RZA sees the latest Wu-Tang Clan endeavor as the end of the influential rap group as we know it.
The 44-year-old Wu-Tang leader and producer says he's still six weeks or so away from finishing the Clan's overdue new album A Better Tomorrow. The process has made him realize he's got different priorities these days.
"When you're a young man, you're hustling and you've got 12 hours a day to dedicate to music. It might be more than that," said the rapper, whose real name is Robert Diggs, in a phone interview. "The energy that's important is constantly pouring out. But when you've got to go seek for the energy, it becomes a little more difficult. Wu-Tang is forever, I'll never take back that statement. But we haven't recorded a lot of studio albums. This is the first album we've recorded in seven years, actually. And we can't wait seven years for another album."
RZA foresees a future where the spirit of the Wu-Tang Clan lives on in the children of the original nine members of the New York-based collective and in the untold scores of rappers, producers and entrepreneurs influenced by the group folks like Drake, whose Wu-Tang Forever drew a lot of attention earlier this year. He's had trouble wrapping up the collective's plans in the now, though.
The 20th anniversary of the release of Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), the Clan's still-powerful debut album, came and went last week, and the album meant to celebrate the moment remains a work in progress.