Latest Release
- 31 MAY 2024
- 1 Song
- Nice 2000s · 2000
- Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers · 2022
- Various Loud Early Daze · 1992
- Various Loud Early Daze · 1993
- Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... · 1995
- Liquid Swords · 1995
- Supreme Clientele · 2000
- Kanye West Presents: Good Music - Cruel Summer · 2012
- SHE IS COMING · 2019
Essential Albums
- Ghostface Killah was chasing his life in 1997. He was 27 and sick with diabetes, and—thinking he had cancer—he went to the African nation of Benin with fellow Wu-Tang Clan member RZA, lived in a mud hut, was treated by a bush doctor and came back with many of the staggering lyrics that decorate 2000’s Supreme Clientele. He sounds glad to be alive; he sounds totally freaked. In a time when everybody who ever delivered sandwiches for Wu-Tang seemed to be getting a solo deal, here Tony Starks, as he calls himself (he also calls himself the Black Boy George on “Stroke of Death”), makes everything stick. Even when you don’t know quite what he’s getting at, his abstract, detail-crammed narratives, often tinged with biographical asides, make for a vivid set of stories. Producer RZA was wrestling with quality control. He’d just masterminded double album Wu-Tang Forever in 1997 and then sent out key members for solo projects, pairing them up with other producers. Ghostface Killah, however, he couldn’t bring himself to hand off, and RZA ended up producing more than half the songs here and revising the work of others. He offers an especially strong mix of his grime and besmirched classic soul. “Nutmeg” chops up a strings-and-flutes sample; “One” is a methodical track that repeats its monosyllabic titular number at the end of each line, screwing the lid down on Ghost’s anarchic verbiage. There are disses (on a skit and the song “Ghost Dini”) that got under 50 Cent’s skin, and appearances from strategic guest stars—including Raekwon, GZA and Redman. Meanwhile, Ghostface Killah does anything for impact, with writing that feels like a Donald Goines paperback, Ip Man fan fiction and several awkward pages of a coming-of-age memoir torn out of his notebook, all of it cut up and glued together for maximum emotional wallop.
- 2023
Artist Playlists
- The unpredictable, restless energy of a true hip-hop original.
- Storytelling and deep soul builds a template.
Compilations
- Monteasy & CT Fletcher
More To Hear
- The Wu-Tang legend talks his solo album Set the Tone.
- Ghostface Killah discusses 'Ironman' for its 25th Anniversary.
- Lowkey celebrates 25 years of Ghostface Killah’s debut solo LP.
- Raekwon links with Ghostface, Nas, and Ebro to tell the story of his seminal solo debut.
- The Texas-based DJ is in for the Monday Motivation Mix.
- With the Internet rap sensation and Tyler, the Creator.
- Reminiscing about the Jackson 5.
About Ghostface Killah
Staten Island’s Ghostface Killah joined the Wu-Tang Clan at the behest of group maestro RZA, appearing on their 1993 debut, Enter The Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers, and immediately marking himself as one of rap’s most vivid storytellers. As the Wu-Tang phenomenon grew, Ghostface became a standout feature on Wu-Tang tracks, making vibrant, idiosyncratic appearances on “Ice Cream” and “Criminology” for Raekwon’s landmark epic Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Ghostface signed with Epic Records in 1996 and released his debut solo album, Ironman, followed by 2000’s Supreme Clientele, a monument of abstract lyricism. Those projects set a disparate tone for his boundless creativity: he’s just as likely to deliver a fantastic tale over an MF Doom beat on “Underwater” (from 2006’s Fishscale) as he is to explore romance on 2009’s Ghostdini: Wizard of Poetry in Emerald City. Ghostface is still one of rap’s most inimitable figures, frequently collaborating with his Wu brethren and other artists across genres and generations.
- HOMETOWN
- Staten Island, NY, United States
- BORN
- 9 May 1970
- GENRE
- Hip-Hop/Rap