Wu-Tang Clan: A Resume
| Rockin' and ringin' |
Advertiser Staff
Why is it so hard to get the members of the Wu-Tang Clan together for group projects like the upcoming "8 Diagrams" CD and the "Rock the Bells" concert tour? Easy: solo successes. Each member of the clan can claim some degree of individual success in music — and even film and television — outside the Wu.
"We wasn't designed as a group that's gonna always do group things," said Raekwon, in Wu-Tang's electronic press kit. "We all got different goals. We all got different motivations. We all got different styles."
Of its five studio albums, Wu-Tang has collected a Billboard Top 200 album chart No. 1 disc (1997's "Wu-Tang Forever") and two Billboard R&B/hip-hop album chart-toppers ("Wu-Tang Forever" and 2000's "The W").
Here's a look at a few of the notable solo projects current Wu members have done outside the clan.
GHOSTFACE KILLAH
ALBUMS
FILM AND TELEVISION
"Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood" (1996), "Black And White" (1999), "The Source Awards" episode of "30 Rock" (2006)
GZA
ALBUMS
FILM
"Coffee and Cigarettes" (2004)
INSPECTAH DECK
ALBUMS
MASTA KILLA
ALBUMS
METHOD MAN
ALBUMS
FILM AND TELEVISION
"Garden State" (2004), "Soul Plane" (2004), "How High" (2001), "Method and Red" television series with tour mate Redman (2004), television appearances in "Oz," "The Wire," "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation"
GRAMMY AWARD
Best rap performance by a duo or group for "I'll Be There For You/You're All I Need To Get By" (with Mary J. Blige) (1995)
RAEKWON
ALBUMS
RZA
ALBUMS
FILM AND TELEVISION
"Coffee and Cigarettes" (2004), "Derailed" (2005), "American Gangster" (2007); film scores for "Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai" (1999), "Blade: Blade Trinity" (2004), "Kill Bill Vols. 1 & 2" (2003-04)
U-GOD
ALBUM