Tag Archives: 36 Chambers

RZA Launches 36 Cinema, Innovative Live-Commentary Film Platform

36 Chambers, the record label and production house founded by RZA and Mustafa Shaikh, has launched 36 Cinema; a live-commentary film platform. The first-of-its-kind experience will feature live-commentary of classic films, presenting in-depth discussion with directors, actors, critics and superfans. The intent of 36 Cinema is to provide viewers with a deeper understanding and appreciation of the films that have inspired and influenced generations of cinephiles.

36 Cinema will feature Shogun Assassin for its next presentation; scheduled for Sunday, May 24th (commencing at 9:15pm EST). RZA will be joined by Dan Halsted (head programmer of the Hollywood Theatre) and Mustafa Shaikh, who will dive into the 1980 jidaigeki film that RZA sampled heavily for GZA’s critically acclaimed debut album Liquid Swords.

On May 16th, 36 Cinema officially kicked off its inaugural event, providing a live-commentary of Shaolin vs Wu Tang: the beloved 1983 martial arts film that inspired Wu-Tang Clan’s name. RZA and Dan Halsted spoke throughout the film’s 87 minute run-time, sharing fascinating insights into one of the most influential yet somewhat underappreciated kung fu films of the past half century. RZA and Dan also answered fan questions in real time, moderated by Mustafa Shaikh.

Memorial Day Weekend is historically one of the highest-grossing weekends for theatrical releases. At a time when the vast majority of theaters across the country are closed, 36 Cinema aims to fill the void and provide a film experience unlike any other, welcoming limitless viewers into a virtual theater from the comfort of their homes. While 36 Cinema was born out of the demand for live-streamed content during COVID-19 lockdowns, the live-commentary concept has thus far proven to be a highly appreciated, evergreen platform that will undoubtedly live on long beyond the current pandemic.

 “We’re proud to have created a first-of-its-kind experience in which for 90 minutes, thousands of people across the world were able to take part in a communal experience.  We appreciate our audience for spending their Friday night with us during the initial screening, and look forward to continuing to entertain them during Memorial Day weekend.” Mustafa Shaikh

“In our first screening, we showed the Wu Tang sword, which is revered as one of the best sword styles in Kung Fu. This week we want to give the audience a taste of the Japanese sword style with Shogun Assassin. Both Shogun Assassin and Shaolin vs Wu Tang are pioneers in their genre and served as inspirations for the music of Wu-Tang Clan.” – RZA

Purchase tickets for the upcoming Shogun Assassin live-stream on the 36 Cinema website.

Source: UndergroundHipHopBlog.com

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Wu-Tang Clan Just Released An EP. Listen Here (Audio)

During the last week, the members of the Wu-Tang Clan have snatched the spotlight. Amid a 25th-anniversary campaign surrounding their classic debut album, Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), RZA, GZA, Inspectah Deck, Raekwon, U-God, Masta Killa, Method Man, and Ghostface Killah produced documentary series Wu-Tang: Of Mics And Men. The Mass Appeal documentary produced and directed by Sacha Jenkins premiered for TV audiences on Showtime one week ago (May 10). In the days that followed, Wu revealed that the collective is dropping new music. In conjunction with the doc’, the Clan is offering up four new songs and three skits: 1. Ghostface Killah & RZA – “On That Sh*t Again” 2. Ghostface Killah, Raekwon & Harley – “Seen A Lot Of Things” 3. Nas – “Project Kids (Skit)” 4. RZA – “Do The Same As My Brother Do” 5. Cheo Hodari Coker: -“Yo, Is You Cheo? (Skit)” 6. RZA, Masta Killa & Cappadonna: “Of Mics And Men” 7. GZA & Masta Killa: “One Rhyme (Skit)” Wu-Tang Clan Was Originally RZA, GZA & ODB But Protect Ya Neck Changed Everything (Video) Heads can now listen in on new music from Wu members RZA, Ghost, Masta Killa, Chef Rae’, and Cappadonna (who is prominently featured in the film). GZA appears on a skit: This new collection of songs arrives from Mass Appeal in partnership with Wu’s 36 Chambers LLC. Power Discusses Founding Wu-Wear & Breaks Down The Mathematics (Video) #BonusBeat: Mass Appeal’s co-owner Nas discussing his earliest encounters with Wu-Tang and how he believes the group is a testament to the talent found in impoverished places:

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

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Wu-Tang Clan Commemorates ’36 Chambers’ 25th Anniversary With NPR Tiny Desk Concert

Yesterday (Dec. 5), in commemoration of their conquering 1993 debut album, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), the Wu-Tang Clan got together to perform a native influenced long-winded session of Wu hits on NPR’s Tiny Desk concert series. Together, Raekwon, RZA, GZA, Inspectah Deck, Masta Killa, U-God, Cappadonna, alongside the son of the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard, Young Dirty Bastard, fed onlookers with a wealth of musical wisdom than obtains 25 years of brilliance.

Starting off with a top-notch classic, “Triumph” which arguably accommodates one of the greatest verses in hip-hop history, Inspectah Deck spewed the famed moment, preceding into their early mantraesque hits from “Wu-Tang Clan Ain’t Nuthing ta Fuck Wit” to “Method Man.” Touching base on their iconic solo still-Wu gems, the concert flew into tracks in the likes of Raekwon’s “Glaciers of Ice”, Method Man’s “Bring the Pain,” Ghostface Killah’s “Run” and ultimately sealed the show with the affectionately received “C.R.E.A.M.”

While both Method Man and Ghostface Killah were not present, the group successfully managed to set forth a nostalgic performance which was reminiscent to the traditional rap cypher their gritty craft tends to reflect. Young Dirty Bastard appears to be on a role with the undertaking of his late father’s eccentric vigor, as he is seen portraying Ol’ Dirty Bastard segments in modern-day performances.

With the help of strings of The Green Project, RZA dropped a “dart” where he accumulates his Wu experience in live time.

“I used to be a metaphor whore/I would search through the core of my brain to find a metaphor better than yours/But now I’m a spiritual lyricist mystic/And I realize Hip-Hop has a sickness/So I’m going to cure the sickness without a pill/That’s better than me saying dollar dollar bill…”

Last month the super group’s debut album Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) reached a new milestone of 25 years since its iconic release. In extended honor of the 25th anniversary of 36 Chambers, the clan will hold two respective east coast celebrations in Philly and New York. Watch the clan swarm through their “Wu Classics” playlist with Tiny Desk, here.

The post Wu-Tang Clan Commemorates ’36 Chambers’ 25th Anniversary With NPR Tiny Desk Concert appeared first on The Source.

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Exclusive: Ghostface Killah Confirms ODB Biopic is “Greenlit,” New Wu Music on the Way

Ghostface Killah wants you all to know he’s working — better yet, the whole Wu-Tang Clan is working!

As the iconic rap collective is still celebrating 25 years since the release of their debut album, Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), there was one other thing worth commemorating as well: the would-be 50th birthday of departed member Ol’ Dirty Bastard.



ODB, as he was commonly nicknamed by anyone in the Hip-Hop community who love the Wu (i.e. everybody), passed away 14 years ago this week, just two days before his 36th birthday. Last night (Nov 15), on what would’ve been his 50th, his presence was felt on such an astounding level during a tribute concert held in his memory at The Roulette Intermedium in the heart of Brooklyn. From guest performances by his son Young Dirty Bastard — the similarities as he covered his dad’s biggest hits felt almost eerie at times — plus a host of ’90s rap vets, including Channel Live’s own Hakim Green sparking the stage with “mad izms” on the mic, to a full-out Wu-Tang reunion to close out the night that saw Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, Masta Killa and RZA handling things behind the booth to run through a gamut of classic records, the night truly turned out to be one for the books. Even Busta Rhymes came through to show love, filling in for ODB to give a stellar rendition of “Brooklyn Zoo,” in addition to telling the funniest 10-minute-long story that involved Dirty causing some serious ruckus on a plane with his infamous glass-shattering high notes. The Golden Era was preserved with mad respect last night, and The Source was just happy to be in the building.

Here’s what Hakim had to say about the Wu legacy and the first time he witnessed their collective greatness when we caught up with him backstage:


“You have to understand, the first time I heard ‘Protect Your Neck,’ I was at a college party at Rutgers University. My boys John Chambers and Dudley had this DJ crew called the Mob, so they always was pulling out the hottest shit first. Party was packed, I’m way in the back, and all of a sudden that ‘Protect Your Neck’ dropped and I’m like, ‘WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS?!’ At that time, the West Coast was really beating things up in Hip-Hop, so to have that in New York and it just be so authentically New York just brought the shit right back to the East Coast. 25 years later, they still just got the game in the palm of their hands and it’s a beautiful thing. I’m in the gym everyday, and it’s Wu-Tang [on the playlist] — Every. Single. Day. That’s my workout regime right there. They put me in the state of mind of boom bap, RZA with the tracks, and just bars galore coming at you. Wu-Tang is a very important piece to Hip-Hop culture — one of the greatest Hip-Hop crews of all-time and some of the illest solo artists of all-time.”



Of course, the night came full circle when we got the golden opportunity to chop it up with none other than “Cherchez La Ghost” himself. Ghostface dropped tons of knowledge on why Wu-Tang Clan is so important to the culture after over two decades of dominating the game, what’s in store for the crew — new music as a group and some solo stuff! — an update on that Ol’ Dirty Bastard biopic in the works, and a hilarious story time moment with ODB that involves him and the eccentric MC posing as legendary Philly R&B group The Stylistics. Yep, they went there!

Keep scrolling to see Ghostface Killah break down the culture of the Wu for us in an exclusive chat in-between rocking the stage alongside his fellow Clan kinfolk, which you see in full detail with the images provided below:



“Nah, it’s like, put it like this: when [Wu-Tang Clan] came in, I knew that we was coming to take heads off but I didn’t know it would be a magnitude where the world would recognize us as that crew. You got many rap crews that came, but to wind up in conversations as one of the top of all-time, if not “the”, is just [amazing]. I’m just a young man from Staten Island, you know what I mean? All praises due to the Most High; everything worked out right through hard work and the talent that each individual had. THE most High definitely moved us on to the next.

—Ghostface Killah, on the long-lasting, ongoing respect that Wu-Tang Clan continues to receive.



“Being here, representing my brother [Ol’ Dirty Bastard] — that’s my brother! I had to at least come, show face and pay my respect, you know what I mean, and let him know that I’m in the building so his energy can just feel my love that I always had for him. His family his here — I seen his daughter the other day and told her I’d do my best to make it and come through. By the grace of God I got here.”

—Ghostface Killah, on making it through NYC’s first blizzard of the season to show love for ODB.



“We just looking to continue that legacy with him. He got a movie that we doing with him — the Ol’ Dirty Bastard movie. We gonna start working on that the top of the year, and it’s already greenlit. We don’t got to sell it to nobody. That’ll will come along with the Wu albums and our solo shit or whatever. We’re just working! It was our 25th anniversary last Friday, so clearly we here to stay.”

—Ghostface Killah, on the ODB biopic announced this past September.



“I’m just grateful, bruh. Brothers been locked up and got jail records, but to turn that around and to stand where we standing at — it gets no better. You have to humble yourself and receive that blessing. It’s about understanding who gave you that blessing.”

—Ghostface Killah, on the many tribulations Wu-Tang had to overcome to achieve the legendary status they each enjoy today.



“[My record could come] any time now. I’ve polished up a lot of stuff I needed to for myself, and also did a lot of little shit for other people that really wasn’t my record, independent shit and whatnot. My records [could drop] at the top of the year, so that’s when those will start going out. That’s not even my Supreme Clientele shit — I’m gonna do the Wu album first and then drop my stuff somewhere after that so it don’t get mixed up. I’ll drop an album somewhere within February or March [2019], just before I drop the Wu album. We busy! It’s a lot of us, so you got to be busy. How not?”

—Ghostface Killah, on new Wu projects scheduled for 2019.



“There’s just too many [memories with OBD]. There’s a lot of shit I really can’t talk about, you know what I mean, but I’ll tell you one thing: that brother right there [is special]. I remember one time we were out of town, and this was before we did Wu-Tang shit, and this muthafucka had these females thinking that we were The Stylistics [Laughs]. He put the tape in and started singing and shit, and we tell them, ‘Yo that’s our shit right there — that’s out new shit!’ I think we might’ve been in Virginia. We was like that for a couple of days, and I think they probably still think that was us! [Laughs]”

—Ghostface Killah, on his greatest personal memory of Ol’ Dirty Bastard.



Rest in absolute Power, Dirt McGirt. We miss you…



Images: Brian Fraser

The post Exclusive: Ghostface Killah Confirms ODB Biopic is “Greenlit,” New Wu Music on the Way appeared first on The Source.

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