Uproxx: 'Supreme Clientele': Why It Might Be The Best Rap Album Of All Time

Started by JAKEMCCNASTY, Jan 6, 2016, in Music Add to Reading List

  1. JAKEMCCNASTY
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    Jan 6, 2016
    My love for hip-hop began inside my friend’s 1988 Peugeot sedan. He had popped in a tape of experimental hip-hop group The Gravediggaz’s debut album entitled Six Feet Deep. I had never heard anything remotely close to the words that hissed from his dusty speakers. It was offensive, creative, perverse, and had completely changed my perspective of music. One of the sonic engineers of that album, Grammy award-winner RZA, also fronted a better known hip-hop group: Wu-Tang Clan. In 1997, the Wu-Tang Clan became the best-selling hip-hop group of all-time by selling more than 600,000 copies of their sophomore effort,Forever, withinoneweek.

    One of the group’s “swordsmen” included Ghostface Killah (also known as Ghostface), an artist who would continue the Wu-Tang Clan’s dominance over the music charts with his 2000 effort,Supreme Clientele. Where Six Feet Deephad expanded my understanding of hip-hop’s limits in creativity,Supreme Clientelerocketed me past expectations and left me breathless. And I’m far from alone: Spinnamed it one of the 20 best albums of 2000, whileVibenamed it one of the 10 best of that year. While rhetorically the album is flush with visually stunning verses, it is perhaps the genre-busting elements of the artifact that truly make it remarkable.

    Supreme Clienteleis full of enterprising references to blaxploitation films, tales of violence, drugs, sexual relationships, off-beat topics, and visceral humor. Ghostface makes mince meat out of the English language, dicing and slicing words together to form new phrases, many of which the meaning is still in contention. Take this section from the first song, “Nutmeg:

    Tidy Bowl, gung-ho pro, Starsky with the gum sole, Hit the rump slow, parole kids, live Rapunzel, but Ton’ stizzy really high, the vivid laser eye guide, Jump in the Harley ride, Clarks I freak a lemon pie.

    G
    hostface is clearly in command of his word choices, and there are no wasted elements in the above lines. Let’s dissect some of this stanza further to understand the true content, and thus the feeling he’s trying to convey early on in the album. Tidy Bowl (clean), gung-ho pro (in charge of his own recklessness), Starsky with the gum sole (’70s TV show reference), jump in the Harley ride (a reference to a vehicle primarily used by white Americans), Clarks I freak a lemon pie (he likes to wear lemon colored-Clarks, a type of shoe).

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    Within the very first verse of the first song, Ghostface is blending together urban fashion with white American icons. In the same song, he mentions John McEnroe, Calvin Coolidge, and Slick Rick all in the same breath. This is just one example of the manic content located within the album; it would take a novel to rhetorically dissect this work. There is no sense of a controlling agent in all of these songs, which in turnbecomesthe controlling agent throughout the album. In other words, you do not know what to expect when listening, except that you should expect nothing.

    Concerning the structure and form of the stanzas, we encounter something new not only to hardcore rap, but to the field of hip-hop in whole: stream-of-conscious rap. Take this excerpt from “Buck 50”:

    Ghetto-fabulous, Ton’ Atlas, Zulu Nation in the ’80s in front of Macy’s, I start my own chapters, Tyco night-glow velvet pose, special effects, High-tech armors merc you at the shows.

    Here, we receive all sorts of images, from 1970s toys, to references to a pro wrestler and then a musical maestro. It is like watching a news show at high speed, barely catching glimpses of figures, words racing past the screen in clusters. It’s within this venue that critics and fans alike designatedSupreme Clienteleone of the most creative and ground-breaking works in hip-hop. Yet, it is also this form of free verse poetry that seemed to excel the album past the status of a “hardcore rap” album.

    The genius in Ghostface’s sophomore work tends to be more in theformof his approach. His off-the wall lyrics are very difficult to understand, most likely on purpose (again, that is the controlling agent in this work). What makes this album so revered in the hip-hop community is not his approach to the sub-genre of hardcore hip-hop, but to his approach to thesituationhe presents his version of the sub-genre in.

    Amy Devitt, professor in genre analysis, explains inWriting Genres that, “Recurring situations are what create genre.” Writers encounter a situation enough times to create a rhetoric that is applied to that situation for future application. With the “hardcore” genre firmly established with Wu-Tang’s first album back in 1993 — a genre built on uncommonness throughout the underground spectrum — it would take something different in order to create a sense of originality with the medium. That “something different” wasSupreme Clientele.

    What Ghostface did with this album is change thesituation. He took the genre of hardcore hip-hop, a genre that he and his team had been perfecting for years, and applied it to the realm of free-verse poetry and stream-of-conscious prose. As Irene L. Clark explains inConcepts of Composition, “We do not construct the situation directly through the text, however; rather, we reach the situation through the genre.” Ghostface used the genre he was familiar with to create a new situation in which there was no previous rhetoric to define. Therefore, while it is easy to select a ready-made term to file this work under — terms such as hardcore, underground, or independent rap — it is impossible to say that this is merely another work of the hardcore rap movement.

    And, with no definitive peer or label to fileSupreme Clienteleunder, it remains a one-of-a-kind phenomena. Works like this come along only once every blue moon. Therefore, it should be piled next to theIllmatic‘s,Ready to Die‘s, andReasonable Doubt‘s as one of the greatest rap spectacles of all-time. Anything less than that distinction would be criminal.


    http://uproxx.com/music/ghostface-supreme-clientele-wu-tang-clan-analysis/
     
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  2. JAKEMCCNASTY
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    Jan 6, 2016
    agree/ disagree?

    I think Late Registration is the greatest of all time btw
     
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  3. Thhuglife
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    Jan 6, 2016
    Not even mad.
     
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  4. Aslatrri
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    Jan 6, 2016
    Best album of all time bar none
     
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  5. boyz n the suburbs
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    boyz n the suburbs In my city, I'm a young God

    Jan 6, 2016
    I prefer Fishscale.
    SC is definitely one of the best hip hop albums to be released though.
     
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  6. Tripstarr
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    Jan 6, 2016
    This isn't black star
     
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  7. Big Dangerous
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    Big Dangerous World Heavyweight Champion

    Jan 6, 2016
    It is up there, for sure.
     
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  8. Mr Moses
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    Jan 6, 2016
     
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  9. K9l
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    K9l Colder than a polar bear's toenails

    Jan 6, 2016
    its not that good, just ghostface spewing mindless garbage over mediocre chipmunk soul trash
     
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  10. wavey
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    wavey tiny pants goon

    Jan 6, 2016
    close second after ob4cl
     
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  11. Malvo
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    Jan 6, 2016
     
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  12. EmilChristensen
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    Jan 6, 2016
     
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  13. EmilChristensen
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    Jan 6, 2016
    GRODT is a better contender for greatest album of all time tbh.. supreme clientele is nothing special.
     
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  14. tehparadox
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    Jan 6, 2016
    [​IMG]
     
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  15. Big Dangerous
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    Big Dangerous World Heavyweight Champion

    Jan 6, 2016
    :kdotrly:
     
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  16. tehparadox
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    Jan 6, 2016
    :hard:
     
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  17. HowHigh
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    HowHigh Can we get much higher?

    Jan 6, 2016
    mbdtf is the best rap album oat
     
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  18. Besky
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    Jan 6, 2016
    :biggiepissed:
     
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  19. boyz n the suburbs
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    boyz n the suburbs In my city, I'm a young God

    Jan 6, 2016
     
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  20. K9l
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    K9l Colder than a polar bear's toenails

    Jan 7, 2016
    00000000000000000000000027095336
    >being this s--- at defending opinions

    >being even more s--- than the last guy
     
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