Wu Tang Clan Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Wu Tang Clan. Here they are! All 11 of them:

There should be a Stage IV of black identity—Unmitigated Blackness. I’m not sure what Unmitigated Blackness is, but whatever it is, it doesn’t sell. On the surface Unmitigated Blackness is a seeming unwillingness to succeed. It’s Donald Goines, Chester Himes, Abbey Lincoln, Marcus Garvey, Alfre Woodard, and the serious black actor. It’s Tiparillos, chitterlings, and a night in jail. It’s the crossover dribble and wearing house shoes outside. It’s “whereas” and “things of that nature.” It’s our beautiful hands and our fucked-up feet. Unmitigated Blackness is simply not giving a fuck. Clarence Cooper, Charlie Parker, Richard Pryor, Maya Deren, Sun Ra, Mizoguchi, Frida Kahlo, black-and-white Godard, Céline, Gong Li, David Hammons, Björk, and the Wu-Tang Clan in any of their hooded permutations. Unmitigated Blackness is essays passing for fiction. It’s the realization that there are no absolutes, except when there are. It’s the acceptance of contradiction not being a sin and a crime but a human frailty like split ends and libertarianism. Unmitigated Blackness is coming to the realization that as fucked up and meaningless as it all is, sometimes it’s the nihilism that makes life worth living. Sitting
Paul Beatty (The Sellout)
My boys and I find a corner booth and I play 'Can It Be All So Simple' because I'm feeling nostalgic for a very particular brand of Wu-Tang Clan, and this is it. One of those Wu songs that really isn't about anything other than the fact that none of us can be as we were when we were young. That a great deal of us have seen too much or heard too much or lived through too much to wrestle our innocence back from whatever cynicism or heartbreak has grown in its place.
Hanif Abdurraqib (A Little Devil in America: Notes in Praise of Black Performance)
And that’s why we should stop. Let’s stop before everything went so wrong. Let’s hold time still. Let’s remember him as he was on Enter—not crazy at all, only brilliant and brave, the most radical member of a radical Clan, whose apparent lack of control was predicated on the most complete control. Let’s remember him whip-thin, his head tilted, gold teeth showing, his eyes aggressively wide, wiry dreads moving away from his scalp like spilt lines of paint or the tentacular extrusions of his brilliant Black mind. Let’s let him win. Let’s remember those vocals, uninhibited by any rules except those he chose. Let’s focus always on the exhilaration, the feeling we had when we first heard him, the disbelief, the laughter which bubbled up like it does in children. Not the laughter of mockery, but the laughter of pure joy, the laughter of disbelief and amazement, the laughter which is all you can manage when confronted by the undeniable, surprising beauty of the world. Let’s let him breathe.
Will Ashon (Chamber Music: Enter the Wu-Tang (in 36 Pieces))
NEW YORK (22. decembar) Lou Reedov album “New York” dobio sam na poklon za rođendan 1990. godine, dok se zagrijavao haos iz kojega do danas nismo izašli. Ništa nisam slutio, danima sam svakodnevno slušao tu ploču i sve na njoj volio. Kad sam prestao, nisam je više niti jednom stavio na gramofon. Uvijek je nešto bilo preče od nje. Večeras sam je izvadio iz najlona. Na vinilu se skupila sitna prašina, decenijama stara. Četka ju je lako pokupila i ploča je zasvirala kao nova. I dalje znam svaki refren, riff, solo na gitari, i dalje mi se sve na toj ploči sviđa. Kao da se ništa nije promijenilo od tada. A onda vidim posvetu na omotu. Mnogi dragi ljudi odavno su otišli iz Bosne i Hercegovine. Prije nekoliko godina bio sam u New Yorku, nakratko, možda tri ili četiri dana. Odlučio sam da ne obilazim turističke lokacije. Lutao sam, bez ikakvog plana, nasumično skretao u uličice, kratko odmarao u barovima i Starbucks kafeima, pa nastavljao pješačenje. Mislio sam da tako mogu bolje osjetiti taj veliki grad. Moje lutanje nije bilo sasvim bez cilja, tražio sam prodavnicu ploča. Planirao sam da kupim neku tipičnu njujoršku ploču, albume Ramonesa ili New York Dollsa, “Marquee Moon” od Television, ili bilo koji Reedov album. Želio sam to bude prvo izdanje, nije trebalo biti pretjerano očuvano, ne bi mi smetale ni sitne ogrebotine niti ljepljiva traka, tražio sam predmet sa tragom vremena na sebi. Bio bi to, mislio sam, idealan suvenir. Našao sam tobacco shop u kojem je desetak tipova nalik na Wu Tang Clan ozbiljno pućkalo iz lula, comic shop sa figurama Batmana od par hiljada dolara, popio kafu sa rastafarijancem od tri metra koji se zove Dino i kojem je bilo jako smiješno moje ime na Starbucks čaši... U ulici skupih cipela, stisnutu između dva bara sa live muzikom, naišao sam na neobičnu prodavnicu. U izlogu je imala samo kartonske maske klaunova, suncobran, ogromne rugby lopte i ofucane plišane pse, a unutra gomilu starih novina u koje je zabodena američka zastava. Prodavac sa staromodnim cvikerom na nosu razgledao je staklenu bočicu kao da je dragulj. Sada nisam siguran, možda je ta prodavnica bila u Washingtonu ili nije bila nigdje, ali tako je se sjećam. Bilo kako bilo, prodavnicu ploča koju sam tražio, nisam uspio naći. Odavno je prošla ponoć i odjednom sam shvatio da sam zaboravio broj avenije, ulice, pa i naziv hotela. Možda zbog jet laga, uzbuđenja, umora, par votki i previše kafe? Ne znam, ali nisam brinuo, vjerovao sam da ću se sjetiti tokom večeri. Stao sam ispred jedne pepeljare na trotoaru, zapalio cigaretu da bih razmislio, okrenuo se i vidio da se nalazim baš ispred hotela u kojem sam odsjeo. Sergej Dovlatov je New York uporedio sa brodom napunjenim milionima putnika, gradom toliko raznolikim da svaki došljak pomisli da u njemu može pronaći kutak za sebe. Odatle, pisao je, čovjek može pobjeći samo na mjesec. Meni u New Yorku niti u jednom momentu nije bilo neugodno. Ništa me nije plašilo u tom gradu, niti sam se u njemu osjećao kao stranac. Kući sam donio samo otvarač za flaše u obliku “Les Paula” i moju fotografiju ulaza u podzemnu željeznicu, koji izgleda baš kao onaj sa omota albuma “Loaded” grupe Velvet Underground. Donio sam i ovu mutnu, nepouzdanu uspomenu. Življe sjećanje na New York daje mi moja stara “Jugoton” ploča.
Selvedin Avdić (Mali smakovi: kako se zaista desilo?)
In Japan they call me Ichiban, Wu Tang Clan, Numba One!
Method Man
Gross and Neumann briefly became obsessed with buying a coveted Wu Tang Clan rap album of which only a single copy was made.
Eliot Brown (The Cult of We: WeWork, Adam Neumann, and the Great Startup Delusion)
Ultra-violet shine blind forensics I inspect view through the future see millennium
Wu Tang Clan
Ultra-violet shine blind forensics I inspect view through the future see millennium
The Wu Tang Clan
Cash, Rules, Everything, Around, Me C.R.E.A.M. Get the money Dollar, dollar bill y'all
Wu-Tang Clan
Unmitigated Blackness is simply not giving a fuck. Clarence Cooper, Charlie Parker, Richard Pryor, Maya Deren, Sun Ra, Mizoguchi, Frida Kahlo, black-and-white Godard, Céline, Gong Li, David Hammons, Björk, and the Wu-Tang Clan in any of their hooded permutations.
Paul Beatty (The Sellout)
They would need a logo for the app, something that instantly enticed users to download and use Picaboo. Reggie and Evan sat together and created the logo over the course of a few hours, going back and forth on ways to symbolize the disappearing nature of the app. They settled on a friendly ghost who was smiling and sticking out its tongue. Evan drew the ghost in Adobe InDesign while Reggie tossed in ideas. Reggie named the ghost Ghostface Chillah, after the Wu-Tang Clan rapper Ghostface Killah. Evan studied the hundred most popular apps in the app store and noticed that none had yellow logos. To make Picaboo stand out, he put the Ghostface Chillah logo on a bright yellow background. Reggie slapped the logo on Facebook and Twitter pages he made for the app. While Evan worked hard on the design and vision for the product and Bobby coded, Reggie contributed less. Plenty of successful Silicon Valley founders do not write code; but they play other roles, relentless hustling in the early days of their companies, dominating nontechnical jobs like marketing and user growth. Reggie simply wasn’t doing that. Having recently turned twenty-one, he wanted to enjoy the Los Angeles nightlife, and he stayed out into the wee hours of the morning. While Evan and Bobby lived the plot of Silicon Valley, Reggie was more Entourage. Evan had always remembered and valued what Clarence Carter had told him when he worked at Red Bull, “When everyone is tired and the night is over, who stays and helps out? Because those are your true friends. Those are the hard workers, the people that believe that working hard is the right thing to do.” His co-founders felt Reggie was not pulling his weight, and it was beginning to cause resentment.
Billy Gallagher (How to Turn Down a Billion Dollars: The Snapchat Story)