Ghostface Killah: Difference between revisions

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==Rivalries==
==Rivalries==
===The Notorious B.I.G.===
===The Notorious B.I.G.===
Ghostface and [[Raekwon]] "subliminally" dissed [[The Notorious B.I.G.]] on [[1995]]'s ''[[Only Built 4 Cuban Linx...]]'' skit, "Shark Niggaz (Biters)", wherein the pair make angry references to [[Bad Boy Records]]' use of cover art motif from [[Nas]]' [[Illmatic|debut]] (a portrait of the artist as a child, although Big's cover is of his then-infant daughter) for B.I.G.'s ''[[Ready To Die]]'' album. [[Nas]] refers to this episode in his song "Last Real Nigga Alive" (from 2002's ''[[God's Son]]''), where he confirms the tensions between Raekwon, Ghost and Biggie. Despite this conflict, Biggie was a fan of the [[Wu-Tang Clan]], collaborating with [[Method Man]] and [[The RZA]] on his first and second albums respectively and performing live with [[Ol' Dirty Bastard]] on occasion. As Method Man would say in a [[2004]] [[XXL]] interview, Ghostface and Raekwon "don't like anybody". Despite this, perhaps out of respect for the dead, a bonus track featuring the late B.I.G. (as well as Raekwon) was included on Ghostface's [[2006]] album ''[[Fishscale]]''.
Ghostface and [[Raekwon]] "subliminally" dissed [[The Notorious B.I.G.]] on [[1995]]'s ''[[Only Built 4 Cuban Linx...]]'' skit, "Shark Niggaz (Biters)", wherein the pair make angry references to [[Bad Boy Records]]' use of cover art motif from [[Nas]]' [[Illmatic|debut]] (a portrait of the artist as a child, although Big's cover is of his then-infant daughter) for B.I.G.'s ''[[Ready To Die]]'' album. [[Nas]] refers to this episode in his song "Last Real Nigga Alive" (from 2002's ''[[God's Son]]''), where he confirms the tensions between Raekwon, Ghost and Biggie. Despite this conflict, Biggie was a fan of the [[Wu-Tang Clan]], collaborating with [[Method Man]] and [[The RZA]] on his first and second albums respectively and performing live with [[Ol' Dirty Bastard]] on occasion. As Method Man would say in a [[2004]] [[XXL]] interview, Ghostface and Raekwon "don't like anybody". However, Ghost has gone on record praising Biggie in two later albums. On "Ghost Deini" from "[[Supreme Clientele]]" he croons "Tupac, Biggie/ohh how we miss you so/We want y'all both to know/We really love you so" and a bonus track featuring the late B.I.G. (as well as Raekwon) was included on Ghostface's [[2006]] album ''[[Fishscale]]''.


===50 Cent===
===50 Cent===

Revision as of 23:10, 7 March 2008

Template:Infobox musical artist 2

Dennis Coles (born May 9, 1970), better known by the stage name Ghostface Killah, is an American rapper revered for his lyrical dexterity and vivid imagination.[citation needed] Ghostface first rose to fame as a member of the Wu-Tang Clan hip hop collective. After the group achieved breakthrough success in the early- to mid-1990s, each member was free to pursue solo careers.

Career

Ghostface Killah was born in Staten Island, New York. He debuted with the rest of the Wu-Tang Clan on their critically acclaimed debut, 1993's Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers). A roommate of Wu-Tang founder The RZA, Ghostface helped bring together the other seven members, and would function as executive producer on all the Wu-Tang Clan releases.

File:Ghostandgza.jpg
Promotional photo of GZA and Ghostface for Enter the Wu-Tang

In 1995, Ghostface would guest star extensively on fellow Clan member Raekwon's debut album, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx.... He also contributed songs to the Sunset Park and Don't Be A Menace To South Central While Drinking Your Juice In The Hood soundtracks, which would be included on his first solo LP, Ironman, in 1996. The album, which debuted at #2 on the Billboard 200, had a more pronounced soul influence (particularly 1970s soul) than previous Wu-Tang releases, and Ghostface's future albums would continue this stylistic trait.

Ghostface became well-known for both his up-tempo, seemingly indecipherable stream-of-consciousness rap and, later in his career, for his emotionally charged raps. In 1996 he would discover that he was diabetic, a condition that would severely weaken his health. According to "Trials of Life", a 2007 song with fellow New York rapper Prodigy (himself a sickle-cell anemic), Ghostface assumed he had been stricken by a sexually transmitted disease until he received the diabetes diagnosis. This assumption was brought on by a rapid weightloss he experienced and that he had "went raw on plenty".[1]

He would return in 2000 with his follow-up to Ironman, Supreme Clientele, which was critically acclaimed by both hip hop enthusiasts and mainstream critics[citation needed], and largely credited as reviving the waning Wu-Tang dynasty. "Cherchez LaGhost", a single off the album, became a minor club hit, and the sentimental "Child's Play" brought numerous comparisons with Slick Rick.

Ghostface wasted little time in recording his next album, the heavily R&B-influenced Bulletproof Wallets, released a year after Supreme Clientele. He had another minor club hit with "Flowers", which features guest vocals from fellow Wu-Tang members Method Man and Raekwon, although the album would be met with disappointing sales and reviews[citation needed].

Signing with Def Jam Records, Ghostface (officially but temporarily dropping the "Killah") released The Pretty Toney Album in April 2004. The album, while containing two RZA productions, featured none of the Clan; instead, it featured collaborations with Missy Elliott, D-Block and Jacki-O. The singles "Tush" and "Run", the collaborations with Missy and Jadakiss respectively, achieved moderate success in the clubs and charts, and the album was featured on numerous "best of the year" lists, including number nine on Pitchfork Media's.[2] Ghostface also appeared on the track "On My Knees" by UK R&B group The 411, which became a hit in the UK and Australia, and released an album titled 718 (after the Staten Island area code) with a group of his Protégés, the Theodore Unit. In November 2005, Ghostface and Theodore Unit's breakout star Trife Da God released a joint project, Put It On The Line.

In 2006, Ghostface teamed up with underground favorite MF DOOM for a still unreleased album entitled Swift & Changeable. MF DOOM also produced several songs for Ghostface's 2006 album Fishscale, which was once again attributed to "Ghostface Killah". The album debuted strongly, in the #4 position on the US Billboard 200 and at #2 on the R&B charts,[3] the rapper's most auspicious chart showing since the heyday of the Wu-Tang Clan and the release of his solo debut. The album also nearly unanimously received positive reviews. Ghostface embarked on a limited-date tour of US venues in support of the album, performing several of his concerts together with most members of the Wu-Tang Clan.

He has worked with 4Cast to produce his own action figure.[4]

On December 4, 2007 Ghostface released his seventh solo studio album, The Big Doe Rehab.

Ghostface Killah, who is a fan of Iron Man, notably naming an album after the superhero, is appearing in the upcoming Iron Man (film) in a cameo as a Dubyan tycoon.

Technique

During Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... he focused chiefly on imagery and the use of Wu-Tang's distinctive half-Five Percenter half-slang lyrics. Ghost often eschews the use of punchlines or similes for metaphors. He tells highly detailed stories on songs like "Run" and "Yolanda's House."

Jewelry and fashion

Ghostface has an eccentric collection of unique jewelry that he mentions frequently in verse and interviews. Items heavily referenced are his "eagle bracelet", a golden eagle statuette worn on his forearm (which has since been melted down), as well as the "Versace Plate" medallion.

Ghost also has an affinity for Clark's Wallabee shoes. On the cover of his debut album Ironman, he is pictured with Raekwon and Cappadonna holding several pairs of brightly colored Wallabees. Ghost can be heard discussing this technique on the Cuban Linx record, where he describes dying a pair blue and cream.

Aliases

Coles' stage name is derived from the alias of the primary villain from Ninja Checkmate, also known as The Mystery of Chess Boxing (martial arts films had been a major influence on the group).

  • Ghost Face Killer
His original stage name, which has undergone a number of variations:
  • Ghostface Killer
  • Ghostface Killah
  • Ghostface
  • Ghost
  • Tony Starks
Ghostface's Wu-Gambino name, adopted on Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... (1995), is derived from the secret identity of the Marvel Comic's character Iron Man, Tony Stark.
  • Ironman
Ghostface particularly identified with Tony Stark's reliance on the Iron Man armor for sustaining his health, particularly while Ghost was battling diabetes.
  • Pretty Toney
  • P Tone
  • Paisley Fontaine
  • Theodore Deini
  • Talk of New York Tony
  • Captain America
  • Scott Kitner
  • Starkey Love
  • Wally Champ/Wally Don
Ghostface has a love for Clark's Wallabees shoes, as well as custom dying them different colors, evident on the cover of Ironman (1996).
  • Ghost Deini

Rivalries

The Notorious B.I.G.

Ghostface and Raekwon "subliminally" dissed The Notorious B.I.G. on 1995's Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... skit, "Shark Niggaz (Biters)", wherein the pair make angry references to Bad Boy Records' use of cover art motif from Nas' debut (a portrait of the artist as a child, although Big's cover is of his then-infant daughter) for B.I.G.'s Ready To Die album. Nas refers to this episode in his song "Last Real Nigga Alive" (from 2002's God's Son), where he confirms the tensions between Raekwon, Ghost and Biggie. Despite this conflict, Biggie was a fan of the Wu-Tang Clan, collaborating with Method Man and The RZA on his first and second albums respectively and performing live with Ol' Dirty Bastard on occasion. As Method Man would say in a 2004 XXL interview, Ghostface and Raekwon "don't like anybody". However, Ghost has gone on record praising Biggie in two later albums. On "Ghost Deini" from "Supreme Clientele" he croons "Tupac, Biggie/ohh how we miss you so/We want y'all both to know/We really love you so" and a bonus track featuring the late B.I.G. (as well as Raekwon) was included on Ghostface's 2006 album Fishscale.

50 Cent

Ghostface also had a feud with 50 Cent in the late 1990s and early 2000s, but unlike other beefs involving Fifty which are typically played out in front of the media, this was not as highly-publicized. On 50 Cent's debut record How To Rob (An Industry Nigga), in which he aims insults at many high-profile rappers and R&B singers, he threatens to rob Ghostface, Raekwon and RZA of their pointed, "funny ass rings"; he would rob Ol Dirty Bastard, "but that'd be a waste of time". Shortly after the release, Ghostface, Superb, Killa Sin and others were accused of attacking several of 50 Cent's associates at the Hot 97 radio station[citation needed]; another of 50's associates named "Zoo" was robbed by a member of Killarmy. The Wu-affiliated American Cream Team recorded a diss, a song that was widely distributed on the Internet credited to the Wu-Tang Clan. A skit on 2000's Supreme Clientele, "Clyde Smith", features a low-pitched recording (of Raekwon) naming 50 Cent and derisively making comments on his behavior and methods of attracting media attention through publicized "beef" with other rappers. Around this time, a 50 Cent freestyle dissing the Wu-Tang Clan began circulating; in his ad-libs at the end of the song, he derides them for their frequent use of the term "god" and the Wu-Tang Clan's alleged proclivity for PCP. There have been various rumors of altercations between Ghostface and 50 Cent[citation needed], one of which describes 50 Cent being thrown down a flight of stairs by Ghostface. However, none have been verified. Since 50 Cent's rise to fame, both he and Ghostface have discussed the supposed beef in interviews, both saying that nothing serious had ever happened.

In July 2007, during a Spin magazine interview with 50 Cent, Tony Yayo alleged that Ghostface did not write his critically acclaimed album Supreme Clientele, but that it was written by long-time Ghostface collaborator Superb. Along with saying Ghostface had a ghostwriter, Yayo also made statements that Wu-Tang Clan's success is over, and that their creativity and lyrical skill doesn't matter anymore since it does not sell to the mainstream. 50 Cent however denied the stronger allegations: "I don't know nothing about any of that. He's the writer. I'm not gonna say he ain't write it."

In a November, 2007 interview with Rhapsody Music, Ghost responded with "…'Perb (Superb) is Rae’s (Raekwon) man. He been in the studio a few times while we’re doing shit. He ain’t write shit. All ‘Perb contributed was a couple of lines that you could put in the air. When we write, we all do that. “Say this one right here” or “Put this one right here.” We all catch lines with each other ‘cause you in the studio. You got niggas around you that write. Even if he did write a verse, he could never make an album of mine. He couldn’t make an album, you feel me? I made Supreme Clientele what it is. Those are my stories, based around whatever they’re based upon. It’s me. I can’t see what songs ‘Perb wrote. He ain’t write “Mighty Healthy” or “One” or “Apollo Kids” or “Cherchez LaGhost” or “Saturday Nite” or “Malcolm.”"[5]

Discography

Albums

Album Name Release Date Status
Ironman October 29, 1996 Platinum
Supreme Clientele January 25, 2000 Gold
Bulletproof Wallets November 13, 2001 250,000 copies
The Pretty Toney Album January 25, 2004 234,000 copies
Fishscale March 28, 2006 Gold
More Fish December 12, 2006
The Big Doe Rehab December 4, 2007 75,165 copies[6]
The Wallabee Champ March 25, 2008

Compilations, collaborations

Album Name Release Date Status
Shaolin's Finest August 1, 2003
Put It On The Line (with Trife Da God) November 18, 2005
Hidden Darts: Special Edition March 13, 2007 980 (First week)[7]

Singles

Year Title Chart Positions Album
US R&B/Hip-Hop US Hot 100 US Hot Rap Tracks UK Singles Chart
1996 "Daytona 500" (feat. Raekwon & Cappadonna) - - - - Ironman
1996 "All That I Got Is You" (feat. Mary J. Blige) - - - 11 Ironman
2000 "Apollo Kids" - - 32 - Supreme Clientele
2000 "Cherchez LaGhost" (feat. U-God) 42 98 3 - Supreme Clientele
2001 "Never Be the Same Again" (feat. Carl Thomas & Raekwon) 65 - 21 - Bulletproof Wallets
2001 "Ghost Showers" 77 - 11 - Bulletproof Wallets
2003 "Guerilla Hood" - - - - 718
2004 "Tush" (feat. Missy Elliott) 53 - - 34 The Pretty Toney Album
2004 "Run" (feat. Jadakiss) - - - - The Pretty Toney Album
2005 "Milk Em" (feat. Trife/Strange Fruit Project) - - - - Put it on the Line
2006 "Be Easy" 91 - - - Fishscale
2006 "Back Like That (feat. Ne-Yo)" 14 61 11 46 Fishscale
2006 "Summertime (feat. Beyoncé)"
2006 "Back Like That(remix) (feat. Ne-Yo & Kanye West)" More Fish
2007 "We Celebrate (feat. Kid Capri)"

Appears on

Trivia

  • Ghostface Killah appeared in Maxim magazine in April 2007, where he is depicted as muslim oriented family-man. It is disputed whether a few of the comments written were actually said by him (no quotations were emphasized).[8]
  • Ghostface Killah appears in The Boondocks episode "Stinkmeaner Strikes Back" as a ghost to warn Huey about Stinkmeaner's return and leave cryptic clues about how to exorcise Stinkmeaner's soul. Huey criticizes Ghostface Killah for appearing as a ghost without actually being dead.

Filmography

TV Episode "Nile Is Made Into a Rapper".....Himself

TV Episode "Jack-Tor".....Himself TV Episode "The Source Awards".....Himself

TV Episode "Mind Explosion"....Himself TV Episode "Mosh Pit!".....Himself

Videography

  • 1996 Daytona 500
  • 1996 All That I Got Is You
  • 1996 Motherless Child
  • 1996 Camay
  • 1996 Mighty Healthy
  • 1998 Cobra Clutch
  • 2000 Apollo Kids
  • 2000 Cherchez La Ghost
  • 2001 Never Be The Same Again
  • 2004 Run
  • 2004 Tush
  • 2004 Biscuits (Live)
  • 2006 Back Like That
  • 2007 Tony Sigel A.K.A. the Barrel Brothers
  • 2008 We Celebrate

Appears on (video)

  • 1995 Shadowboxin'/4th Chamber (GZA)
  • 1995 Ice Cream (Raekwon)
  • 1995 Criminology (Raekwon)
  • 1998 Holocaust (RZA)
  • 2000 Put Ur Hands Up (Jay-Z)
  • 2001 Stand Up (Charli Baltimore)
  • 2001 Supermodel (Cappadonna)
  • 2001 Knock Knock (GZA)
  • 2002 Savior's Day (Sunz Of Man)
  • 2002 Special Delivery (P. Diddy)
  • 2003 Ooh Wee (Mark Ronson)
  • 2003 Pass The Mic (Theodore Unit)
  • 2004 Live From The PJ's (X-Ecutioners)
  • 2005 Go Crazy (Young Jeezy)

References

External links


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