Iron Flag
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iron Flag | ||
Studio album by Wu-Tang Clan | ||
Released | December 18, 2001 | |
Recorded | late 2001 | |
Genre | Hip hop | |
Label | Loud/Columbia | |
Producer(s) | RZA | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Wu-Tang Clan chronology | ||
The W (2000) |
Iron Flag (2001) |
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Iron Flag is the fourth album from the hip hop group Wu-Tang Clan. It was released on December 18, 2001.
Contents |
[edit] Overview
A gap of four years separated both the first two and second two Wu-Tang albums from each other, with those gaps being filled by a myriad of solo projects, so it was surprising to many when the Clan reformed for a new LP only a year after their well-received 2000 album The W, with only RZA's Digital Bullet and Ghostface Killah's Bulletproof Wallets released in between. The album's promotion was also quite low-key, particularly in comparison to the fanfare, hype and expensive videos that had preceded the release of the group's two previous albums. Unusually for hip hop albums of the time, Iron Flag only consists of 12 tracks (which contain 13 songs plus a short introduction) with no interludes or skits between songs. This is similar to The W, which only consisted of 13 tracks (though unlike Iron Flag it did feature interludes and skits).
[edit] Absences
Ol' Dirty Bastard's contributions to the Wu-Tang's group albums continued to decrease with each successive album: after being one of the main stars of Enter the Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers, he was by far the least prolific Clan member on the group's follow-up album Wu-Tang Forever. He then made only one appearance on The W due to being engulfed in legal troubles; legal troubles which in the year separating The W and Iron Flag had only gotten worse. Consequently, ODB does not appear on Iron Flag at all.
Another absentee is Cappadonna: after being merely a very close affiliate of the group on Wu-Tang Forever (tracks with Cappadonna verses were marked as "featuring Cappadonna", as with fellow affiliates Tekitha's and Streetlife's appearances), he appeared to have become absorbed into the group itself as a full member on The W (tracks with his contributions were no longer marked as "featuring Cappadonna", whereas tracks with Streetlife were, and he was also in every promotional photo of the group at the time). However, in the year since the release of The W Cappadonna had become dissatisfied with being in the group (RZA has said he felt unhappy that people outside of the group did not respect him as much as the original nine members) and had also got into dispute with the group over the revelation that his manager Michael Caruso was a police informant. [1] Whatever the case, he does not appear on the album (though his background vocals can be heard on the hidden track "The Glock"). It is highly likely however that he recorded with the Clan at the album's recording sessions, but was edited out of the album at the last minute (Clan leader and producer RZA is known for rearranging verses and song structures very late on in the recording process), as Cappadonna participated in the photo shoot for the Iron Flag album cover, but was later airbrushed out (one of his legs remains on the cover). In other shots from the same photo shoot that were distributed to the press as promotional images, such as this one, Cappadonna is clearly visible.
[edit] Revisiting old sounds
Rather than stick to one unified sound for most of the album's tracks, as with previous Clan albums, much of Iron Flag returns to many different individual sounds and styles that the Wu-Tang had visited over the years:
- "Chrome Wheels" uses the synthesizer-heavy "digital orchestra" sound of RZA's Bobby Digital In Stereo (RZA also raps in the song as his Bobby Digital persona, and Bobby Digital is namechecked in the bridge (sung by Madame D). "Dashing (Reasons)" also uses the Bobby Digital sound, with the Digital trademarks of the off-kilter keyboard riff, a high-pitched portamento sine wave synthesizer, and prominent synthesized hi-hats.
- "Radioactive (Four Assassins)" is firmly in the gritty, foreboding style of the Wu-Tang's debut album 36 Chambers: it has a recurring dialogue sample from a martial arts movie, short and indistinct one-note samples buried in the mix, a quickly looping ascending bassline, and hard, pounding drums. The beat also incorporates the sound of shuriken throwing blades, which are "launched" with a single B note, before the sound effect pans from right to left then back again before dissipating. The repeated horn blare at the start of every bar is also reminiscent of Public Enemy, particularly "Rebel Without A Pause".
- "Iron Flag" has all the hallmarks of the Wu-Tang Forever sound: string samples coupled with subtle keyboards and a speeded-up vocal sample (a technique which was pioneered by the RZA on Forever but which by the time of Iron Flag's release had been widely imitated by many, most notably Just Blaze and Kanye West).
- "Uzi (Pinky Ring)" recalls The W's murky blaxploitation-influenced atmosphere with its dramatic horn riffs and gritty drums. "Soul Power (Black Jungle)" is also reminiscent, albeit to a lesser extent, of The W.
[edit] Wu-Elements contributions
Many of the remaining tracks sound little like much the Clan had done before, and little like each other. This may be a result of the collaborators involved: all of the above tracks are produced by the RZA, whereas of the remaining 6 only two are RZA produced. Two are produced by in-house Wu-Elements producers True Master and Mathematics:
- True Master's "Y'all Been Warned" is a simple one-bar composition with a funky guitar riff over a steady rhythm and a deeply buried piano sample. The advance copy of Iron Flag featured a slightly different version of this song which featured a synthesizer line over the top of the guitar riff. It is not known why this was changed for the final release.
- Mathematics' "Rules" features a pattern of one bar repeated three times then a one-bar turnaround. The repeated bar features four samples layered in a vaguely call-and-response structure: an initial horn sample is answered by a James Brown grunt, which is answered by a two-chord piano sample, which is answered by another James Brown grunt. The horn sample is highest in the mix and effectively "leads" the other samples. The turnaround bar has two descending chords with a high-pitched picked guitar riff, bringing the four bar pattern to the start once again.
Though these two producers are known for their distinctly traditional Wu-Tang sound, these two beats do not particularly resemble much of the Clan's previous output, at least not as a group. If anything they resemble some of the sharp 1970s soul-influenced funk tracks from the Wu-Tang's 1999-2000 solo albums (U-God's "Dat Gangsta" & "Soul Dazzle" from Golden Arms Redemption, Inspectah Deck's "Word On The Street" & "Movers & Shakers" from Uncontrolled Substance)
[edit] Outside collaborators
There had been some discontent among fans and critics when The W included non-Wu Tang affiliated hip hop crossover superstars Busta Rhymes and Snoop Dogg. Nevertheless, Iron Flag also makes use of non-Wu artists well-known in their own right: Flavor Flav of Public Enemy provides the chorus for "Soul Power (Black Jungle)", and "Back In The Game" features both pop-rap hitmakers Trackmasters and soul legend Ronald Isley. Nick "Fury" Loftin also produces "One Of These Days", sampling Donny Hathaway's rendition of Ray Charles' "I Believe To My Soul" for its hook and using a fairly generic coupling of muffled horn stabs and soul guitar.
"Back In The Game" opens with the same vocal sample ("if what you say is true, the Shaolin and the Wu-Tang could be dangerous!") as 36 Chambers, but it sounds little like anything the Clan had done before; it also sounds little like well-known Trackmasters hits of the time, such as R .Kelly's "Fiesta" (apart from its use of bongos). A delicate piano melody is layered over a heavy organ vamp and a stumbling, complex rhythm.
A number of critics, such as the NME's Ted Kessler and The Onion A.V. Club's Nathan Rabin, saw Flavor Flav's appearance as a way to temporarily fill the clownish role of the absent Ol' Dirty Bastard. Flav sings the call-and-response chorus of "Soul Power (Black Jungle)" with U-God, and has a long conversation with Method Man in the song's outro about growing up in Long Island.
[edit] Track listing
# | Title | Performer(s) | Songwriters | Producer(s) | Samples |
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1 | "In The Hood" |
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Elgin Turner Robert Diggs Jason Hunter Patrick Charles |
RZA |
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2 | "Rules" |
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Dennis Coles Corey Woods Elgin Turner Jason Hunter Clifford Smith Ronald Bean Patrick Charles |
Allah Mathematics |
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3 | "Chrome Wheels" |
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Corey Woods Elgin Turner Robert Diggs Vergil Ruff |
RZA | |
4 | "Soul Power (Black Jungle)" |
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Lamont Hawkins Dennis Coles Robert Diggs Corey Woods Elgin Turner Jason Hunter Clifford Smith |
RZA | |
5 | "Uzi (Pinky Ring)" |
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Lamont Hawkins Dennis Coles Robert Diggs Corey Woods Elgin Turner Jason Hunter Clifford Smith Gary Grice Clarence Reid Russel Jones |
RZA |
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6 | "One Of These Days" |
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Lamont Hawkins Nick Loftin Corey Woods Jason Hunter Patrick Charles |
Nick "Fury" Loftin |
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7 | "Ya'll Been Warned" |
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Robert Diggs Corey Woods Elgin Turner Jason Hunter Clifford Smith Derek Harris Patrick Charles |
True Master | |
8 | "Babies" |
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Dennis Coles Robert Diggs Corey Woods Jason Hunter Gary Grice |
RZA | |
9 | "Radioactive (Four Assasins)" |
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Robert Diggs Corey Woods Elgin Turner Gary Grice Clifford Smith |
RZA | |
10 | "Back In The Game" |
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Dennis Coles Corey Woods Jason Hunter Clifford Smith Samuel Barnes Jean-Claude Olivier |
Poke & Tone | |
11 | "Iron Flag" |
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Lamont Hawkins Robert Diggs Corey Woods Elgin Turner Jason Hunter |
RZA | |
12 | "Dashing (Reasons)" |
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Robert Diggs Jason Junter Gary Grice |
RZA | |
13 | "The W" [Bonus Track] |
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Robert Diggs Jason Junter Gary Grice |
RZA |
[edit] Album singles
Single cover | Single information |
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"Uzi (Pinky Ring)"
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"Rules"
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"Back In The Game" |
[edit] Album Chart Positions
Year | Album | Chart positions | ||
Billboard 200 | Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums | |||
2002 | Iron Flag | #32 | #6 |
[edit] Singles Chart Positions
Year | Song | Chart positions | ||
Billboard Hot 100 | Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks | Hot Rap Singles | ||
2002 | Uzi (Pinky Ring) | - | #93 | #16 |