In the same time he reminds 50 about a lot of flaws in his career, but at the same time touches the classics, and touches the masiveness of the Clan. With a simple RZA beat, a very simple RZA beat, intended to emphasize the lyrics, although the lyrics are followed by a somewhat sleepy delivery. Calling his art "disposable" like a Paper Plate in the title. An interlude that immediately sears into.Īlready discussed. This woke me up.Ī cut from an 8 Diagrams interview that grips the topic of the massiveness of the Wu-Tang Clan. A good verse from Rock Marciano, with a real enjoyable chorus from the cat. GZA's delivery is too sleepy on this one, but the storytelling lyrics make up for it to some point. "Took her of the showroom floor, no money down"Ī nice Arabian Knight beat laced with guitars in the background. Reminiscent of Queens Gambit, the storytelling lyrics with incorporated car names, simply blow you away. Classic GZA flow, a little sleepy delivery and mindblowing lyrics. The much-discussed re-used Stay In Line beat is very enjoyable, and I'll regard it as an authentic beat. A crazy-ass sample and nice old-school raps. GZA comes true on this, with his flow/delivery matching the beat perfectly. A sick intro by Preservation, and a great beat produced by Black Milk. The second verse is pretty strong, but he's joined by his son Young Justice that has some nice lines, but nothing Groundbreaking.īanger. A storytelling first verse from the Genius, followed by a familiar chorus "We roll together as one, I call my brother son, cuz he shine like one". Everything he produced lately takes down the wall. It looks like Bronze Nazareth is the hottest producer in the hip hop game right now. I'll be bumping this in front of my kids proudly in 10-15 years.Ĥ. With a classic chorus that gets every letter of the alphabet covered. Great delivery that matches the beat, and the lyrics are vintage. What Can I say? A sick True Master looped beat (All I need is a beat, with a continous loop, and a live vibe that hypnotize like a flute), and GZA's flow is on point. A great verse, that trademarks this track. GZA comes sick, a nice MK verse, but RZA is on some next level shit. but.Ī certified Wu-Banga, with a sick Allah Maths beat with a creepy-ass sample. With RZA shouting out GZA/Genius at some points, this really gets you in a relaxed mood. A nice intro for things to come, musically.