Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Step Twenty Two: Wu-Tang Clan: Iron Flag.

Artist:  Wu-Tang Clan
Album:  Iron Flag
Release Date:  December 18, 2001
Producers:  RZA (except Mathematics' "Rules," Nick "Fury" Loftin's "One of these Days," True Master's "Y'all Been Warned" and Poke and Tone on "Back in the Game").

Review:  Wu-Tang is one of the best hip-hop groups of all time, so I honestly hate it whenever I have to make any complaints about one of their albums.  Hopefully by this point - the 22nd step on the path across the Map of Shaolin - I've proven that I give credit where it's due and I throw my W's up with the best of them.  However, up to this point (December 2001 on my map), Iron Flag is the weakest group album the Wu had put out.  It still has some real bangers, but there are too many problems to simply ignore.  However, it's such a unique contrast to their previous outings that it deserves to be dissected track by track.

Before even getting to the music, the packaging speaks volumes about the album's troubles.  The album cover might be their best (aside from the special edition 8 Diagrams, released six years later), imitating the famous picture of the U.S. flag raising at Iwo Jima in 1945.  However, once again Ol' Dirty Bastard is missing.  RZA dons a beanie or skullcap bearing his initials, but ODB's appearances on Wu-Tang albums finally decreased all the way to zero - on The W he only appeared on "Conditioner" and on Wu-Tang Forever on just over a quarter of the tracks.  Cappadonna is also missing, but in a different sense of the word.  He posed for the photo between Raekwon and RZA (see that big gap between them?) and was airbrushed out after having a falling out with the group.  Fans never fully accepted him as much as the original nine Wu-Tang members, which upset him, and it was also revealed that his manager Lord Michael (birth name Michael Caruso) was a police informant.  After that trouble, he only ended up on one Iron Flag track and was taken off the cover.  RZA also only produces two-thirds of the tracks here.  I'm not a RZA purist with production duties but for their group albums it's surprising that he'd dip below the 75% mark he hit on Wu-Tang Forever - which, to be fair, was his seventh straight album and to which he contributed 21 of the 28 tracks at the controls.

So before hearing a single track, any listener on his/her way home from the record store has the first impression that Iron Flag is - compared to previous albums - missing ODB, Cappadonna and a higher rate of RZA-produced songs.  What's worse is Loud Music's liner notes advertisement, promising a "new album" from Raekwon in early 2002 - which became The Lex Diamond Story, dropping in late 2003.  Other albums have done the same - promising Method Man's Crystal Meth and GZA's Liquid Swords 2, both of which have yet to be released - but it sticks out more here due to Iron Flag's unstable staff (no pun intended).

Fortunately it starts off with a bang, between "In the Hood" and "Rules."  The former is highlighted with a fiery verse by Inspectah Deck and a chorus by Suga Bang Bang (who formerly appeared on the Ghost Dog soundtrack) over lively horns, uptempo drums and sound clips of sirens and gunshots.  Ghostface kicks off "Rules" with a verse about 9/11 and is followed by Masta Killa and Streetlife, who both offer tight verses.  The music is hype without being as frantic as "In the Hood," which is perfect for Method Man's last verse.  It reminds me of the more recent Wu-Tang sound - cleaner and less chunky than their classic albums but not without the chopped '70s horns we know and love.

Then there's "Chrome Wheels."  A sung hook about smoking pot and "bangin' that shit retarded" leads off before RZA raps a verse as his alter-ego Bobby Digital (which is likely why the production sounds so similar to Bobby Digital in Stereo on this track).  12 O'Clock and Prodigal Sunn appear, and they're fine but why are we hearing them before a word from GZA or U-God?  Flava Flav appears on "Soul Power (Black Jungle)" which some have criticized as a stand-in for ODB's usual wackiness.  It also features the power duo of Ghost and Rae, but Masta Killa and U-God shine brightest with sharp couplets illuminating their verses.  Masta Killa rhymes "I need a beat to expand, the mind guide the hand" and "Pen stroke excellent quotes of literature / Nights over Egypt, black as Arabia"; U-God recalls decades-past black pop culture with "Line Cadillacs to blocks, Richard Pryor Redd Foxx / Jukebox records, flatfooted cops" and "Dr. J before Jordan, Al Green on the organ / When Rerun did the dance, the whole world saw him."  Their two verses aside, "Chrome Wheels" and "Soul Power" pulled me out of the experience for nine minutes before bouncing back.

"Uzi (Pinky Ring)" calls back to The W's style with the blaxploitation funk horns and thicker sound.  It's got a hell of a loop with verses by all eight present Wu members, in the same strategy as "Protect Ya Neck," "Triumph" and "Protect Ya Neck (The Jump Off)" before it - including GZA's first appearance on Iron Flag, over 1/4 through the album.  It's followed by "One of these Days," most notable for Raekwon's classic-style gangster/kung-fu lyrics: "Take these niggas and throw 'em in lakes, it's business / Rake these niggas on the mic, display your ninjas."

Then there's another quick rut.  "Y'all Been Warned" has a great post-Forever beat by True Master but no real standout verses by the otherwise spectacular emcees featured (INS, RZA, Rae and Meth); "Babies" aims for an endearing and dramatic chorus by Madame D (who also sung the hook for "Chrome Wheels") but somehow misses the mark.  A phenomenal RZA beat holds it together, and the real-life stories by Ghostface and Raekwon sound genuine and sorrowful, but when put together it doesn't hit the high-water marks of other tracks here or a year prior (on The W).  Essentially, Madame D's choruses - and she's a great singer, no doubt - don't hit me as hard as Tekitha on "Impossible" or Blue Raspberry on "Rainy Dayz."

But then GZA brings it back with his best verse yet on "Radioactive (Four Assassins)."  He opens with Liquid Swords-quality lyrics:

"Slept on this hazardous enterprise
Hit from the back from a long-range attack in disguise
Weeks of captivity became months
Those who were holdin' it down they hold a pump
Do we delay the conflict and prolong the suffer?
Got a mass of starvin' niggas wanna eat supper
Unfair corruptions lead to abductions
Creatin' wider circles of destructions."

Trackmasters bring a compelling beat and killer guest spot by the legendary Ron Isley to "Back in the Game," but there's little else on which to hang your hat.  The title track "Iron Flag" has awesome music, mixing old and new Wu sounds; and very solid verses by Raekwon, Masta Killa and Inspectah Deck - it may be Rae and MK's best verses so far.  Then it crossfades into a hidden track, "The Glock," which effectively undoes all the good "Iron Flag" did.  At the end of every bar in the song is a slowed-down loop of the line "Good thing we brought the Glock!" that alternates with every line or two.  Its closest cousin is "Careful (Click, Click)" on The W, but most of the dangerous antihero feelings from "Careful" are gone here, making way for a painful hook: "Never leave home without it / Good thing we brought the Glock! / Y'all niggas ain't 'bout it 'bout it / Good thing we brought the Glock!"  It's effectively the least impressed I've been with a Wu song.  Where are the amazing spiritual, philosophical and pop culture references?  They all got traded in for lines like "20 drunk crabs try to push the back door / Good thing we brought the Glock / Five box cutters drawn, they was ready for war / Good thing we brought the Glock."

Inspectah Deck and GZA close with decent verses and a ridiculously cool hook on "Dashing (Reasons)," but by the time the disc stops spinning, the album is as close to wearing out its welcome as Wu-Tang has been so far.  It leaves its audience with an anticlimax, and they'd have to wait six full years before the Wu returned with 2007's 8 Diagrams.

As far as emcee presence goes, the Clan is tallied up as follows, with big ups to Raekwon for providing ten verses on his own throughout 12 tracks.

RZA:  Production on eight songs, five verses.
Raekwon:  10 verses and a shared verse with Masta Killa.
Inspectah Deck:  Eight verses.
Masta Killa:  Seven verses and a shared verse with Raekwon.
Ghostface Killah:  Six verses.
Method Man:  Five verses, two hooks.
GZA:  Five verses.
U-God:  Four verses, two hooks.
Cappadonna:  One bridge ("The Glock").
ODB:  MIA.

Legacy:  Iron Flag saw Wu-Tang standing on shaky legs, coming in just a year after The W and completely lacking Ol' Dirty - a sore disappointment for those hoping for his comeback after only appearing on one song on The W.  Cappadonna is also virtually absent, and although he's not my favorite Wu emcee he'd earned a place on Ironman, Wu-Tang Forever and The W so it's odd not hearing him here.  RZA also only produces two-thirds of the album, which is strange because considering his near-impeccable track record, three of my four least favorite songs on Iron Flag had him in the producer's booth.  Not knocking RZA - he's one of the world's best music producers - but a couple of his tracks here weren't for me.  Despite those handicaps, Iron Flag holds its own as best it can for 55 minutes and brings some real winners to the mix.

From the standpoint of the band regrouping between solo records, Iron Flag is also a damn memorable place.  Between it and 8 Diagrams would come Masta Killa's debut solo album, Method Man's widely-panned Tical 0: The Prequel, a whopping four releases by Ghostface Killah, the departure and return of U-God to/from the Wu and the biggest tragedy the group has faced: the death of Ol' Dirty Bastard at the age of 35, marking The W as the last group album on which he appeared before his passing.

Recommended Tracks:  Uzi (Pinky Ring), Radioactive (Four Assassins).

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Step Twenty One: Ghostface Killah: Bulletproof Wallets.

Artist:  Ghostface Killah
Album:  Bulletproof Wallets
Release Date:  November 13, 2001
Producers:  RZA ("Maxine," "Flowers," "Walking through the Darkness," "Jealousy"), The Alchemist (as Al Chemist) ("The Forest," "The Juks," "Street Chemistry"), Mathematics ("Theodore," "Strawberry"), et al.

Review:  Ghostface's third album is Bulletproof Wallets.  There's so much to say about it I'm going to skip the preamble and get down to business.

For starters, the personnel is very intriguing.  This is the first album to feature Ghostface's spin-off group The Theodore Unit (which includes Ghostface, Trife, Twiz, Shawn Wigs, Solomon Childs and Cappadonna).  The Theodore Unit is similar to Raekwon's American Cream Team, being led by one Wu general and featuring several hand-picked talents - Twiz was even in both groups.  On Bulletproof Wallets, Trife and Twiz appear, though more members of the group followed on subsequent Ghost records - keep them in mind, as Ghost's 2006 release More Fish includes them on the majority of tracks.  Producer mainstays RZA and Mathematics provide close to half the album together, and this is also the first appearance in the Wu catalog of The Alchemist (here credited as Al Chemist), who would go on to produce tracks on Raekwon's Cuban Linx 2 and Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang as well as become Eminem's official DJ five years later.  Speaking of Raekwon, The Chef appears on four tracks ("Maxine," "Flowers," "Never Be the Same Again" and "The Hilton").  Other Wu appearances include Method Man, an interlude/hook by RZA and GZA ("Strawberry") and Wu affiliates Killa Sin, Prodigal Sunn and Tekitha.

Avid fans may recognize the track name "Walking through the Darkness" from RZA's Ghost Dog soundtrack.  On that release, it was performed solo by Tekitha, singing wonderfully over Bobby Womack's "Across 110th Street" instrumental.  Here, Ghost has two verses, differentiating it from the original.  This is also one of the most prominent early example of Ghost performing amid sung R&B hooks (on his own records that is), on tracks like "Never Be the Same Again" and "Ghost Showers."  This style came to fruition most prominently on Ghost's 2009 album Ghostdini: Wizard of Poetry in Emerald City, which features R&B vocals on almost every track.

So how does the album fare?  RZA kicks it off right with phat beats on "Maxine" and "Flowers" and live verses by Ghost, Rae, Method Man and Superb.  I was never an R&B fan but I appreciate Carl Thomas's hook on "Never Be the Same Again," The sped-up sample of Blood Sweat & Tears' "40,000 Headsmen" intro on "Theodore" is fantastic, making for a unique music box-led beat by Mathematics that features the best lyrics so far on the record.  Ghost runs out of the gate with

"Stark edition rock Christians
The crystallized rock got the big jewelry dealers on a mission
With a slick taste of lace, I done smacked New York City
The 450 went poppin' when he tried to dip me
Balled out in bingo halls, reported skied out in jury duty
Judge Judy, big groupie bitch blew me, beigin' rush Kufi
Blast the last uzi, ship me to Africa right?  I share rubies."

Meanwhile, Trife makes a case for himself on the same song: "Whatever y'all put up I double that / Stapleton is where I hustle at, 2-12 is where I bubble at / Yeah I'm talkin' moneywise, you funny guys / I'm quick to yolk you up like an egg cooked sunny-side."

Mathematics kills it again on "Strawberry," which also showcases the only thing about Ghost I'm not crazy about: he's got so many explicit verses about sex that they tend to stand out even among his most brilliant albums.  I'm no stranger to sex in lyrics, stories and movies, but between the squishing sound effects and rhymes about ejaculation, sometimes it seems like too much.

Fortunately the second half of the album stays mostly solid throughout.  Ghost's lyrics fare better on the surreal "The Forest" than "Strawberry."  It's themed around cartoon characters in adult situations and based on a lovely sample by The Imaginations.  "The Juks" is an engaging track about gambling that never wears out its welcome.  As mentioned earlier, "Walking through the Darkness" is a winner, just like the following proper track "The Hilton" - although the latter is thrown off pace a bit since it's bookended by two 60-second musical interludes.  "Interlude" itself gets your blood pumping just as it cuts out, although it does a good job of foreshadowing the equal parts modern and retro sound that continued on Fishscale.  The R&B-centered "Love Session" feels a bit long before the closer "Street Chemistry," but on the whole it's a satisfying album.

Legacy:  At just 46 minutes, with five of its 16 tracks clocking in under two minutes each, Bulletproof Wallets is a concise and listenable album that mixes Ghost's classic sound (which evokes RZA's most syrupy funk beats) with his first project as a group leader (of the Theodore Unit). Due to sample clearance issues, several tracks failed to appear on the album, which is likely the chief cause for Wallets' brevity.  This is also Ghost's last album for Epic, signing next to Def Jam, and rumors (and Wikipedia) have it that Ghost's reasoning for leaving Epic is tied to their failure to assist him in obtaining rights to the samples he used on the missing tracks.  Besides being a bit less airtight than Supreme Clientele and Ironman, Bulletproof Wallets is proof that Ghost can make a hat trick for great albums, rendering him as reliable a talent as Inspectah Deck or Raekwon's more recent career.

Recommended Tracks:  Maxine, Theodore, The Forest.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Step Twenty: RZA: Digital Bullet.

Artist:  RZA
Album:  Digital Bullet
Release Date:  August 18, 2001
Producer:  RZA (except "Domestic Violence Pt. 2" prod. by Tony Touch, "La Rhumba" prod. by True Master).

Review:  Bobby Digital in Stereo received mixed reviews when it was released in November of 1998, but RZA bounced back immediately on lyrics and production on the Ghost Dog soundtrack and Wu-Tang's The W.  So when Digital Bullet surfaced in 2001 as another "RZA as Bobby Digital" album, it's easy to understand either way whether a fan would be on-board or hesitant to embrace it.  Would it be tighter than Bobby Digital in Stereo?  Could it measure up to the high bars set by Ghost Dog and The W?  As it turns out, it lands somewhere in between.  For its typical Bobby Digital lyrical problems, it still fares better than Bobby Digital in Stereo with far better beats and solid guest spots.

Digital Bullet opens with "Show U Love," whose only real problem is the number of times its hook repeats.  "We come to show you love, son, we come to show you / Whether you my nigga, my bitch or I don't know you."  Luckily the verse lyrics make up for it.  "A room full of eyes, naked demons in disguise / As naked women, walkin' sour lemon airy head / High-pitch bird fly canary bodies vary / Wisdom is secondary, at most necessary."  RZA brings the heat with guests Method Man, Masta Killa and Streetlife on "Glocko Pop," which may be the best realization and balance of Bobby Digital's id-driven egoism and key/synth-based beats and Wu-Tang's trademark rhyme skills and lyrical swordsmanship.  It's like his alter-ego brought his own take on Wu's Ghost Dog track "Fast Shadow."  Method Man sets his verse off lovely with "Yo who wanna play the hero?  Your chances are slim / Less than zero, Shaolin laboratory friend."  Masta Killa follows suit:  "The marvelous bone-crushin' assassin / Appears to be blind in glasses / Daredevil bang head with shovel / Iron skin, Tony Starks, liquid metal."  MK's verse on "Brooklyn Babies" doesn't flow as mercurial as he does here.

"Must Be Bobby" and "Brooklyn Babies" have great music and adequate vocals.  Surprising no one, GZA slays on "Do U" with lyrics like "You know those jams in the park produced the spark / Made me feel words how I read books in the dark" and "I walked through the borough challenging the best that stood / Torch metal mics, they conduct better than wood."

At the halfway mark on the album, True Master's South American-steeped "La Rhumba" may have the most infectious beat on the album, evoking the pleasure-seeking Bobby Digital to some fun lyrics.  "On the dance floor, yo, the way you glide / Make a club of thugs do the Electric Slide."  Method Man provides a quick verse, but like Masta Killa, he did better on "Glocko Pop."  As is the usual problem with this album, "Shady" has a great beat but the lyrics don't match up, telling the story of Bobby Digital ditching a girl after finding out that she's bisexual - wait, what?

"Bong Bong" and "Throw your Flag Up" have killer beats as well - the former utilizing what sounds like a shamisen or seung.

It's right on "Throw Your Flag Up" that the album decides to finish damn strong for its final five tracks.  It offers an Ironman-esque slow soul tune with brass and grimy drums on a loop.  RZA also returns to a classic lyrical style here, referencing Rollie Fingers (Inspectah Deck's Cuban Linx nickname) and ending with "Up in the 36 cell block I shadowbox / ship on weed grass and build up like a male ox."

"Be A Man" brings back more funk sax and RZA's best lines so far.  For example...

"Peoples' eyes closed like envelopes by faux penmanship
With unpaid doctor bills, framed, got shot and killed
Cops poppin' pills, three pair cotton, steel closet, cabinet of no frills
More bills, sister got evicted from Park Hill"

and

"$50 ticket, about to strike and picket
And shout at the city hall 'Motherfuck the wicked
And greedy,' give to the needy
Down on my luck, about to grab a ouija
Board, that's when Bobby Digi seen me
Said 'Yo son, don't stress over no one
Learn the slogan:
Knowledge is half the battle, that's one to grow on
And don't be counterfeit
It's a bad situation being a man, but we got to handle it.'"

Junior Reid, who brought his ragga vocals on "One Blood Under W" and "Jah World" on The W, returns for "Righteous Way" and sings truly beautiful lyrics for the first half ot the track before RZA's verse.  Tekitha backs RZA on "Build Strong," which seems to be the part of the story in which RZA wrestles his Bobby Digital alter-ego and wins, closing with "Sickness," which is much more in tune with RZA's Wu slang and street lamentations.

Overall it's a jarring album at the first couple listens:  It starts and finishes strong, with a couple less stellar tracks before its halfway point and a few after.  RZA slips in and out of Bobby Digital's mentality on the lyrics and the beats.  Sometimes it seems like he wants to live both identities at once and in a couple places he seems to let the reins go entirely (eg "Black Widow Pt. 2").  Anyone who heard Bobby Digital in Stereo and is willing to grant Digital Bullet as much patience will be greatly rewarded, as it's ultimately the better of the two albums - if not quite as strong as when RZA just plays The RZA.

Legacy:  Digital Bullet is about the last the world saw of RZA's comic book alter ego, with rumors and test footage of a Bobby Digital movie popping up here and there over the last decade.  If "Build Strong" is any indication, RZA managed to put Bobby to sleep.  It was received more favorably than its predecessor and holds an odd place in RZA's production career, between the excellent Wu-Tang release The W and their following album, Iron Flag, which earned the ire of much of the public.  It's also one of the earliest points of reference for the tightly-spun latter-day RZA sound that permeated the Afro Samurai soundtracks.  If this is Bobby Digital's last appearance, RZA sent him off with a bang.

Recommended Tracks:  Glocko Pop, La Rhumba, Be A Man, Righteous Way.

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Step Nineteen: Wu-Tang Clan: The W.

Artist:  Wu-Tang Clan
Album:  The W
Release Date:  November 21, 2000
Producer:  RZA (except "Do You Really (Thang Thang)" and "Clap" prod. by Mathematics)

Review:  For anyone who found 1997's Wu-Tang Forever too lengthy or bloated, their third full-length release, The W, tightens things up considerably.  It clocks in at under an hour, bonus track included.  It also features guest spots from some legendary artists, not the least of whom are Isaac Hayes and Nas.

With or without the cover art, I find that this is Wu-Tang's darkest - and maybe even most "gangsta rap" - sounding album.  "Careful (Click, Click)" has a grimey beat and echoing wood block, group shout-outs saying "Fuck the police," and a hook that repeatedly references gunfire and box cutters (implying that they're used for violence). "Something in the street went BANG BANG / Making it hard for you to do ya thang thang," says Capadonna, followed by Ghostface's "Something in the hall went click click / The box cutter went click click."  The unsettling "Let My Niggas Live," (featuring a verse by Nas that smartly references Marcus Garvey) has a Raekwon hook which mentions "making major moves," "getting caught in the caper" and advising others to "handle your bid and kill no kids."  It's followed immediately by the Ghostface/RZA track "I Can't Go to Sleep" (with vocals by Isaac Hayes) that centers around children and civil rights leaders being murdered.

The other interesting thing about this record is the addition of several separate beats/verses after a song seems to end.  "Conditioner," the only track which features Ol' Dirty Bastard or Snoop Dogg, stops around the four-minute mark and starts a new beat with a freestyle by GZA and a hook by Inspectah Deck.  "I Can't Go to Sleep" starts about 30 seconds before the end of "Let My Niggas Live" - the track changes over with the proper start of Ghostface's verse.  "Do You Really (Thang Thang)" also winds down around four minutes and picks up with a new beat, a hook and the first couple lines of a verse before Raekwon says to turn it down and the following track starts.  Even "Clap," the secret song at the end, is only separated by the closing track "Jah World" by a couple seconds.

It should come as no surprise that this album sounds great from start to finish.  "Chamber Music" starts off with some fast ride cymbals and simple piano notes - and a blistering opening verse by Raekwon.  Slicker than snot he spits out "Peep the jump-off, ain't nothin' sweet, got dumped off / Frontin' like you won't get deaded and bumped off / Drastic son, master guns that'll run up in plastic ones / And then go crash in the slums."  Despite his recent Immobilarity being his least impressive release to date, The Chef is back and proves it all over this album - even as the first to be heard on it.  It's a good idea on RZA's part to feature every member of Wu-Tang Clan, including Cappadonna but excluding Ol' Dirty Bastard, on the first two tracks.  Unlike Forever, The W guarantees most listeners will hear their favorite emcee inside the first nine minutes of the album.  Raekwon, GZA, Method Man and Masta Killa take "Chamber Music" and RZA, Cappadonna, U-God, Ghostface and Inspectah Deck feature on "Careful (Click, Click)."

"Hollow Bones" continues the sound I described recently that became a real trend with the Wu.  It takes their old soul-inspired sound and tunes up an instrument or two - in this case, the hook.  Speaking of good ideas, "Redbull" features Redman and, likely due to the platinum success of Method and Red's Blackout!, he's followed immediately by Method Man.

Junior Reid provides lovely rasta vocals on "One Blood Under W," which is also Masta Killa's first solo track on a group album.  That may sound like a narrow focus (he already had solo tracks on the Ghost Dog soundtrack and the Shaolin Style soundtrack), but to me it's an important track on the album.  Here's why.  Method Man had the only solo track on Enter the Wu-Tang, which featured just one Masta Killa verse in its entirety.  On Forever, ODB, RZA, Inspectah Deck and U-God all had their own solo tracks.  In the seven years between Enter the Wu-Tang and The W, Masta Killa came into his own on close to a dozen tracks and is here featured with his own song.  Despite at this point being the only Wu-Tang general without a solo album released, this is the biggest sign that he's grown as an artist to the point of getting the spotlight on a track like the others before him.  I also think he's fascinating, since so little is known about him; and very underrated, since Method Man, Ghost and RZA seem to be the most popular surviving members of the group; so I keep a close eye on Masta Killa's work.  And his second verse really slays.  "Don't ask this is genuine draft / Blueprint ultimate legit sting international, stone love classical / Coming back to attack in black fatigue / Wu-Tang and Junior Reid."

ODB makes his only appearance of the album (due to a stint in prison) on "Conditioner" with a weird verse about vaginas, bedwetting and farts; he also provides the awkward chorus "MC conditioner, you could never say this boy's a amateur" which repeats a dozen times.  It's the most off-beat hook since the beginning, when Method Man says "Chamber music, fuckin' the party uppin'" on "Chamber Music."

The lead single "Protect Ya Neck (The Jump-Off)" features every Wu general (minus ODB) plus Cappadonna.  There are fantastic lyrics throughout, from Inspectah Deck's intro ("Dance with the mantis, note the slim chances / Chant this anthem, swing like Pete Sampras") to GZA's closer ("Run on the track like Jesse Owens / Broke the record flowin' without any knowin' that my word play run the 400-meter relay / It's on once I grab the baton from the DJ").  The beat is uptempo and really keeps the Wu on their toes:  Method Man brings some killer similes ("Bust shots at Big Ben like we got time to kill") and RZA's quick verse finishes each line with a shout-out to his alter ego Bobby Digital ("Y'all might just catch me in the park playin' chess, studyin' math, signing 'seven' and a sun" "BOBBY!").

"I Can't Go to Sleep" and "Do You Really (Thang Thang)" both have incredible music in their own rights - the first is a slow, orchestrated '70s-style soul melody and the latter is an upbeat hip-hop beat with urgent keyboards and popping drums.  "Gravel Pit" displays the most common complaint about RZA's music in the last 15 years - an ill-fitting, sung chorus peppered throughout the song.  Wu-Tang just released their brand-new single "Ron O'Neal," 14 years later, and it's still the same problem: admirable idea, but just doesn't fit.

As always, let's take a look at presence on the album.  In light of the recently-resolved Raekwon/RZA dispute and the personnel on the upcoming album A Better Tomorrow (with RZA ranking which Wu members have brought the most verses or the least), it's worth seeing who carries each album the most.

Ghostface Killah dominates with seven verses, a couple hooks and backing vocals.
Method Man does six verses and a hook as well.
Masta Killa has six verses.
Raekwon spits five verses, two hooks and extra vocals.
Inspectah Deck rhymes five verses and a hook.
RZA brings four verses and an intro and produces 12 of the album's 14 tracks.
GZA has three verses and a freestyle.
U-God offers three verses, a hook and extra vocals.
Cappadonna, the quasi-official 10th Wu-general, has two verses.
Ol' Dirty Bastard performs one verse and a hook.

Legacy:  The W was highly rated by most critics.  The music sees RZA and Mathematics taking plenty of risks that mostly pay off, the lyrics are a return to form for everyone (including members like Raekwon whose previous solo outings weren't as well-received) and it gels as a record overall.  It features great guest spots too.  It's a great example of how prolific Ghostface Killah can be: he has seven verses on this album, released his sophomore album Supreme Clientele earlier that year and put out his third solo album (Bulletproof Wallets) less than a year later.  On the other hand, ODB's absence here is just one sign of the legal troubles that would plague him the rest of his life.  The other minor hiccups are that it's often remembered for its Flintstones-esque video for "Gravel Pit," which is clearly a misstep; and there is the aforementioned sung hook that doesn't fill the shoes of choruses like "Can it Be All So Simple."  However, The W is still a great listen, from the winning music on "Do You Really (Thang Thang)" to the tight lyrics throughout (especially Raekwon on "Chamber Music," Masta Killa on "One Blood Under W" and the whole clan on "Protect Ya Neck (The Jump-Off)").

Recommended Tracks:  One Blood Under W, Protect Ya Neck (The Jump-Off), Do You Really (Thang Thang).

Next Week:  Can RZA improve on Bobby Digital in Stereo with his second Bobby solo album Digital Bullet?  Come back next Wu Wednesday and find out!