead of continuing making my self look like the clown that I am."

:russell: How many times have you used the word 'f@ggot' in this thread alone? Dude, you're a complete waste of space. No links, no analysis. All you do is follow consensus or hate on original opinion. It's boring as fukk.

Last response for real
 

Billy Ocean

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:russell: How many times have you used the word 'f@ggot' in this thread alone? Dude, you're a complete waste of space. No links, no analysis. All you do is follow consensus or hate on original opinion. It's boring as fukk.

Last response for real

Translation: "I got sonned by you again. I quit. I look forward to the next time I'm trolling in a thread and you son me. Last response for real."
 

mson

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Five Best Songs From GZA’s ‘Liquid Swords’ Album

Wu-Tang Clan is one of the most important rap groups in rap history. Coming out of Staten Island, the crew, which consisted of nine members (some from the Island while others from Brooklyn) the Clan would release their 1993 debut, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) and the rest is history. But a big piece of that history is what happened in the years following the group’s hostile takeover of the rap game. Expanding outside of the crew, members began recording solo albums of their own, starting with Method Man and Ol’ Dirty b*stard.

Wu member GZA’s own solo endeavor, Liquid Swords, would touch down on Nov. 7, 1995, and become the soundtrack for the chillier months of the year, heading into 1996. The album was entirely produced by RZA, save for the bonus track, which is credited to Wu in-house producer 4th Disciple, and features an array of bone-chilling soundscapes over which GZA and his Clan brethren pull verbal stunts with the ease of skilled assassins. Despite being devoid of any big hits, Liquid Swords would achieve platinum status, the only release of the rapper’s career to reach that plateau.

To celebrate the 20th anniversary of this undisputed classic, we take a look back at the five choice cuts that exemplify the brilliance of the Genius’ magnum opus.


5
"Investigative Reports"
Featuring U-God, Raekwon & Ghostface Killah


Crew love is the theme on "Investigative Reports," a brooding number that finds GZA plying his trade alongside a few of his Wu brethren. Raekwon makes his lone appearance on the album a memorable one, spitting, "Way of life got me thinking, plus I'm analyzing young / Youths on roofs, you know, three time felony brutes / Roll together, tropical trees puff, whatever / Yo we could go run up on, kids for leathers," and examining the ways of the younger generation. GZA follows up with some potent rhymes as well, rapping, "They used to heat up the cipher with a shot that was hyper / Than your average JFK sniper / He just came home from Spofford / Rolling like Kaufman, and laid that ass out like carpet" and runs roughshod over the RZA production. Ghostface Killah and U-God hop on the track and complete the cypher with verses of their own, placing the toe-tag on one of the album's most cinematic offerings.



4
"Shadowboxin'"
Featuring Method Man


In Wu-Tang tradition, Liquid Swords includes a battle of the wits between two of the clansmen, this one pitting GZA against Method Man for a little lyrical sparring. Meth comes out the gate swinging with nifty couplets like, "I breaks it down to the bone gristle / Ill speaking spud missle, heat-seeking, Jhonnie blazin'," before completely spazzing with "Know just what the f--- I'm doing, rap insomniac / Fiend to catch a n---- snoozing / Slip the cardiac, arrest me, exorcist, hip-hop possessed me / Crunch a n---- like a Nestle, you know my steez." GZA then catches some wreck of his own. "Protect ya neck my sword still remains imperial / fore I blast the mic, RZA scratch off the serial / We reign all year round from June to June / While n----a bite immediately, if not soon," he rhymes before Meth polishes off the end of the beat with a few additional bars. Pugilism never sounded so beautiful.



3
"Labels"


GZA has a bone to pick on the Liquid Swords banger, "Labels," which finds the former industry casualty popping shots at various record companies with abandon. "Tommy ain't my motherf---in' boy / When you fake moves on a n---- you employ," he raps. GZA makes sure to take aim at the label that he was signed to before linking up with the Wu and Loud Records. He doesn't stop there either, going on to include a litany of popular record labels from the '90s throughout the verse. "This so called comedian rap ain't the rough witty / On the reala real, it wasn't been a Tuff City / N----s be game thinking that they lyrical surgeons / Knowing they microphone's a Virgin / And if you ain't boned a mic, you couldn't hurt a bee / That's like going to Venus driving a Mercury," he delivers. One of the more innovative concept songs, "Labels" plays a major part in Liquid Swords being the classic that it is and a quintessential listen for any rap fan.



2
"Cold World"
Featuring Inspectah Deck


The album reaches a crescendo with "Cold World," the second single. GZA teams up with Inspectah Deck for one of the more notable songs in the rapper's discography to date. Vocalist Life tackles the bone-chilling hook, singing, "Babies crying, brothers dying, and brothers getting knocked / S--- is deep on the block and you got me locked down In this cold, cold world" with an unmistakable grit that gives the track a grimy feel. GZA unleashes a flawless opening verse as well. "Gunshots, shatter first-floor window panes / Shells hit the ground and blood stained the dice game / Whether pro-calisthenic, any style you set it / Beat n----s toothless, physically cut up like gooses / But with iron on the sides, thugs took no excuses /Therefore, your fifty-two handblocks was useless," he serves, pummeling the track to bits. Inspectah Deck joins in on the festivities on the second verse, rhyming, "Some n----s in the jet black Gallant / Shot up the Chinese restaurant, for this kid named Lamont / I thought he was dead but instead / He missed the kid And hit a 12-year-old girl in the head, and then fled," he raps, spelling out what is yet another tragic story of life on the streets of New York. While "Cold World" didn't shake up the Billboard charts -- the track peaked at No. 97 on the Hot 100 -- it did earn the GZA a spot at No. 8 on the Hot Rap chart and is as timeless a Wu banger as they come.



1
"4th Chamber"
Featuring Ghostface Killah, Killah Priest & RZA


"4th Chamber" showcases GZA tapping Ghostface Killah, RZA and Killah Priest for one of this album's finer selections. Pretty Toney takes the initiative and bats lead-off, dropping zany quotables, like, "Why is the sky blue, why is water wet / Why did Judas grab the Romans while Jesus slept / Stand up, you're out of luck like two dogs stuck / Ironman be sipping rum out of Stanley Cups" and takes the show. Wu-Tang affiliate Killah Priest also gets off a few rewind-worthy bars, rapping, "I judge wisely, as if nothing ever surprise me / Lounging between two pillars of ivory / I'm lively, my domepiece is like building stones in Greece / A poems are deep from ancient tomes I speak" before RZA and GZA come with some rhymes of their own. "Disciplinary action was a fraction of strength that made me truncate the length one-tenth," GZA rhymes, laying his complex verbiage over the track.



Read More: Five Best Songs From GZA's 'Liquid Swords' Album | Five Best Songs From GZA's 'Liquid Swords' Album
 

BuddahMAC

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Anybody here got the demo version of liquid swords with the original version of labels before RZA redid it?

There was no "demo LS" with a different Labels. The only official Labels remix was the RZA produced "GZA mix" on the single.

Tracklist-400x354.jpg





The one that has been mislabeled online as a "demo version" on the internet for a while isn't a demo at all.



It's a 1995 remix using the "GZA mix" acapella found on the 95 vinyl single. On the vinyl acapella, you can hear the beat for the RZA remix of Labels underneath throughout the whole track. When you listen to this "demo" version, you hear that same beat bleeding through, especially around :50 when the piano drops out.

This version comes from the Stretch & Bobbito show.

Dirty Waters: Stretch & Bobbito September 1995
HipHop-TheGoldenEra: Stretch Armstrong & Bobbito Show - September 28th 1995 - WKCR

They played it a couple of times in late 95 and the version that's been online forever is a radio rip which spread further when that radio rip got on a DJ Swarm Wu rarities mixtape in the mid-2000s mislabeled as a demo. Godfather Don & V.I.C. from Beatnuts were producing under the name Groove Merchantz back then & they'd done a few remixes here & there like Nas' One Love One L remix w/ Sadat X & House of Pain's On Point remix, and supposedly they did the beat in question here. No white label has ever surfaced making it look it was just a radio remix (plus, if it was official, they probably wouldn't have used the vocals off the vinyl single & have access to the masters).

But it's not a demo & not RZA produced.
 

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GZA breaks down Liquid Swords track by track

“Liquid Swords”

This track is just braggadocios. It isn’t meant to stand for anything. I’m talking about my skills and how I’m better than the rest. Usually I take a beat home and write to it for a few days, but it wasn’t like that with this track. I think RZA played the beat for me and I just spit to it right there. The hook was actually a routine from around ’84 that me RZA and Ol’ Dirty would do: [sings “When the emcees came, to live out the name.”] Just like that.

“Duel of the Iron Mic”
This might be my favorite track on the album. I like how I delivered on this one, and I love RZA’s beat. I remember writing to it and that it took me a while because I was trying different things. I remember being so happy after Ol’ Dirty [b*stard] blessed the track like he did. I love how the recording sounds too. When we perform this song live, the music gets real low for Deck’s part, and then it comes in real loud and it still always gets me hype. I also love the skit at the beginning. I just love that shyt.

“Living in the World Today”
I just remember sitting in the basement for hours and writing it over and over. I don’t know what actually transpired during the making of this. But as far as the song itself, it was another old-school hook taken from a crew we knew from the Bronx. They used to say something like: “And if you listen to me rap today, you be hearing the sounds that my crew will say. And we know you wish you can write them, we’ll don’t bite them, well okay…”. So I flipped it and said: “Well if you’re living in the world today, you’ll be listening to the slang that the Wu-Tang say…” and so on. It’s just another old-school hook we took and had some fun with.

“Gold”
This is a great track. I really love the beat a lot. It has sorta has a rock vibe to it, and Meth helped with the hook. The whole song is on a street-hustling-vibe tip. The whole song is talking about hustling and stuff like that, but I don’t say it plainly. It’s a street tale, not a let’s-get-your-grind-on song. And the hook is actually kind of taken from the Diana Ross and the Supremes song, “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough.” In the ’80s we’d used to harmonize a lot and we sang a similar hook: [sings] “No neighborhood is rough enough, there is no clip that’s full enough… See? Like that. We used to sing the chorus and harmonize with each other. That’s how that one came bout.

“Cold World”

Just another dark, gritty street tale. Normally, when I hear a beat, I already know where to go with it. I can picture the track and just vibe off it. As soon as I heard the beat to “Cold World,” I knew it would be another inner-city story. And the beginning is obviously taken from “The Night Before Christmas.”

I have this cousin who we call Life. He sang a little bit of background on the album, and he was in the studio when we were making this track. He’s got a great voice, not a great as it used to be [laughs], but he’s been singing his whole life. He was singing Stevie Wonder’s “Rocket Love,” where the hook goes, [sings] “Took me riding in your rocket, gave me a star, but at a half a mile from heaven, you dropped me back down to this cold, cold world.” RZA was the one who told Life to change the words and use it as a hook. So we added the hook and we got [Inspectah] Deck on it and boom! That’s how that one went.

“Labels”
My whole negative experience with Cold Chillin’ was part of why I made this song—but it wasn’t the main reason. I wasn’t deliberately trying to write a song dedicated to problems with labels and so on—I just threw Cold Chillin’ in there because they were an established label at one time. It actually started when I heard my friend say: “Tommy ain’t my boy!” Then it just kind of clicked in my head to use “Tommy” and “Boy.” I mean, I like doing songs based around wordplay with one theme. I actually love doing those kinds of songs. It comes naturally to me for my rhymes to have double meanings.

“4th Chamber”
Crazy, crazy song. If I ever do a rock album, not saying I would, but if I did, it would have to be on that kind of vibe. It would musically have to sound like “Rock Box” from Run DMC. Making “4th Chamber” was crazy because I didn’t have a rhyme ready for that one. That’s why I went last on it [laughs]. Plus, Ghost killed it with his verse so I knew I had to come correct.

This is one of three songs that crowds always go crazy for when we do a Wu show. As soon as they hear the [imitates opening guitar sound] they just explode. It’s not even a GZA song to me—it’s a Wu-Tang song. And Ghost’s verse is [just] incredible to me. He delivered so well. I don’t know if you saw the video, I directed that too. This song, the guest verses, the video, the crowd response, all turned out perfect for this one.

“Shadowboxin”
Meth delivered well on this one too. I even do his verse when I do it live! I mean, “I breaks it down to the down bristle,” is so dope. It’s hard not to rap along to this one. Just like when I hear “Triumph,” it’s hard not to do Deck’s verse. I think I was actually [just] the filler for that song anyways [laughs]. It always seemed more like Meth’s track. I remember RZA telling me I needed to get on it, so he put me in between. It’s an incredible song though, and I love performing it. It’s just another emcee lyrical joint with crazy smooth cadences.

“Hell’s Wind Staff / Killah Hills 10304”
This is another one of my favorites. It’s a very special song as far as the album’s concerned because it’s long as hell and has no hook. It’s up-tempo and is straight through. My cousin Life who did the hook on “Cold World” also did some singing on this too. This song has a lot of depth in terms of sound ’cause we used to layer weird shyt over it.

For example, myself and Killah Priest were in the city one day with a portable ADAT recorder I just bought. We were just walking around, going to stores, buying water, juice, whatever, and just recording the random stuff, you know, just picking up sounds and shyt. I think we recorded the Hells Angels riding by [us] too. RZA was in a restaurant talking to some guy, and we were banging forks on the tables, and we just recoded all those sounds too [laughs]. So we incorporated all that into the production.

As a song, it’s a street story, but not told in a regular street way. I’m talking about slanging on the block, but not just your average street dealer. These were more sophisticated cats. Some of it came from a documentary I saw on the infamous Pablo Escobar. He was sending judges intimate photos of their wives and things like that. I think this is [probably] my first real Mafioso track. It’s like a dense, short film.

“Investigative Reports”
I don’t remember this one that much. RZA kicked us the beat and Rae just set it off. RZA decided to put all that news footage in there and U-God did the hook and I just followed it up. This one was just all of us doing our parts. I think it was just a simple track we put together.

“Swordsman”
This is another one of those hard ones that I love. The beat just knocks. The hook also came from a routine we used to sing a long time ago. But like I said, we used to harmonize often back then: [sings] “Every emcee has his place, to begin in the emcee race.” The melody is from an Earth, Wind and Fire track. It’s just a dope, recycled hook. I love this song a lot too. I think I delivered well on it.

“I Gotcha Back”
This was a short rhyme I wrote for one of my nephews. When I said, “My lifestyle so far from well, could’ve wrote a book called Age Twelve and Going Through Hell.” It’s for my nephew who was twelve at the time, and whose father, my brother, had been locked up since ’88. So he wasn’t around for my nephew when times were rough, so I wanted to up my nephew a bit with this track.

It was actually part of the soundtrack for the movie Fresh. I don’t know if a lot of people know this, but I directed the video for that song. The interesting thing about that [one] is how the video blends in with the movie itself. I had two nephews in the video, they were both real young at the time. And in video, they both had met up and shots rang out from some young gangsters. It’s a shame because both those kids in the video, both nephews of mine, ended up getting in trouble for ringing out shots and are both doing time right now. It’s kind of ironic. One of my nephews ended up getting eights years for that shyt. So the whole song is a sad irony to me now.

“B.I.B.L.E. (Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth)”
I really wanted to get [Killah] Priest on the album. And when I did, he said he could cover the whole track, so we let him do it. It’s incredible to me, man. Some people still tell me that that it’s their favorite song off the album. I mean, it’s a really deep song. He broke down lots of things: preachers, ministries, churches, details, and a lot of insight on a lot of stuff. “The earth’s already in space, your bible I embrace, a difficult task I had to take…” The song’s just perfect and ends the record out brilliantly.

Wu-Tang Clan's GZA runs down every track off Liquid Swords - Wax Poetics
 

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Hail!!
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PJ's to the Burbs
My personal GOAT CD. Had this shyt on tape from a promo, the day it came out I skipped class and waited infront of the Wiz till it opened cause i needed to hear it in full CD clarity
 
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