Name | RZA |
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Background | solo_singer |
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Birth name | Robert Fitzgerald Diggs |
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Alias | Prince Rakeem, The Scientist (As member of Force of the Imperial Masters, later known as All in Together Now Crew) The Abbot (As member of Tommy Boy Records) , Rzarector (As a member of Gravediggaz) , Bobby Digital, Bobby Steels, Prince Dynamite, Prince Delight, Ruler Zig-Zag-Zig Allah |
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Birth date | July 05, 1969 |
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Birth place | Brownsville, Brooklyn, New York |
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Origin | Staten Island, New York, United States |
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Instrument | Rapping, guitar, piano, keyboards, zither, sampler |
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Genre | Hip hop |
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Occupation | Rapper, CEO, record producer, actor, screenwriter, author, director |
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Years active | 1989–present |
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Label | Tommy Boy/Warner Bros. RecordsWu-Tang Records/Razor Sharp/Epic/36 Chambers Records/Wu Music Group/Wu-Tang International/SME RecordsVirgin/EMI RecordsKoch Records |
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Associated acts | Wu-Tang Clan, Gravediggaz, Easy Mo Bee, Kanye West, Eslam Jawaad, Kool G Rap |
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Notable instruments | E-mu SP-1200Roland MC-909Roland MV-8000Roland MV-8800Ensoniq-16 plus
}} |
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Robert Fitzgerald Diggs, better known by his stage name
RZA (; born July 5, 1969), is an
American Grammy-winning
music producer,
multi-instrumentalist,
author,
emcee, and occasional
actor,
director, and
screenwriter. A prominent figure in
Hip Hop, RZA is a member of the
Wu-Tang Clan. He has produced almost all of Wu-Tang Clan's albums as well as many Wu-Tang solo and affiliate projects. He is widely considered one of the most influential and landmark hip-hop producers of all time. He subsequently gained attention for his work scoring and then later acting in films. His revolutionary techniques of sampling, speeding up tracks to fit the beat laced, and his cinematic skits sprinkled throughout albums have greatly inspired other producers in the industry. He produced for a slew of Wu Tang solo albums as well as group albums that dominated not only commercially, but also thematically and artistically. His production from the mid 90's to the late 90's brought about one of the greatest 'bouts' or 'runs' of inspiration the industry has seen, creating various classics.
He has also released solo albums under the alter-ego Bobby Digital, along with executive producing credits for countless side projects. In addition to the Wu-Tang Clan and his solo releases, RZA was also a founding member of the horrorcore Hip Hop group Gravediggaz where he used the name The Rzarector. Furthermore, he has acted in several movies, including ''Coffee and Cigarettes'', ''American Gangster'', ''Gospel Hill'', ''Life Is Hot in Cracktown'', ''Ghost Dog'', ''Funny People'', ''Derailed'', ''Due Date'' and ''Repo Men''. He continues to build his acting and production work hand in hand. He is currently appearing in the ''Showtime'' TV series ''Californication''.
In 2008, RZA was ranked #4 on About.com's list of the Top 50 Hip-Hop Producers, while ''The Source'' placed him on its list of the 20 greatest producers in the magazine's twenty-year history. He also made the "Elite 8" in the search for The Greatest Hip-Hop Producer of All Time by ''Vibe''.
Early life
Born in
Brownsville,
Brooklyn,
New York, RZA spent time in
Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania as a child, where his father had a
convenience store in the
Hill District. From the ages of three to seven, RZA lived in
North Carolina with his uncle, who always encouraged him to read and study.
He is named after Robert Kennedy and John Fitzgerald Kennedy. His mother greatly admired the Kennedys, the RZA has called his given name an "honorable" name, given the legacy of both brothers Robert and Jack.
Music career
1989-1991
RZA began his Hip Hop music career in the late 1980s and early 1990s, as a member of the trio Force of the Imperial Master (which subsequently became known as the
All in Together Now Crew after they had a successful underground single of that name). The group consisted of future Wu-Tang members and his cousins
GZA (then known as the Genius) and
Ol' Dirty Bastard (then known as Ason Unique, the Specialist, and the Professor).
Once this local band dissolved, both he and the GZA attempted to kick start solo careers. With the help of GZA's friend Melquan (then owner of Yamak-ka Records) they both secured single deals with album options at successful labels, GZA going to Cold Chillin and RZA to Tommy Boy. GZA ultimately released the ''Words from the Genius'' album, but RZA's stint at Tommy Boy ended with only the EP ''Ooh I Love You Rakeem'' to show for it when he went to jail soon after its release. GZA's album flopped, and the two cousins became determined to conquer the hip hop industry on their own terms. Throughout most of his youth he enjoyed watching various kung-fu movies and purchasing countless albums which he would later sample in most of his music.
1992-1993: ''Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)''
From this determination came the Wu-Tang Clan (named after ''
Shaolin and Wu Tang'', a kung fu movie), formed with GZA and Ol' Dirty Bastard as well as with six other rappers (Inspectah Deck, Raekwon, Method Man, Masta Killa, U-God and Ghostface Killah). With the Clan, Prince Rakeem started going by the name RZA (Ruler Zig-Zag-Zig Allah).
After the single "Protect Ya Neck," which was driven by a raucous RZA-produced beat, made the group into underground sensations, the group released their debut LP ''Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)''. The album, which only cost $36K to produce, eventually went platinum, and was heralded by hip-hop fans as a classic. ''Enter the Wu-Tang'' revolutionized hip hop and helped bring the East Coast back into the spotlight after Dr. Dre's G-funk had come to dominate the rap scene, the resurgence in large part thanks to RZA's lean, gritty and very distinctive production style.
1994–1996: Gravediggaz and Wu-Tang solo projects: Round one
As each of the group's members embarked on solo careers, RZA continued to produce nearly everything Wu-Tang released during the period 1994–1996, producing in both the hip-hop producer sense (composing and arranging the instrumental tracks) and in the wider music producer sense (overseeing and directing the creative process as well as devising song concepts and structure in addition to being responsible for a recording's final sound). RZA's rule over the Clan at this time is described in 2004's ''Wu-Tang Manual'' book as "a dictatorship". Yet he still released a hit single of his own, in the form of ''
Wu-Wear: The Garment Renaissance''. The song was featured on the ''
High School High'' soundtrack, and was released to coincide with the Wu-Tang clothing brand. It peaked at #60 on the
Billboard Hot 100, and #6 on the
Hot Rap Singles chart.
His sound was to develop from the raw, minimalist sounds of Method Man's ''Tical'' and Ol' Dirty Bastard's ''Return to the 36 Chambers'' to more cinematic and expansive soundscapes driven by string sections or thick layers of synthesizer on Ghostface Killah's ''Ironman'', GZA's ''Liquid Swords'', and Raekwon's ''Only Built 4 Cuban Linx...''.
During this time, RZA also took part in the creation of a hip hop subgenre called horrorcore with the Gravediggaz, an off-and-on hip-hop supergroup including Frukwan of Stetsasonic, Too Poetic of The Brothers Grym, and Prince Paul who released the album ''6 Feet Deep'' in 1994. As part of the Gravediggaz, he went by the name The RZArecta. In reference to RZA's start with the group he mentions:
1997: ''Wu-Tang Forever''
The success of ''
Wu-Tang Forever'', which hit number one on the charts after selling 600,000 in its first week, also marked the end of RZA's "five year plan"; at the group's inception, he promised the group if he had total dictatorial control of the Wu-Tang empire, it would conquer the hip hop world within five years.
After ''Forever'''s success, RZA ceased to oversee all aspects of Wu-Tang product as he had previously, delegating much of his existing role to associates such as Oli "Power" Grant and his brother Mitchell "Divine" Diggs, and giving each Clan member more individual control. This move was designed to enable the Wu-Tang empire to expand further and further into the fabric of the hip hop industry, and in accordance with this an extremely large amount of Wu-Tang music was to be released over the next two years.
This had already to some extent begun on ''Wu-Tang Forever'', which for the first time featured RZA delegating a small number of beatmaking duties to other producers in the Wu-Tang camp, such as his proteges True Master and 4th Disciple who are known as the Wu-Elements, and Clan member Inspectah Deck.
1998-1999: Gravediggaz and Wu-Tang solo projects: Round two
During the 1998–2000 period RZA ceased to produce every Wu-Tang solo album as he had done previously, but continued to contribute usually one or two songs on average to each record as well as receiving an Executive Producer credit.
''RZA as Bobby Digital in Stereo'' was an experimental concept album featuring him rapping as his hedonistic, fun-loving alter-ego Bobby Digital and showcasing a unique keyboard-driven sound RZA called "digital orchestra", receiving mixed reviews at best.
''The Cure'' album currently remains unreleased and incomplete, due to further work and development being continued into the new millennium. It is now said to be RZA's final solo album. Within the same year, a mixtape known as ''Formula For The Cure'' was compiled and released by Dreddy Kruger, without RZA's approval and consent. The mixtape was meant to be as a prequel of some sorts to the final solo album.
2000: ''The W''
After helming another Wu-Tang group album titled ''
The W'' (his production on which received much praise) and providing narration to a Clan greatest hits album titled ''
The RZA Hits'', RZA released another Bobby Digital album, 2001's ''
Digital Bullet''. ''Digital Bullet'' was an attempt to develop Bobby Digital further, and the album followed a loose story arc which saw the character becoming more "enlightened" and more disillusioned with hedonism as the album went on.
2001-2004: Post ''The W'' solo projects
In 1999 the RZA moved into composing film scores. His first work,
Jim Jarmusch's ''
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai'' (1999), earned praise; he also had brief cameo in the film itself, as a fellow samurai wearing camouflage. The experience was positive and, as he noted during an interview on
National Public Radio's ''
Fresh Air'', the work with traditional musicians gave him the desire to learn how to read and write music.
The critical success of the ''Ghost Dog'' soundtrack led to further work. RZA created and produced the original music for Quentin Tarantino's ''Kill Bill'' series, as well as ''Blade: Trinity'', and ''Soul Plane''. RZA was nominated for four different awards for the work he did on the ''Kill Bill'' vol. 1 and 2 soundtracks, winning one.
In the beginning of 2003 he also produced a few tracks for ''The Mindscape of Alan Moore''.
His third solo album is titled, ''Birth of a Prince'', which was released in 2003 under the name RZA, and spawned the single "We Pop". The album itself featured a mix of lighthearted Bobby Digital tracks and more lyrically highbrow RZA tracks. In 2003 he also released an album of collaborations with international rap and R&B; musicians (including the UK's Skinnyman, France's Saïan Supa Crew, Germany's Xavier Naidoo and Italy's Frankie Hi-NRG MC) entitled ''The World According to RZA''.
2005-present: Solo projects: Round three
In 2005 RZA released the long-gestating book ''
The Wu-Tang Manual'', an in-depth discussion of the Wu-Tang terms, Wu-Tang members, merchandise, movies and inspirations. RZA continued to act in and score movies such as ''
Derailed'', ''
Blood of a Champion'' and ''
Miami Vice''. He also contributed two bonus tracks for the reissued soundtrack to the
Luc Besson film ''
Unleashed'', starring
Jet Li. In 2006, as a producer, he contributed to five tracks on Method Man's latest album ''
4:21... The Day After'' and also executive produced the project.
In late January 2007 he announced that he was working on a fourth album titled, ''Digi Snacks'', which continues the further adventures of Bobby Digital. The album was released on June 24, 2008. The albums first single, "You Can't Stop Me Now", featuring Inspectah Deck, was released in March 2008 in preparation for a planned release in Summer 2008.
He has also stated that the long-delayed ''The Cure'' album will now be his final solo album, for he will end his career as MC and move on with his movie directing career. The album will feature deeper lyrics and guests ranging from Zack de la Rocha to Isaac Hayes.
Before signing with SRC Records in early 2007, RZA was flooded with offers from Bad Boy Records, Aftermath Records, Interscope and Def Jam among others for the Wu-Tang Clan super-group.
In 2007, he did the score of the Japanese anime ''Afro Samurai'' starring Samuel L. Jackson. He recently and quietly released an instrumental album entitled, ''The RZA-Instrumental Experience'', and worked with Raekwon on his highly anticipated ''Only Built 4 Cuban Linx II''. Talks are on between System of a Down bassist Shavo Odadjian and RZA regarding a collaboration between the two artists called Achozen. RZA has stated in an interview that he is involved in the project. A self-titled album, ''Achozen'', was set to be finished in mid-January 2009 but as of late 2010 had not yet been released. The first single that came about was "Dueces".
RZA announced on September 10, 2008 that a partnership with global digital music group The Orchard will market Wu's extensive catalogue worldwide in digital and physical formats. The deal includes new material and 13 previous Clan releases that have been unavailable digitally from the Wu-Tang Clan, Wu-Syndicate, Shyheim, U-God, Black Knights, and West Coast Killa Beez and others. Wu-Tang's viral marketing began as a study of promoting an artist online globally. RZA explained that the deal was a natural progression needed to make sure that fans will have continued access to Wu's catalogue in the ever-changing music industry. Also being launched is the online video channel Wu Music Tube, a forum focused on allowing the artists to speak directly with their fans. In the ensuing months, Wu’s music and video catalogue will also be featured by various brands and ad agencies in marketing and promotion programs around the world. Wu Music Group’s catalogue will be available worldwide for downloads on September 23. RZA told AllHipHop.com:
}}
He has also confirmed that he will be solely-producing ''Liquid Swords II'' with GZA, which was tentatively due in Fall 2010, but the status of the album has not been updated since the release date passed. RZA also worked with Kanye West on the latter's fifth album, ''My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy'', as well as Watch The Throne by Kanye and Jay-Z.
In a recent interview discussing the producer's new line of headphones, RZA revealed that he recently decided to clean out his beat machines of instrumentals he made for the Wu-Tang Clan that were never used; as a result, he has so far given away ten beats each to Nas, Busta Rhymes and Talib Kweli, as well as 20 beats for Kanye West, including the two that were used on the artist's most recent two albums.
Achozen
RZA has also formed a musical alliance with
System of a Down's
Shavo Odadjian,
Kinetic 9 and the Reverend William Burke from Chicago for the band
Achozen. Music from Achozen also appears on the major motion picture, ''
Babylon A.D.'', on which Achozen song "Deuces" is heard blaring at the introduction of the film. The four principal members feel that their unique sound is not only spiritual in nature, but a new genre of "heavy hip hop", not "
rap-metal". Achozen's first live show was at the Key Club in LA on December 1, 2006. On Friday, November 13, 2009 the second Achozen track "Salute/Sacrifice" was released exclusively as a free download on Odadjian's online art district and networking site,
Ursession from the upcoming Achozen debut album. The Achozen album was anticipated to be released in mid-2010 but no firm release date had been scheduled by the end of 2010.
Various Wu-recording labels
Since the early 1990s, several '
various Wu recording labels' were established. The earlier labels are believed to be dissolved. The connection that RZA had to these labels were unknown.
Other record labels were later founded in the early 2000s, and are still active in the present. Very little is known about these labels, other that the fact that RZA produces music on them. It is unknown if RZA is CEO, or has high position within these labels, considering that he was never known to have a CEO position of any recording label.
Wu-Tang Records
Razor Sharp Records
36 Chambers Records and Wu Music Group
Wu-Tang International
Artistry
Production style and influence
He has stated that he uses "the sampler more like a painter's palette than a
Xerox. Then again, I might use it as a Xerox if I find rare beats that nobody had in their crates yet". According to himself, RZA tries to have no more than 20 to 25% of the latter type of sampling on any given record, something starkly different from many other major hip hop groups. He played much of the piano himself, with
Bill Evans and
Thelonious Monk as major influences.
RZA has stated Ennio Morricone, Mark E. Smith, Syl Johnson, Marley Marl, Augustus Pablo and Danny Elfman as musicians he is fond of and has taken influence from. During the ''Enter the Wu-Tang'' period, RZA's production consisted mainly of stripped-down, frenetic piano loops and finger-snaps with heavy bass and drums, though he experimented with more melodic sounds on the album's "Method Man" and "C.R.E.A.M." He also began incorporating skits consisting of clips of old kung fu movies.
The next two solo albums from the Wu, Method Man's ''Tical'' and Ol' Dirty Bastard's ''Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version'', featured versions of the same style of production from the RZA; the former delved somewhat into old soul records and became somewhat bouncy rather than quite as gritty, while the latter was at times even more simplistic than the group's debut.
On Raekwon's ''Only Built 4 Cuban Linx'' and GZA's ''Liquid Swords'', RZA would immerse his beats in dark, sinister soul sampling, pioneering the technique of speeding up or slowing down samples to fit the beat. He also fully realized the potential of the skit, using samples from John Woo's film ''The Killer'' to string the ''Cuban Linx'' album together into a loose storyline.
In 1997, Icelandic avant-pop star Björk commissioned RZA a remix for her song "Bachelorette". In addition, RZA was later featured on a TV biography about Björk called Inside Björk.
RZA's production technique, specifically the manner of chopping up and/or speeding or slowing soul samples to fit his beats, has been picked up by currently popular producers — most notably Kanye West and Just Blaze, the two main producers behind Roc-A-Fella Records. West's own take on RZA's style briefly flooded the rap market with what was dubbed "chipmunk soul," the speeding of a vocal sample to where it sounded as though the singer had inhaled helium. Several producers at the time copied the style, creating other offshoots. West has admitted that his style was distinctly influenced by the RZA's production,
Said by Kanye West:
In response, RZA himself has spoken quite positively of the comparisons:
}}
Subsequent Wu group albums saw RZA become even more experimental, usually with soul samples as well as the layers added his beats. Around 1997 he began tutoring 4th Disciple, True Master and Mathematics in production. The early-mid 2000's have seen him move more toward smoother and more tightly-assembled productions, where the melody, drums, bass and other elements play more off each other than they previously had in his beats.
His Bobby Digital albums introduced tweaked-out new age elements to his sound; these have incorporated themselves more fully into his beats on newer albums such as Method Man's ''4:21... The Day After''.
}}
The Beatles song being covered is "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" for the album ''8 Diagrams''. It was titled "The Heart Gently Weeps" and features Erykah Badu, John Frusciante, Dhani Harrison, Ghostface Killah, Method Man and Raekwon.
In a recent 2010 radio interview with UK hip hop station Conspiracy Worldwide Radio, RZA spoke in great detail about the homemade, candid ethos of much of his classic work, including the organic creation process behind ODB's debut album.
Mentality and leadership
According to ''
The Wu-Tang Manual'', at the group's inception, RZA started what he called the "5 Year Plan" in which he asked the other 8 members of the Clan for 5 years of life, hard work and good lyrics. He promised the members that if he had total control of the Wu-Tang empire, he would "take them to the top", and conquer the hip-hop world within a dynastic cycle. Afterwards, he would then relinquish his total control. He described this five year period "as a dictatorship". RZA's five year "dictatorship" was completed after the successful release of ''
Wu-Tang Forever''.
As each of the group's members embarked on solo careers, RZA continued to produce nearly everything Wu-Tang released during the period 1994–1996. He was in control of producing composing, arranging, overseeing, directing, and possibly naming songs. He oversaw the creative process as well as devising song concepts and structure, in addition to being responsible for a recording’s final sound. All of this was the majority of his "dictatorship". He began doing this on a reduced extent around the time that he relinquished his dictatorship, thus taking complete control of fewer solo projects between group releases.
}}
He has stated in several interviews that the challenges of maintaining the group are not egos, but rather timing and scheduling due to the fact that the members have families and side projects.
He has shown little or no concern about illegal downloading, for he feels that it has little impact on the music industry:
}}
In several interviews, in response to the phrase "hip hop is dead", he said, "How can hip hop be dead if Wu-Tang is forever?" In regards of the southern dominance, rather than criticize the music, he instead spoke on the look and image of the southern artists themselves. He went on to say:
In the 1990s, the Wu-Tang Clan was one of the first hip hop acts to have a clothing line. However, throughout the following years to the 2000s, nearly every hip hop act has followed suit and created their own clothing line. In response, RZA spoke on his views on the oversaturation of the hip hop clothing market:
}}
Various names and aliases
RZA is known for having multiple
aliases, for different lyrical styles and personalities: Prince Rakeem, The Abbot, Bobby Digital, Bobby Steels, the Scientist, Prince Delight, Prince Dynamite, Ruler Zig-Zag-Zig Allah. During his time with the
Gravediggaz, he went by the name the Rzarector, which is for waking up the mentally dead.
Film career
Acting
In addition to working behind the scenes on movie scores, RZA has been active on-screen as well. He has made cameo appearances as himself in numerous major motion pictures throughout the course of his career such as ''
Be Cool'', ''
Scary Movie 3'', ''
Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood''. RZA has also made various cameo appearances in the films ''
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai'' and ''Rhyme & Reason''.
His acting career began to rise in the mid 2000s alongside fellow Wu-Tang member and cousin GZA in one segment of Jim Jarmusch's ''Coffee and Cigarettes'' opposite Bill Murray. He and GZA have also made appearances on ''Chappelle's Show'' and Upright Citizens Brigade.
He followed up with a big role in the hit 2005 film ''Derailed''. The same year, he served as the Artist in Residence for the Los Angeles Film Festival.
Rza was also given the duties of producing the soundtrack to the Afro Samurai series and movie.
Originally, he was offered the role of "Brown" in ''The Departed'' (2006), but turned it down because of scheduling conflicts.
His biggest acting role to date, is in ''American Gangster'' by Ridley Scott, as "Moses Jones" whose real-life name is "Edward V. Jones."
He performed cameo roles in ''Funny People'', ''Gospel Hill'', and ''Life Is Hot in Cracktown''. He was also said to be attached to friend Quentin Tarantino's ''Kill Bill'' project in one way or another, featuring as a solo artist on the soundtrack to ''Kill Bill 1'' and selecting some other songs for the soundtrack too. In 2010, RZA appeared in the science fiction action film ''Repo Men''.
In 2010, he appeared in the comedy film ''Due Date'' alongside Robert Downey Jr. and Jamie Foxx, and directed by Todd Phillips.
RZA also appeared in the 2010 movie "The Next Three Days," starring Russell Crowe.
RZA appeared as a wrongly convicted felon in the pilot episode of NBC's ''Outlaw''.
RZA is set to appear in ''G.I. Joe: Retaliation'' as the character Blind Master.
RZA appeared in 2011's ''A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas''
RZA appeared as rapper Samurai Apocalypse in the 5th season of Showtime's ''Californication''.
He was recently cast in Quentin Tarantino's spaghetti-western film ''Django Unchained'', starring Jamie Foxx and Leonardo DiCaprio, slated for release Christmas 2012.
Directing
RZA directed and starred in an unreleased Bobby Digital movie, saying of it:
He was once asked about directing:
Directors Quentin Tarantino and Eli Roth are involved in the production of
''The Man with the Iron Fists'', according to several movie Web sites. In regards to the movie, Eli said:
He is also co-producing a movie remake of ''The Last Dragon'', with Samuel L. Jackson assuming the role of Sho'nuff. John Davis of Davis Entertainment and Gordy's son Kerry Gordy, along with RZA are set to produce. Penning the screenplay as well as producing is Dallas Jackson, who heads up the urban family label DJ Classicz with Davis. Rihanna is rumored to appear in the movie as Laura Charles.
Personal life
He was once affiliated with
the Nation of Gods and Earths but has stated that he is no longer a member of any particular group. However, he usually wears the Five Percenter Universal Flag as a necklace, and still follows Five Percenter aspects, which include the
Supreme Mathematics and the
Supreme Alphabet. He also has taken on various aspects of
Buddhism,
Taoism,
Confucianism,
Islam, and
Christianity as stated in his book ''
The Wu-Tang Manual'' as well as
Hinduism which he talks about thoroughly in ''
The Tao of Wu'' in order to expand his
spiritual growth. He has gone on to state that
Qur'an,
The Bible, and
Lotus Sutra are three of his favorite books stating that each of the three contain
enlightenment. One of his favorite hobbies consists of watching
martial arts films, and he is considered to be an "encyclopedia of
martial arts films", due to his vast knowledge of the genre. His second well-known hobby is
chess, for he is a director of development, and champion of the Hip-Hop Chess Federation.
RZA was married to Eboni Mills Diggs from July 2000 to April 2006, with whom he has four children: Shaquasia, Melchizedek, Understanding and Eternity Diggs. RZA is known to have fathered at least two children with other women while in a relationship with Eboni Mills Diggs. In the course of their divorce it was revealed in court papers that Raindia Diggs was born March 27, 2000, and Pranda Diggs was born Aug. 1, 2000. On August 29th, 2009 RZA married his long-term mistress Talani Raab in a ceremony in Santa Barbara. Raab had previously given birth to another of RZA's children, a son, in 2005 while RZA was still married to Eboni Mills Diggs.
On children and domestic problems RZA said:
Along with a number of members in the Wu-Tang Clan, RZA is vegetarian.
RZA is a distant cousin of Flavor Flav. The two are part of one of the largest extended families in all of New York.
RZA has a personal verified account on Rap Genius where he explains the meaning of his own lyrics.
RZA created and released his own app called RZA's World in December 2011 for the iPad and iPhone.
Controversies
In 2000 the
Village Voice ran a story about the
FBI infiltrating the Wu-Tang Clan through a criminal-turned-informant named Michael Caruso, who got a job as the personal manager for
Ghostface Killah and
Cappadonna. Several other members of the group did not like Caruso, however his ties with
Ghostface Killah and
Cappadonna got him into the inner circles of the Wu. Due to Caruso's criminal past he was prohibited by law to associate with felons (which many members of the Clan are) or leave the state of New York, however these restrictions were lifted in return for providing information on the group. The federal government turned their head and allowed Caruso to tour around the country with Wu-Tang as long as he was kicking back info on their involvement in
gunrunning and the
Gambino crime family.
Caruso was subsequently fired from all duties regarding The Wu-Tang Clan's business when these allegations came to light. RZA forced Cappadonna to fire him as his manager, however Caruso still works with Ghostface and is on his new poker team. The report rules out the majority of Wu-Tang affiliated performers and focuses on those running the business aspect of the Wu empire, Oli "Power" Grant and Mitchell "Divine" Diggs (RZA's brother) and RZA himself.
Fox News reported that in mid-2007 RZA attended one of Hillary Clinton's parties and donated money to her 2008 campaign. Fox News criticized the fact that Clinton took money from RZA, claiming it was contradictory due to RZA's felony record, FBI investigation, ties to the Gambino family and his music lyrics. RZA referred to the investigation in one of his lyrics, "Plus, feds had one ad saying I gun traff' / I sold 20 million records bitch, some laugh."
In a recent interview with MTV he stated, in response to the beliefs that the group would dissolve:
Recently he was accused by several members that he mishandled money. While in the UK, when questioned by radio DJ Tim Westwood, concerning the group situation, RZA said, "It's really all good, it's just different directions... Everything is back peace already". RZA also rebutted claims that he owes group members any money. He yelled:
In a June 2008 interview with L.A. Record, RZA elaborated on the $20,000 bullet-proof suit, car and briefcase he mentions in the ''Wu-Tang Manual''.
}}
Discography
''Bobby Digital in Stereo'' (1998)
''Digital Bullet'' (2001)
''Birth of a Prince'' (2003)
''Digi Snacks'' (2008)
References
External links
RZA and Don Hyun
RZA at Beatbuggy
Category:1969 births
Category:Living people
Category:Actors from New York City
Category:African American rappers
Category:American vegetarians
Category:American writers
Category:American hip hop record producers
Category:Members of the Nation of Gods and Earths
Category:Virgin Records artists
Category:Epic Records artists
Category:E1 Music artists
Category:American film directors
Category:American film actors
Category:American screenwriters
Category:Musicians from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Category:Rappers from New York City
Category:People from Brooklyn
Category:Wu-Tang Clan members
Category:Horrorcore artists
Category:Gravediggaz members
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