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. 'Released: October 24, 1994.
'Released: June 26, 1995. 'Released: September 25, 1995. 'Released: 1996Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Is the debut studio album by American rapper and member, released on August 1, 1995,.
The album was loosely composed to play like a film with Raekwon as the 'star,' fellow Wu-Tang member as the 'guest-star,' and producer as the 'director.' It features appearances from every member of the Wu-Tang Clan except for. The album also features debut appearances for affiliates.
It also features an acclaimed guest appearance from rapper, which marked the first collaboration with a non-affiliated artist on a Wu-Tang related album.Upon its release, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Debuted at number four on the chart, and number two on the chart, while selling 130,000 copies in its opening week. The album was certified by the (RIAA) on October 2, 1995, and according to, it has sold 1.1 million copies in the United States alone.
Although it failed to acquire the same initial sales success as previous Wu-Tang solo albums, Cuban Linx achieved greater critical praise, with many complimenting its cinematic lyricism and production.Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Has received acclaim from music critics and writers over the years, with many lauding it as one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time. With its emphasis on insinuations and, the album is widely regarded as a pioneer of the subgenre. It is considered to have been highly influential on hip hop music over the next decade, being heavily referenced and influential on acclaimed albums such as 's (1996) and 's (1997). Along with 's, Cuban Linx is the most acclaimed solo Wu-Tang work. In 2012, magazine placed it at number 480 on their list. Contents.Background released Only Built 4 Cuban Linx.
As his first solo album, and the third seen from the Wu after the release of their debut album, with 's and 's released prior. The song ',' from 36 Chambers, marked the first recorded exhibition of Raekwon and Ghostface Killah as a duo, as the two would further establish this alliance on Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Much of the content on the album deals with real life topics and situations that both Raekwon and Ghostface Killah commonly encountered and experienced while growing up in,. In an interview with, Raekwon explained 'I grew up in the street, so I talked about the shit I knew and saw. We did the hustlin' thing, we did the crime thing; we did all the things that made us feel like mobsters or Mafiosos in some way.'
In a different article, Ghostface Killah recollected 'Back then I was punchin' a lot of rap niggas in their face, and niggas was getting beat up in the clubs. We were banned from everything. They wouldn't even let me in the. Niggas was scared to death when I was out there wilding. I was fucking niggas up, robbing niggas, fucking a lot of bitches, just doing dumb shit.' In regard to his and Ghostface's partnership, Raekwon later commented 'Ghost and me, especially at the time, had this identical-twin effect on each other. We would joke about the same things and laugh at the same shit.
We were into the same clothes and shit. We were like the of the crew.' Producer also commented on the duo's congruency:Rae and Ghost together, those two right there were notorious kids from two different. Cuban Linx was an opportunity for Rae and Ghost to give us the street side. When we did it, I said, 'yo, it's gonna be a very dangerous album; it's gonna change the game. We gonna invite those demons, every negative stereotype, and deal with them.'
It's like the shit was lived; a lot of it was lived or experienced in one form or another. It's so natural, it don't feel like songs. It was a chance to show the world not only how New York lived, but also how preserved New York. An older generation was leaving and getting older.
We're from the - that real gritty, rough project shit. We was on corners at 15, 16, doing shit you couldn't imagine. — RZAOnly Built 4 Cuban Linx. Features a wide array of Wu-Tang members, as well as Wu-Tang affiliates,. It also features a guest appearance from rapper, making this the first collaboration with a non-affiliated artist on a Wu-Tang related album. Regarding this event, Nas later recalled 'Rae would come out to, I would go to.
We'd just ride and hang out all night. We didn't call each other to work. We called each other to hang out. Somehow we wound up in the studio. RZA had a couple of beats. He played them for me. I got on both of them.
The other one never came out. I was honored to be asked to be on the album. Raekwon was ahead of his time. I knew Rae was a classic artist and the album was going to be a music classic.' Title significance The album's title serves as 'a warning of its musical potency to those not prepared for the uncut raw contained within.' Although the original intended title was ' Only Built 4 Cuban Linx Niggaz', this idea was eventually dismissed in favor of a more market-friendly one. Ghostface Killah later specified 'We already had the title.
The we used to rock back in the days was Cuban links. So Rae came up with the theory, like a Cuban link is one of the roughest chains to break. Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Real niggas, strong niggas.' The album is also commonly referred to as ' The Purple Tape' because the original cassette's plastic was entirely purple; Raekwon marked the tape distinctively as a reference to drug dealers' method of tagging their product, to distinguish it from that of others'.
'I wanted to portray an image that if I was selling crack or dimes in the street, you would recognize these dimes from other niggas' dimes.' Recording and production. Member produced the entire album in his basement studio, as he did with solo releases by other members.Recording sessions began in late 1994, and proceeded midway through 1995 in RZA's basement studio in Staten Island, the same studio that many of the group's earlier albums were recorded in.
In regard to Raekwon and Ghostface Killah's original recording intentions, RZA recounted 'They had wanted to go to. But when they got to Barbados, the racism was so crazy. It was on some slave mentality. The Blacks was being treated like shit.
They stopped back, and everything was recorded in my basement. No, no assistant engineer. I did everything on that shit. The only two albums I did with nobody fucking with me was Linx. I was on a mission.
To make all those early albums took three and a half years of my life. I didn't come outside, didn't have too many girl relations, didn't even enjoy the shit. I just stayed in the basement.
Hours and hours and days and days. Turkey burgers and blunts.
I didn't know if it was working. But nobody could hear or say nothing, no comments, no touching the board when I leave. Everything was just how I wanted it.' Regarding the recording atmosphere, Raekwon stated 'The way RZA had it poppin' back then, we would come into his spot.
It was like dudes would come in on their own time and create stuff. I remember I just came in, and the beats was just pumpin'.' Seeking to musically express Raekwon's blend of creed and inner-city experience, producer RZA worked intensively on a polished sound, slower and more layered than that of Wu-Tang's previous efforts, using strings, piano loops and vocal samples from,. Due to Raekwon's storytelling, mobster-minded approach, the producer set up Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. To play like scenes in a crime movie. RZA has cited musician as an influence on his orchestral approach to several of the album's tracks. He also later revealed that several of the album's beats, such as 'Incarcerated Scarfaces,' were originally intended for Wu-Tang member GZA's Liquid Swords album, but because of Raekwon's timely writing approach, were used last minute for Cuban Linx.
In regard to this, Raekwon clarified 'RZA's house was more or less like a candy store. You come in and have all kinds of shit to choose from.
I would take stuff that I felt would suit my album correctly; others would take their own beats too. The beats were like a grab bag. If I came in and heard a beat that someone already claimed, then I just had to fall back. We almost never fought over beats or nothing. I'd tell RZA if I liked a certain beat, and he'd see if it would fit me or not.' Throughout the album, producer RZA dialogue from various scenes in the film.
RZA later recollected 'I met John Woo that same year. He sent me a letter. He was honored that we did it. I felt confident we could settle anything that came up. You can usually settle that shit. It's part of the budget, man. But John Woo didn't want nothing, never no money for that.
We actually became friends. He took me and Ghost to lunch and dinner many times.
He gave me a lot of mentoring in film.' Gambinos The song 'Wu-Gambinos' was one of the first songs recorded for the album, and marked the beginning of the aliases used for the members who appeared on the album, and would eventually become highly influential on hip hop. Raekwon later explained 'The Wu-Gambinos aliases come from how I used to like that movie, with Robert De Niro and James Woods. I liked how these young little niggas grew up, from the ground up, not having nothing to start. And the names came. You know, 'Tony Starks' came from. 'Lou Diamond' came from who made, and from me being infatuated with the diamond world.
Back then I was wearing a lot of, was calling shit ice. But then I started giving some of my niggas in the crew names. Being that it's my album, I wanted niggas to know, you gotta have a certain when you're on this track.
This is a Gambino track. I would call 'Noodles,' call 'Maximillian.' Inside the movie ( Once Upon a Time in America), Noodles and Max was partners.
I felt like GZA was like Maximillian because he was like the brains of the crew. He would say something real intellectual and smart. I called 'Rollie Fingers' cause of the way he roll. So names just started fitting niggas.'
Music and lyrics. A lushly impenetrable jungle of sonic allusions transforms the nightmare of the into a dream of and warmed for the bathtub—a dream with its own, moral weight, and commitment to beauty. It's an illusion, as any denizen caught in the crossfire knows. But materially and metaphorically, Wu-Tang's power to create this illusion provides a way out of the hell underneath—especially, but not exclusively, for them.—Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Is often commemorated for its introduction to a distinctive individual to Raekwon and Ghostface; heavy use of the and, as often used by the Wu-Tang Clan, blended with terms picked up on the inner-city streets of New York, as well as several songs based around detailed, loosely-connected stories. In an article for, RZA later illustrated 'The theme of the album is two guys that had enough of the negative life and was ready to move on, but had one more sting to pull off.
They're tired of doing what they doing, but they're trying to make this last quarter million. That's a lot of money in the streets. We gonna retire and see our grandbabies and get our lives together.' In keeping with this loose storyline, the album opens with the introduction track 'Striving For Perfection,' in which Raekwon and 'co-star' Ghostface converse about visions and goals. On the proceeding track 'Knuckleheadz,' Raekwon and Ghostface divide money in the song's intro, and then engage in a, with 's character being killed off at the end of his verse.
The reason for this elimination is because U-God was sentenced to serve several months in prison, which prevented subsequent participation on Cuban Linx. U-God, however, recruited his lyric mentor and childhood friend to take his place later in the album. The much-revered collaboration between Raekwon and Nas portrays prophetic and criminal imagery.Problems playing this file? See.Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Features dialogue-driven interludes in the beginning of several tracks with Raekwon and Ghostface Killah conversing about money, life, crime, and hip hop, among other things. The introduction to 'Glaciers of Ice,' for instance, involves Ghostface addressing his plans and methods of Wallabee-styled. In a 2005 interview, Ghostface Killah explained 'We was in the car one day, driving around with the DAT machine with a microphone and we just started talking shit about how we're gonna do it this summer with the Clarks.
The dyeing was something I was doing already. I'm an inventor. Niggas can't fuck with me when it comes to style. Only nigga that is right there with me is probably. Other than that, I'm boss.'
The album ends with the song 'North Star,' which serves as a ' type of song. In regard to this track and 's inclusion, RZA later remarked 'The idea is Rae did everything he had to do. Everything is over now. The job is over. Mission is over, it's a perfect closing to the album. Popa Wu was a very smart mentor in the younger days to me.
Everybody had dibs and dabs of knowledge of self, I brought him in to be a mentor to these men like, 'I love them and you the only person I know that have the intelligence to keep them in sync with knowledge.' It's very poisonous unless they got proper guidance.
He was the smartest man I'd ever met at a certain time in my life.' Raekwon further commented 'North Star' was a track I really, really wanted on my album. It was a track that I felt a vibe of it was motion picture-like.'
The RZA-produced track has an uptempo beat and features a verse by Ghostface Killah, the album's 'co-star'.Problems playing this file? See.Though several songs, such as 'Glaciers of Ice' and 'Incarcerated Scarfaces,' received radio play and music video treatment, only four official singles were released for Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. The first of which was ',' released October 24, 1994. Aside from being the album's first single, it was also the first song recorded for the album, serving as an installment to the soundtrack for the movie. The song features the second recorded appearance of Wu-Tang affiliate, who provides backing vocals. In 1994, 'Heaven & Hell' reached number 32 on the chart, and number 34 on the chart. One year later, it re-entered the Hot Rap Singles chart, peaking at number 21.With 'Glaciers of Ice' as its, the album's second single ' was released June 26, 1995, almost one year after 'Heaven and Hell.'
It had notable chart success, as it peaked at number 43 on the, and number 5 on the Hot Rap Singles chart. Producer RZA later illustrated 'That was me trying to produce like a DJ, produce a breakbeat. Ghost actually asked me to make one of those beats. You listen to old DJ tapes.
That's how I made that song, and he wanted this shit to sound like a breakbeat. He had a rhyme that he knew was going to change the game - that was the verse that got him recognized. 's called up and was like 'Yo, he killed that shit. He ripped that shit.' Serving as the album's most radio-friendly track, ' was released September 25, 1995, with 'Incarcerated Scarfaces' as its B-side. This proved to be the most successful single off the album, as it reached the 37th spot on the Billboard Hot 100, and the fifth spot on the Hot Rap Singles chart. The song uses different flavor variants of ice cream as a metaphor for different races of women.
Raekwon later commented 'we wanted to reach out and let the women know that we respected them as queens. And queens, much like ice cream, come in all different flavors.' The song marks the second appearance of Cappadonna on the album, and serves as his break-through performance, as it would give him commercial exposure.
In regard to his guest spot, Cappadonna later recalled 'I had heard Rae's and Ghost's verses on there. And I had made a joke about me getting on the track, and RZA took it seriously and was like 'Yo, go ahead. ' was the fourth and final single for the album, releasedas a on in early 1996. In regard to the song's lyrics, Raekwon summarized 'this is for the struggling girl who can't understand her man and he a thorough nigga. We wanted to put a girl from the movie The Killer in the skit, at the start of the song, when she said 'I sing for him and he isn't here.' He ain't here, cause he makin' money!
He trying to put some food on the table.' Producer RZA has stated that 'Rainy Dayz' is one of his all-time favorite songs on the album.
Critical reception Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingA−A−8/109.5/104.5/58/10Only Built 4 Cuban Linx was well received by contemporary critics. Magazine's Nicholas Poluhoff said 'Raekwon has always brought his own special flavor to the Wu cipher: he sprays out lyrics like gunfire, forming vivid tales. What truly sets Cuban Linx apart is the sheer abundance of well-written, complex lyrics.'
Poluhoff also praised RZA's production, viewing it as his best yet: 'The tracks are suited to the distinct flow of the Chef, who weaves in and out between beats.' From magazine found Raekwon to be as vivid a lyricist as, 'so vivid you smell the gunpowder and wipe the blood on your shirt', while crediting RZA for 'taking the art form of production to new heights'. Said the songs with other Wu-Tang Clan members are as good as anything on Enter the 36 Chambers and wrote of the music: 'RZA's production sensibilities, sometimes minimal, other times symphonic, pull the listener in despite the chaos. In a genre characterized by, Cuban Linx is a full-blown album where the big picture is just as moving as the compositional stylistic elements.' In magazine, was impressed by Raekwon and Ghostface Killah's use of (as a type of “sweet revenge”) in their lyrics and said they 'bring the best in each other.' Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Has since been ranked by critics and publications as one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time.
(2004) called it essential listening for anyone interested in the Wu-Tang Clan, while Steve Huey from said Raekwon is 'arguably the Wu's best storyteller,' crediting him for 'translating epic themes and narratives of a mafia movie into a startlingly accomplished hip-hop album'. Huey argued the record was possibly the 'best Wu-Tang solo album', along with GZA's, and wrote that like that album, ' Only Built 4 Cuban Linx takes a few listens to reveal the full scope of its lyrical complexities, but it's immensely rewarding in the end.' Legacy and influence Gambinos OB4CL popularized street-related, on the. While this style was originated by in the late 1980s, it didn't completely permeate the hip hop world until the release of OB4CL in 1995. References to Cuban Linx could be heard heavily in following years with several notable changes in hip hop culture. For instance, the album refers to 'Wu-Gambinos' in various occurrences; the term being a name for the 'alter-egos' of the rappers involved in Cuban Linx, and used on various later projects. These alter-egos inspired an already hip-hop world to adopt new names and personae, from Nas' Escobar moniker to 's Frank White counterpart, which he would go on to further utilize upon the release of OB4CL.
A known fan of the Wu, began to refer to himself as Makaveli and gave his crew new names, albeit with a militaristic, dictatorial theme. In regard to Raekwon's innovation of the gambinos, later affirmed 'Raekwon started that.
Rae always had that mobster mentality, always liked to watch gangster movies and read mob books and stuff like that, you know? So he pretty much knew the names of the cats and what they was about. He polished his whole style like that.' Ghostface Killah also touched base on the gambino influence stating 'We done took that to the highest peak. We bonded as a tight family, so niggas is starting to try and do that right now. Everybody thinking they have a strong family.
We opened up the door for a lot of niggas. The shit was just crazy on how it came together.' Cristal Another exemplification of Cuban Linx's influence is in the spike in popularity of, an expensive champagne, which was mentioned on the album and touted by Rae and Ghost. It has now become a staple in hip hop, with name-drops that continue to this day. The brand even made its way into popular culture when director, a known affiliate of RZA and the Wu-Tang Clan, goes on a rant about the champagne's quality in his segment of, a film released in the months after Raekwon's album.In regard to this trend, Raekwon later clarified 'We was the first to be talking that Cristal shit. I know that for a fact.
Back then we would go do dinners and sit with president and them up at the label. And our mission would be like, when we sit at the table, we want the best fuckin' wine they got in the building.
We might have asked for some or something and they didn't have it. So we was like 'What the fuck is the next best thing, Steve?' And Steve's like 'Give 'em the next best thing.' They came out with Cristal. Me and Ghost liked the bottle, and the name on the bottle was Louie Roederer. I was like, I'm Lou Diamond, Louie Roederer.
Me and Ghost is loving how the bottle looked. It cost more than the muthafuckin' other, so we was like, Cristal, nigga! That's our new shit!' Hip hop albums Ironically enough, despite Raekwon and Ghost's warning on 'Shark Niggas (Biters)' to 'be original', OB4CL's influence spawned a countless number of albums with many of the adopted principles that it set in place.
The year following its release, in 1996, released his debut album, which describes a lavish, Cristal-drinking mobster persona and deals with the subjects of street crime and getting out of drug-dealing and into the rap game, much like the topics covered on OB4CL. Jay-Z would later reference Cuban Linx in his 2009 song ' by stating 'Wu-Tang gangbanged it, Meth ate / Rae took on a date with the Purple Tape / passed it on to Ason, then Ghostface / they had a hell of a run,.' Raekwon later commented in an interview 'Jay was a student of our shit and what we accomplished in those days. He'll tell you that himself.' The same year, highly acclaimed rapper Nas released, revising his image to incorporate the Mafia posturing of Raekwon; adopting the Mafioso moniker 'Nas Escobar' bestowed upon him by his guest appearance on Cuban Linx. 1996 also saw the releases of Ghostface Killah's debut album, which loosely covers some of the topics on Cuban Linx, and also 's second major-label album, which showcased the duo's interpretation of the Cuban Linx demeanor, and featured contributions from Raekwon, Method Man, and Nas. In 1997, The Notorious B.I.G.
Revamped his image into that of a gun-toting, big-money making, mob-commanding kingpin, most notably on the songs 'Niggas Bleed', 'What's Beef', 'My Downfall', and 'I Love the Dough' featuring Jay-Z (previously mentioned); Nas, then with, put out a similarly minded album that year in.The influence of Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Continued through into the 2000s with other albums, such as ' and Jay-Z's, continuing to find success following the album's overall structure and premise. Though Cuban Linx would prove to be highly influential, Raekwon later revealed that he had no intentions for this impact, stating 'Really, I was just trying to make something worth purchasing and worth respecting.'
Sequel After two solo projects that were both critically and commercially unsuccessful, Raekwon announced a sequel to Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. In late 2005. The sequel was highly anticipated for nearly four years since its original announcement and fourteen years after the release of the original, appearing in XXL 's top 10 list of most anticipated albums in 2007. Was released in 2009 to critical acclaim.
Track listing. All tracks produced by.No.TitleLength1.' Striving for Perfection'1:432.' Knuckleheadz' (featuring and )4:033.' Knowledge God'4:244.' ' (featuring Ghostface Killah)3:475.' Incarcerated Scarfaces'4:426.'
' (featuring Ghostface Killah and )6:027.' Guillotine (Swordz)' (featuring, Ghostface Killah and )4:228.' (Remix)' (featuring Ghostface Killah)5:389.' Shark Niggas (Biters)'1:3810.' Ice Water' (featuring Ghostface Killah and )3:3811.'
Glaciers of Ice' (featuring and Ghostface Killah)5:2012.' Verbal Intercourse' (featuring and Ghostface Killah)3:3113.' Wisdom Body' (featuring Ghostface Killah)2:3814.'
Spot Rusherz'3:1315.' ' (featuring, Ghostface Killah and Cappadonna)4:1316.' Wu-Gambinos' (featuring Method Man, Masta Killa and Ghostface Killah)5:3917.' ' (featuring Ghostface Killah)4:56Total length:69:30Bonus track (CD only)No.TitleLength18.' New York: 84.
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Retrieved 2016-04-20. ^ The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. Special Collectors Issue (2012).
Retrieved 2012-04-24. ^ Arnold, Paul W.; et al. (May 2005). Retrieved 2009-12-31.
^ (2000). Retrieved September 6, 2009.
Article. Retrieved on 2010-03-01. ^ Mr. S (February 3, 2001). Retrieved on 2011-05-31. ^ Huey, Steve.
Retrieved September 6, 2009. ^. Retrieved 2010-09-05. Ma, David. Retrieved 2010-07-27. Mukherjee, Tiarra (August 18, 1995).
Retrieved September 6, 2009. ^ (August 20, 1995). Retrieved September 6, 2009. Cowan, Andy (February 2016).
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August 19, 1995. Bromwich, Jonah (May 27, 2018). Retrieved May 27, 2018. ^ Relic, Peter (2004).
In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). P. Poluhoff, Nicholas (September 1995). 'Raekwon the Chef featuring Ghost Face: Only Built 4 Cuban Linx'. (72): 97. ^ (November 1995). Retrieved September 6, 2009.
Poluhoff, Nicholas.: 97. September 1995. Archived from on 2009-09-06. Hampton, Dream.: 180. September 1995.
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January 1996. (subscription required)See also.References. Nathan Brackett, Christian Hoard (2004). Simon and Schuster.External links. at. at.
Name: Raekwon – Only Built 4 Cuban LinxGenre: Rap Hip-HopYear: 1995Label: Loud / RCAFeaturing: Ghostface Killah, U-God, Blue Raspberry, Inspectah Deck, GZA, Cappadonna, Masta Killa, Nas, Method Man, RZAProducers: RZA (also exec.), Mitchell Diggs (exec.), Oli Grant (exec.)Format: mp3 320 kbpsDuration: 00:69:30Size: 168 MBTrackList:01 Striving For Perfection02 Knuckleheadz (feat. Ghostface Killah & U-God)03 Knowledge God04 Criminology (feat. Ghostface Killah)05 Incarcerated Scarfaces06 Rainy Dayz (feat. Ghostface Killah & Blue Raspberry)07 Guillitine (Swordz) (feat. Inspectah Deck, Ghostface Killah & GZA)08 Can It Be All So Simple (Remix) (feat. Ghostface Killah)09 Smark Niggas (Biters)10 Ice Water (feat. Ghostface Killah & Cappadonna)11 Glaciers Of Ice (feat.
Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah)12 Verbal Intercours (feat. Nas & Ghostface Killah)13 Wisdom Body (feat.
Ghostface Killah)14 Spot Rusherz15 Ice Cream (feat. Ghostface Killah, Cappadonna & Method Man)16 Wu-Gambinos (feat. Method Man, RZA, Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah)17 Heaven & Hell (feat.
Ghostface Killah)18 North Star (Jewels)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pRHZm8LPZQ.
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