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G Z A Liquid Swords Rating: 3,9/5 7786reviews
Gza Liquid Swords Torrent

National Association Of Court Monitoring Programs. Program De Facut Coafura more. A1 Liquid Swords 4:31 A2 Duel Of The Iron Mic Featuring –, *, *,, * Featuring, Chorus – *, 4:06 A3 Living In The World Today 4:23 B1 Gold 3:57 B2 Cold World Featuring – *, * Vocals [Chorus] – Written-By – * 5:30 B3 Labels 2:54 C1 4th Chamber Featuring – *,,, 4:37 C2 Shadowboxin' Featuring –, 3:30 C3 Hell's Wind Staff Featuring –,, * Written-By – *, *, * 1:26 C4 Killah Hills 10304 3:42 D1 Investigative Reports Featuring – *, *,, *,, Written-By – *, *, * 3:49 D2 Swordsman 3:21 D3 I Gotcha Back 4:58.

It feels cynical when we only talk about albums when it’s their anniversary, but 20 years since its release, the GZA’s Liquid Swords is an album worth revisiting. More than two decades after the Wu came swarming out the slums of Shaolin, the crew itself might not be what it once was (let’s just pretend A Better Tomorrow never happened, OK?), but their logo will forever mean something to hip-hop fans across the globe. As Method Man once rhymed on “House of Flying Daggers”: “See these fans can't resist the rush, they Wu-Tang for life/Scarred for life, they can't forget the cuts.” And no Wu album sliced through hip-hop to leave as distinct a scar as GZA’s Liquid Swords.

Mixing imagery of street life with metaphors about chess and martial arts, and throwing in some philosophy and spirituality for good measure, Liquid Swords is the most Wu-Tang of any of the Wu-Tang albums because it brings the uniqueness of Wu’s aesthetic to the forefront. 36 Chambers is the more versatile offering, thanks to the many members involved, but Liquid Swords is the one that acutely focuses on the ideas the Wu championed as a whole. What sets the album apart, first and foremost, is the man born Gary Grice. Liquid Swords was released in 1995, but the GZA isn’t your typical ’90s rapper—he’s really an ’80s rapper at heart who just happened to blow up in the ’90s. At 49 years old, he’s not only the oldest member of the Clan; he’s two years older than ’80s stalwarts like Rakim, Big Daddy Kane, and Kool G Rap.

It shows up in his flow too; compare his understated, slow-winding delivery on “Shadowboxin” versus Method Man’s in-pocket spitfire. Liquid Swords is often mistaken as GZA’s debut album, but he actually debuted in 1991 as the Genius with Words From the Genius. The album was released on Cold Chillin—a label whose best-known acts were, again, guys like G Rap and Kane as well as Biz Markie and MC Shan. His old school ethos shows up in his intricate wordplay as well—GZA preferred to write his rhymes piecemeal, rather than walking on the spot like Raekwon and Ghostface Killah were known to do. With their kung fu kicks and chess metaphors, Wu brought an Eastern influence to their music that was all their own—and no one quite embodies it like the GZA.

Album: Liquid Swords Year: 1995 Track: 1 Track Produced By: RZA Samples: 'Mercy, Mercy, Mercy'. Liquid Swords is the second solo studio album by American rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member GZA, released on November 7, 1995, by Geffen Records.

Msc Patran 2012 Torrent. GZA’s age isn't the only thing that made him unique. There were plenty of rugged rappers in the ’90s, the Wu included.

But with their kung fu kicks and chess metaphors, Wu brought an Eastern influence to their music that was all their own—and no one quite embodies it like the GZA. Wu albums were always littered with kung fu movie samples, but GZA uses dialogue from Shogun Assassin to create one of the eeriest album intros imaginable. 36 Chambers featured 'Da Mystery of Chessboxin',' but no one takes chess more seriously than GZA, LS's cover is set on a chess board, and the deluxe version of the album came with. (If that's not enough, GZA later revisited the topic on his collaboration album with DJ Muggs, Grandmasters.) POST CONTINUES BELOW. Beyond the GZA, the RZA is in top form here as well. The RZA thought Liquid Swords would be the album that would help the Wu win over college kids, and he was right; it’s a dark album for a cold world best enjoyed on headphones, not stereos and certainly not clock radio speakers. The sound is crisper, with more care paid to the mastering of the album than any of the other solo Wu releases. In a weird way, Liquid Swords almost feels like RZA’s most personal project—even more so than his first solo album, Bobby Digital in Stereo, where he rapped from the perspective of his alter-ego, Bobby Digital.