
Enter the Wu Tang (36 Chambers) is of course not a work of pure comedy and contains a very serious, desperate undertone, but perhaps nowhere more than on C.R.E.A.M. These tales may or may not be autobiographical and they contain little of the kung fu inspired weirdness of some other tracks from the Wu Tang Clan’s ground-breaking debut album. In the two verses Raekwon and Inspectah Deck tell two different tales of getting money while living in poverty. What can you do when cash rules everything around you? That is a question at the heart of C.R.E.A.M. Lead vocals by Method Man (intro and chorus), Raekwon (intro and first verse) & Inspectah Deck (second verse). Place in the Acclaimed Music Song Poll 2015: Not ranked. Ranks higher than Connection by Elastica, but lower than Digital Witness by St. Song ranking on Acclaimed Music in the artist’s discography: 2nd. “Neglected, but now, but yo, it gots to be accepted/ That what? That life is hectic”ħ9.
#WU TANG CLAN CREAM SERIES#
So in reverse to other topics on this site I say: “Please comment on this song, rating is optional”.Įarlier entries of this series can be found here. I want it to be about people’s personal reviews and hopefully discussions. You are free to rate the song each week, but I’ll do nothing with this rating. The idea for this topic came to me because I wanted to think of a way to engage more actively with the very large top 6000 songs that Henrik has compiled for us, while still keeping it accessible and free of any game elements. The only other rule in this is that after an artist has had a turn, he can’t appear for another ten weeks. The song is chosen completely at random, through, making the selections hopefully very varied. In this, every week another song from the Acclaimed Music song top 6000 is selected for discussion. This topic is part of the weekly 6000 songs, 6000 opinions.
