GZA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
GZA/Genius | ||
---|---|---|
Background information | ||
Birth name | Gary Grice | |
Born | August 22, 1966 | |
Origin | Brooklyn,New York | |
Genre(s) | Hip hop | |
Years active | 1990–present | |
Label(s) | Cold Chillin' Records Loud Records Geffen Records MCA Records Angeles Records Babygrande Records / Liquid Swords Entertainment |
|
Associated acts |
Wu Tang Clan |
GZA (pronounced Jizza), aka The Genius, born Gary Grice August 22, 1966 in Brooklyn, New York City is an American MC . He is most well known as a founding member of the seminal hip-hop group the Wu-Tang Clan. In addition to appearing on all the Wu-Tang Clan albums he has released four solo albums and has appeared on many other Clanmate's solo releases.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Born in Brooklyn, GZA spent his childhood living with various groups of relatives in the other New York boroughs. During this time began to visit the Soundview Projects in the Bronx where he became fascinated with hip hop. Influenced by the early MC's of the time he began to write his own rhymes.
Also sharing his interest in hip-hop were his cousins RZA and Ol' Dirty Bastard. The three performed together as the group All In Together Now with Grice going under the alias The Genius; Diggs and Jones performed as The Scientist and The Professor respectively. After gaining some notoriety in the underground GZA and Diggs were signed as solo artists. GZA managed to ink a deal with legendary hip-hop label Cold Chillin Records. In 1990 GZA released his debut album Words from the Genius on the label.
The album was produced by Easy Mo Bee and was heavily influenced by the style of Cold Chillin at the time, who wanted to make GZA a commercially viable artist like Big Daddy Kane. However critical reception for the album was lukewarm at best and sales were disappointing. Eventually GZA was dropped from the label. GZA's experience with Cold Chillin was shared with Digg's experience at Tommy Boy Records who only managed to put out an EP under the alias Prince Rakeem.
Disillusioned with the recording industry GZA and Digg's got back together with Jones and decided that they would make the music they wanted and get to the top of the business their own way. Calling themselves the Wu-Tang Clan after a group of ancient Chinese warriors they saw in old-school Kung-Fu movies, the trio brought together the most talented MC's in the New York underground and began making music. It was at the this time that GZA took up that moniker which comes from the sound made when the word "Genius" is scratched by a DJ on a record. Also Diggs became known as RZA (Rakeem scratched) and Jones Ol' Dirty Bastard, after a character in one of the Kung-Fu movies so influential to the group.
The group debuted in 1993 and their album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) took the music business by storm. Produced entirely by RZA, it was like nothing that had ever been heard at the time. GZA was featured throughout the album, and one of only two members to have a solo track. The whole album was hailed by critics as a masterpiece, and GZA was touted as the greatest lyricist of the group.
Building off of that success GZA signed a new deal with Geffen Records and in 1995 released Liquid Swords. Again produced entirely by RZA and featuring a plethora of guest appearances from his fellow Clanmate's the album was lauded by critics as a hip-hop classic and was certified gold by the RIAA. The album took the dark, foreboding atmosphere found in previous Clan releases to a whole new level and GZA's lyrics are still considered some of the sharpest ever, with vicious battle raps, mind-bending word-play and rich visuals. In 1998, the album was selected as one of The Source Magazine's 100 Best Rap Albums. Image:gza.jpg
After appearing on the Wu-Tang Clan's second album, Wu-Tang Forever, GZA released Beneath the Surface in 1999. Reviews were mostly positive however it failed to live up to Liquid Swords acclaim and commercial success. Critics pointed to production as the albums main weakness, noting a distinct lack of RZA produced tracks, resulting a messy collage of beats rather than a cohesive sound. There were also complaints about the needless skits and the vast number of guest spots which allowed little time for the GZA to actually rap.
GZA laid low for the next few years, only appearing on the Wu-Tang Clan albums The W and Iron Flag. However in 2002 he dropped Legend of the Liquid Sword. The album was received well by critics, with some hailing it as GZA's return to Liquid Swords form, but with most agreeing it was an improvement on its predecessor. The production was superior and there was less guest appearances. However the album lacked commercial success and failed to go gold as his previous two releases had. Near the end of the year he was offered a deal from Jay Z for his label Rocafella Records, which GZA turned down.
[edit] Solo Career
GZA spent most of 2004 touring both solo and with the Clan. He also made an appearance with RZA in Jim Jarmusch's film Coffee & Cigarettes opposite Bill Murray. In 2005 GZA and DJ Muggs (the producer for Cypress Hill) released the LP Grandmasters. Muggs provided all the beats for the album which saw GZA using chess as a metahpor for the rap game, exercising his story-telling muscle and commenting on his place as a senior member in the hip-hop community. The album received overwhelmingly positive reviews and decent commercial success.
2005 also saw GZA ink a deal with indie label Babygrande Records to release a new LP. The album was originally scheduled to drop sometime in October 2006, but since that time there is no word when it will be released. The album has been referred to at various time as The GZA Presents..., Return of the Genius and More Words from the Genius. GZA will also be featured heavily on fellow Clansmen Raekwon's new CD the highly anticipated Only Built 4 Cuban Linx II. It is speculated that he will have the co-starring role similar to Ghostface Killah's in the original Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Although GZA has pursued a successful solo career, he plans on reuniting with the Wu-Tang for a Europe tour sometime in 2008.
[edit] Technique
GZA uses the sword as a metaphor for the tongue, and sees his raps as deadly sword techniques. His own technique is self-described as visual and descriptive, yet at the same time succinct. He is a firm proponent of "less is more" when it comes to rapping. He is also highly adept at using similes and metaphors. Here is an example of his lyrics taken from the first verse of the song "Gold" from his album Liquid Swords:
I’m deep down in the back streets, in the heart of Medina / About to set off something more deep than a misdemeanor / Under the subway waiting for the train to make noise / So I can blast a nigga and his boys / For what? They pushed up on the block / And made the dope sales drop Like the crash of Dow Jones stock / I had to connect and cross seals, to catch more mils / Than hoe bitches got birth control pills / I’m in the park, setting up a deal over blunt fire / A bum nigga sleeping on the bench, they had him wired / Peeped my convo, the address of my condo / And how I change a nigga name to John Doe / And while he set up camp he got vamped / Put the stake through his heart / I ripped his fucking fangs apart / Snakes got smoked on the set like Brandon Lee / Blown out the frame, like Pan-Am flight 103 / He got swung on, his lungs was torn / The Kingpin just castled with his rook and lost a pawn / A regular on the block, he played look-out / For playing predator with the glock he should have took out
GZA is also known for his wordplay where he takes various groups of objects and gives them double meanings such as animals and NFL teams. The most famous example of this is "Labels" a song, again from Liquid Swords where he weaves the names of record labels in an out of the verse. A sample:
TOMMY ain't my motherfuckin' BOY / When you fake moves on a nigga you employ / We'll EMIRGE off ya set, now ya know God damn / I show LIVIN LARGE niggaz how to flip a DEF JAM / And RUFF up the motherfuckin' HOUSE / Cause I smother you COLD CHILLIN' mother fuckers / I'll still WARN A BROTHER (Warner Brothers)...
GZA covers a diverse range of topics in his raps. Though mainstays include life on the streets, crime, chess, 5 Percenter teachers, and the always relevant "wack MC's." He raps with a methodical, laid-back delivery that is occasionally punctuated with anger. Still some of his detractors refer to his flow as monotonous and boring.
[edit] Aliases
- Allah Justice (Original 5% name)
- God Zig-Zag-Zig Allah (G Z A in the Supreme Alphabet )
- The Genius
- The Head
- The Master
- Maximillion
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
Album Name | Release Date | Status |
---|---|---|
Words from the Genius | February 19, 1991 | |
Liquid Swords | November 7, 1995 | Gold U.S. |
Beneath the Surface | June 29, 1999 | Gold U.S. |
Legend of the Liquid Sword | December 10, 2002 | |
GrandMasters (with DJ Muggs) | October 25, 2005 |
[edit] Singles and EPs
- 1991 "Come Do Me"
- 1991 "Come Do Me (Remix)"
- 1991 "Words From a Genius"
- 1994 "Pass The Bone"
- 1994 "I Gotcha Back"
- 1995 "Liquid Swords"/"Labels"
- 1995 "Labels"
- 1995 "Cold World"
- 1995 "Cold World (Remix)"
- 1996 "Shadowboxin'"/"4th Chamber"
- 1999 "Breaker Breaker"/"Publicity"
- 1999 "Beneath The Surface"
- 1999 "Publicity"
- 1999 "Hip Hop Fury"
- 2000 "When The Fat Lady Sings"
- 2002 "Fame"
- 2003 "Knock Knock"
- 2005 "General Principles"/"All in Together Now" (with DJ Muggs)
- 2005 "Advance Pawns"/"Destruction of a Guard" (with DJ Muggs)
[edit] Appears On
- 1993 Enter the Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers (album by the Wu-Tang Clan)
- 1995 "Damage" (from the Ol' Dirty Bastard album Return To The 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version)
- 1995 "Guillotine (Swordz)" (from the Raekwon album Only Built 4 Cuban Linx)
- 1997 Wu-Tang Forever (album by the Wu-Tang Clan)
- 1997 "Third World" (from the DJ Muggs album Soul Assassins, Vol. 1)
- 1997 "Cross My Heart" (from the Killah Priest album Heavy Mental)
- 1997 "Wu Banga 101" (from the Ghostface Killah album Supreme Clientele)
- 2000 The W (album by the Wu-Tang Clan)
- 2000 "When The Fat Lady Sings" (from the DJ Muggs album Soul Assassins, Vol. 2)
- 2001 "Do U" (from the RZA album Digital Bullet)
- 2001 Iron Flag (album by the Wu-Tang Clan)
- 2001 "Big Acts Little Acts" (from the Afu-Ra album Body of the Life Force)
- 2003 "One World" (from the Rockin' Da North album Star Warz)
- 2004 "Silverbacks" (from the Masta Killa album No Said Date)
- 2004 "Head Rush" (from the Pete Rock album Soul Survivor II)
- 2004 "On the Eve of War" (from the Jedi Mind Tricks album Legacy of Blood)
- 2004 Disciples of the 36 Chambers: Chapter 1 (album by the Wu-Tang Clan)
- 2005 "Just The Thought" (from the Prefuse 73 album Surrounded By Silence)
- 2005 "Rush" (from the Mathematics album The Problem)
- 2005 "Pool Of Blood" (single by Jus Allah)
- 2006 "9 Milli Bros." (from the Ghostface Killah album Fishscale)
- 2006 "Street Corner" (from the Masta Killa album Made in Brooklyn)
- 2007 "Cameo Afro" (from the The RZA Presents: Afro Samurai OST)
- 2007 "Associated" (from the Wisemen album Wisemen Approaching)