Tag: anniversary

Soul Music and Sirens: The Story Behind the Wu-Tang Clan’s ‘36 Chambers’

With their 1993 debut album, “Enter the Wu-Tang,” the Wu-Tang Clan stormed onto the hip-hop scene with an aggressive message and a soulful sound. They grew up in crack-era New York City, a time and place of widespread suffering and even wider public indifference, with the soul records of the 1960s and ‘70s ringing in their ears. Songs like Booker T. & the M.G.’s “Children, Don’t Get Weary” and Gladys Knight & The Pips’ “I Feel A Song (In My Heart)” promoted peace, positivity, tenderness, and love from their stereo speakers, as violence, discord, and hopelessness spread like tenement fires outside their windows. Out of this surreal and jarring clash, the Wu-Tang built their world.

It was a grimy and mesmerizing one, purposefully dark and dense with inscrutable symbols. They spoke their own language, re-christened their home boroughs (Staten Island became “Shaolin”), and lived by their own mythology, borrowed heavily from kung fu films and Sun Tzu’s The Art of War. For their name, they took inspiration from the Chinese swordsmen of Wudang Mountain, who sought to anticipate their enemies’ movements before they made them. They weren’t a brotherhood. They were a swarm of killer bees.

In 1993, the group was busy pushing copies of their underground hit single “Protect Ya Neck” out of vans when RZA negotiated a historic contract with Loud Records, one that allowed each individual member to sign with rival labels for their solo records. The Wu’s first release for Loud, “Enter the Wu-Tang”, was an enormous success and pushed the band up from hip-hop’s underground scene and into the mainstream. This leap, from underground to mainstream, was amorphous at the time, and the Wu-Tang helped shape what it would look, sound, and feel like. It would feel like a hostile takeover, a regime change. “PLO-style,” the man calling himself Ghostface yelled at the outset of the album.

Photo by Danny Hastings, Courtesy of Sony Music

The Wu might have signed to multiple major labels, but they were “rugged,” “rough,” “raw.” They wanted to look unpolished, unpredictable, unprepared, when in fact they had planned their strategy far in advance — “If y’all give me five years of your life, I promise in five years I’m gonna take us to the top,” RZA told them. In this strategy, they were again turning to kung fu movies by taking a page from the Drunken Master, who throws his opponents off by seeming foolish and erratic.

RZA was not, strictly speaking, the leader of this fractious group, but the vision for their total takeover was his, and, most crucially, so was the group’s sound. He was something completely new to rap: a sonic mastermind who wasn’t fussy about fidelity. Over on the West Coast, Dr. Dre polished every corner of his records until they gleamed like a brand-new Bentley. Sit back, relax, and take this ride, Dre commanded. Sitting back and relaxing in Wu-Tang’s world was not an option: They wanted you wild-eyed and disoriented, fight-or-flight hormones coursing through your system.

To evoke this sensation, RZA savored sounds that felt septic, rusted and roughly used. If that meant he had to take a pristine piece of symphonic soul like The Intruders’ “Cowboys to Girls” and brutalize it until it sounded like it was spilling out of a turned-over garbage can, so be it. (You can hear the result in the sonic melee of “Protect Ya Neck.”) His drum hits sounded like backfiring cars. Tellingly, it was soul music that received the roughest treatment in his hands—it was too beautiful, perhaps, to exist in Shaolin on its own.

Photo by Danny Hastings, Courtesy of Sony Music

The nine MCs each had a distinct style but the group’s larger vision remained pure—to detail an existence ruled by desperation and determination, full of heartbreaks and defeats. Raekwon’s opening verse on the iconic “C.R.E.A.M.” recalls a life of small-time crime, “sticking up white boys in ball courts.” The result? “My life got no better.”

RZA built the beat for “C.R.E.A.M.” from a sample of The Charmels’ Stax/Volt girl group song “As Long As I’ve Got You,” a forgotten almost-hit from 1967. In RZA’s hands, the lovestruck source song was just another broken dream. He snatched up its first two seconds in his sampler and laid those piano notes underneath the track like glass shards crunching under Raekwon’s feet. Nothing in the song is larger-than-life or glamorous. Inspectah Deck opens his verse yelling that it has been “twenty-two long hard years, and I’m still struggling.” Compare that to the cool, laid-back tracks contemporaries like Snoop Dogg were releasing at the time.

The record’s massive, earth-shaking tremors influenced everything that followed. It’s rare that you can say this sort of thing about an album without hyperbole, but “Enter The Wu-Tang” was truly seismic. Before its release, New York rap was drifting into softer, neater, jazzier circles, receding from the national stage while Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg’s G-Funk conquered the country. “Enter The Wu-Tang” rescued New York rap back from obscurity and revolutionized its aesthetic. Now it was dark, frenetic, intricate and full of threats both veiled and open. In the merciless way of hip-hop, every other New York rap record of the time instantly felt pat, tame, and outdated by comparison.

If a pop cultural moment hits with just enough force, at the exact right time, it will inscribe itself so deeply into our minds that it will keep on shocking people, over and over again, as the years mount. Think of Miles Davis’s Kind of Blue”; think of Led Zeppelin’s first LP. “Enter The Wu-Tang” was so monumental upon release that it now lies in wait, ready for each new generation of converts to come its way.

Whether it’s your first or fortieth experience, listen to and celebrate the legendary album, Enter the Wu-Tang, today.

– Jayson Greene 

Remember 50 Iconic Years of “Hey Jude” with Spotify’s Top 10 List of Cover Songs

Some songs are so iconic, the stories behind them are just as famous as the stories told within them. That’s certainly the case with “Hey Jude,” the 1968 Beatles classic that redefined what a pop single could be. Clocking in at over seven minutes in length, the epic track—an emotionally complex, triumphant celebration of the human spirit—was written by Sir Paul McCartney after a visit with John Lennon’s young son, Julian.

As Sir Paul told Billboard in 2015, he met with Julian just after John and his first wife, Cynthia, divorced. “It came into my mind: ‘Hey, Jules, don’t make it bad,’” he remembered. “It’s a song of hopefulness.” “Jules” turned into “Jude” simply because Sir Paul liked the name. “I’d heard it in a musical—Carousel, I think.”

But “Hey Jude” isn’t entirely about Julian Lennon. As Sir Paul explained to Billboard, he only references the then-five-year-old Julian in “the first lines.” Though he’s never confirmed nor denied rumors about the song’s additional meaning, John Lennon famously believed that his bandmate wrote “Hey Jude” about his new relationship with Yoko Ono (perhaps alluded to with the line, “you have found her, now go and get her”).

Regardless of its true meaning, though, “Hey Jude” has remained part of the fabric of our collective imagination, and has been covered by artists across countless genres. So in honor of the song’s release exactly 50 years ago, we rounded up Spotify’s top 10 most-streamed versions. From Wilson Pickett’s warm, soulful rendition to an appropriately theatrical take from the cast of Glee, each song on our list offers its own impassioned voice and new perspective.

Don’t make it bad, Beatles fans: Stream them all below.

1. Wilson Pickett

2. Joe Anderson (from Across the Universe)

3. The Silver Beetles

4. Paul McCartney

5. The Apples

6. Erik Grönwall

7. Glee Cast (from Glee)

8. Monique Kessous

9. Eric Anderson

10. The Beatles Greatest Hits Performed by the Frank Berman Band

Honorable Mention: Elvis Presley’s haunting, gospel-tinged rendition from 1972.

And of course, the iconic, original “Hey Jude” itself, released by the Beatles in August 1968.

100 Years of Beauty: Kristin Chenoweth On Leonard Bernstein’s Legacy

With legendary composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein’s (1918–1990) 100th birthday on August 25, we set out to search the world of entertainment for those who found inspiration in his work. As it turned out, we didn’t have to look too hard. Avid Bernstein fans are always game to talk about his many works, ranging from beloved musicals such as West Side Story and Peter Pan, to classic operettas like Candide. But Bernstein didn’t just contribute lasting scores and scripts: He also had a profound influence on the way we listen to music.

The author, pianist, and lecturer has inspired generations of composers, songwriters, singers, and artists, including Broadway standout Kristin Chenoweth. Kristin, an Emmy and Tony Award-winning actress and coloratura soprano, is perhaps best known for originating the character of Glinda in Wicked, and for her roles in TV shows Pushing Daisies and The West Wing. For Kristin, Bernstein’s impact spans from encouraging originality, to engaging youth in the classics, and using music to make the world a better place.

Remembering a Legend—And His Legacy

Kristin often cites female singers across time and genres as role models—including Judy Garland, Sandi Patty, Dolly Parton, Bernadette Peters, and Dinah Washington—but credits Bernstein as her favorite composer. “My biggest regret in life is that I was too young to meet him,” she says. Every year on his birthday, the singer takes some time to recognize Bernstein, whether by quoting him in a speech or performing one of his works.

“My favorite piece that I’ve done [to honor him] is an aria from the operetta Candide,” she says. “It’s called ‘Glitter and Be Gay.’ I just love Candide; it’s one of my top-three pieces that he composed. I also love Trouble in Tahiti, which is a very cool little opera that he did. And ‘The Masque.’ They’re all very different, and that to me shows what kind of composer he was and what kind of mark he left on the world.”

One of Bernstein’s best-known works is West Side Story. Set in New York City, the loose take on Romeo and Juliet portrayed the gang war between the Jets and the Sharks, and first premiered in 1957. In its 2009–2011 Broadway revival, instead of English, the Puerto Rican characters’ lines were translated to Spanish, a twist that revamped the musical for a modern audience. The director stayed true to the material while making the show accessible for new fans—in a way Bernstein himself would have loved, Kristin says.

Modern theater-goers now enjoy timeless classics in venues other than the theater, like at concerts. For Kristin, singing Bernstein’s songs at her own shows means exposing audiences to a new genre or composer. She’s encouraging other artists to do it, too: “I would love to see a country band do a classic standard just like I sing country music or pop music in my concerts. I think there are no more rules anymore. And if Leonard Bernstein were alive today, he would one hundred percent agree.”

The Legacy of Tha Carter III, 10 Years Later

It’s been 10 years since the debut of Lil Wayne’s groundbreaking “Tha Carter III,” but that tattooed baby face on the album cover is as fresh as ever. From its first leak until now, the album has paved the way for up-and-coming rappers and left a lasting imprint on hip-hop.

The Grammy Award-winning Best Rap Album, which originally dropped Sunday, June 10, 2008, features the hit singles “Lollipop” and “A Milli,” along with “Mrs. Officer” and Grammy-nominated hit “Mr. Carter.” Lil Wayne had already been on the scene with a long stream of mixtapes, but it was “Tha Carter III”—also known by fans as C3—that secured his legacy.

“C3 wasn’t just an album, it was a moment—that stretch in time where many feel Weezy realized his self-fulfilling prophecy of becoming the best rapper alive,” says Carl Chery, Creative Director and Head of Urban Music at Spotify. “Weezy has since become a benchmark in hip-hop. Every artist aspires to drop Tha Carter III.”

The now-iconic album went platinum only one week after its debut and is featured on Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. And the album is still bumping on its 10th anniversary: Streaming numbers have consistently increased on Spotify since “Carter III” appeared on the platform in 2010. According to Chery, the standout album still influences modern rappers.

“Today’s hip-hop landscape is filled with artists with Lil Wayne’s DNA,” he says. “It was special to watch him reinvent himself into a super lyricist, redefine the mixtape grind and give us countless memorable guest verses leading up to ‘Tha Carter III.’”

To celebrate the album’s anniversary and success, we teamed up with some of today’s biggest rappers, including Chance The RapperWiz KhalifaMigosLil Yachty, and Lil Uzi Vertto recreate Tha Carter III’s iconic album cover art. While the original cover features an image of young Dwayne Michael Carter Jr. (Lil Wayne) fitted in a dapper suit, our rappers pay homage to it by inserting their own personal childhood photos — a testament to its profound influence on their artistic careers.

“With a career as illustrious as Wayne’s, we thought it was paramount to give an artist ‘the flowers’ while they can still smell them,” says Brittany Lewis, Creative Manager, Hip-Hop and R&B.

The musicians also shared their thoughts on how “Tha Carter III” inspired each of them—and ultimately the entire rap genre.