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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deep in the 36 Chambers...
This was one of the most welcome surprises in years. There was no mention of this album being made and no clue that it was in the works until "Harbor Masters" hit the net about a month before release. The second details of a Wu-Tang-meets-classic-90's-NY-rappers album fleshed out, excitement flooded me. A few more tracks leaked and it was obvious this was going to be...
Published on June 30, 2009 by G. S. Tribble

versus
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Um...
Compared to other Wu albums, this has got to be the worst. I bought it (whoops) after hearing it once, and played it for a few weeks. Now I can't stand to listen to it...the production is extremely "dull". Not to mention, many members are missing. Seems more like a RZA project than an actual Wu album. I did enjoy a couple of songs, though. Especially "Evil Deeds".
Published on September 5, 2009 by Boogey Boo


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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deep in the 36 Chambers..., June 30, 2009
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This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
This was one of the most welcome surprises in years. There was no mention of this album being made and no clue that it was in the works until "Harbor Masters" hit the net about a month before release. The second details of a Wu-Tang-meets-classic-90's-NY-rappers album fleshed out, excitement flooded me. A few more tracks leaked and it was obvious this was going to be something to reckon with.

Now that it's out, this is just what's been missing from the Wu-Tang camp for a while. The last few years have produced some albums that appeared to bring the old Wu flavor back, namely the two Masta Killa albums, GZA's Pro Tools, and moments on U-God's Dopium and Meth's 4:21... The Day After, but this has the feel of what 8 Diagrams should have been.

The features on this album are perfect. It's amazing a concept like this hasn't already come up. Masta Ace and AZ's appearances are moments of pure joy. The only time it doesn't work is when Havoc shows up on "Evil Deeds." It's a solid track for Ghostface and RZA, but it's just not what I want out of Hav. I love when he gets on his high-energy tip. That being said, it's still not a bad song or a bad appearance from Havoc, it's just the one part where expectations are not met.

RZA worked with a soul band, The Revelations, to create the music for this whole album so it brings an obvious cohesive quality. The surprise is how being created by a band brings a certain liveliness to these tracks that begs all hip-hop go in this direction. It's faithfully indebted to the the Wu-Tang boom-bap variant that RZA mastered in the mid-90's era, but it's richer without being glossier. Sonically it has the feel of one of the first round solo projects between '94 and '97.

The second big surprise here is how inspired the Clan members themselves sound. Inspectah Deck especially is attacking these beats in a way that hasn't been heard since he fought for the spotlight on Wu Tang Iron Flag. Raekwon has awoken from the slumbered-out mush-mouth flow he's drifted into at times in recent years and Ghostface, the most consistent in the entire Clan, even he sounds more lively here if you can imagine that. U-God, the most slept-on in the Clan, is continuing the show-n-prove he started on 8 Diagrams and Dopium and is here to show what's up. Even RZA stays on cadence.

Therein lies the problem with this release, though. Those are the only members of the Clan that appear here. Method Man is sorely missed. No one in the Clan rides a beat like him or brings the energy that he does. GZA has been the Clan member that's evolved the Wu-sound most successfully across his solo career and to not have him on this album which is colored with a feeling of resurgence is a shame. And when Masta Killa gets in that Chessboxin' mindset and decides to actually rhyme, there's no one more Wu than him.

This is a perfect album in regard to what's here, but it's frustrating at the same time. It screams for the whole Clan to be involved and the fact that a little more than half the tracklist is short instrumentals or RZA philosophizing is disappointing. That certainly adds character and creates an atmosphere so I'm not even suggesting they be left off, but at 35 minutes and 37 seconds, many more full tracks could be added in. Maybe if this proves to be successful we'll get a second volume and see it more fleshed out. Regardless though, the 8 full songs that are here are all exactly what any Wu-head or 90's NYC rap fan will want.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Short, but EXTRA Sweet, July 1, 2009
This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
The album is definitely a banger. It has been a while since i have bought something, and been thoroughly pleased with every song. I had heard about the length and interlude criticisms, and was hesitant to buy it. I am glad i decided to cop it, because although it is on the shorter side, every song is a banger. The beats are fresh and everyone comes correctly. This isn't something you would hear on the radio today, but something you would hear on the radio in 1995. Its that O.G. street corner music i have been yearning for.
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17 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Shaolin Daggers are Deadly Too, June 30, 2009
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This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
The Wu-Tang Clan is the most-prolific, most talented hip-hop collective in rap's three-decade history. Since 1993, the Clan has been swinging their lyrical swords and slaying their rap competitors. RZA, GZA, BZA, MZA, RKWN, GFK, INS, UGD, and MK have led the way in hip-hop expertise ever since their debut in `93. Now, over fifteen years later, "Chamber Music" boasts a return to the 36 Chambers.

Was this album worth the wait? Wu-Heads rejoice: "Chamber Music" is an almost-perfect blend of hard-hitting lyricism and smooth-as-silk instrumentation. The Revelations, under the direction of RZA, the Abbot, provide live-in-the-studio instrumentation for the Clan.

Along with RZA and The Revelations, rap legends Masta Ace, AZ, Cormega, Sean Price, Havoc, Tre Williams, M.O.P., Kool G Rap, and Sadat X temporarily join the Clan (albeit without the support of GZA, Method Man, and Masta Killa). Indeed, GZA, Method Man, and Masta Killa are sorely missed...but let's not dwell on the negative (after all, this is not a Clan release; this is an affiliate compilation album).

RZA offers Wu-Tang philosophy and wisdom throughout the entire album. These interludes are short and sweet, and fortunately, these do not distract from the music. Sandwiched between these interludes, we find an exposition of witty and unpredictable talent and natural game.

Surprisingly, every track is pure dynamite. "Kill Too Hard" is a wonderful opener. "Harbor Masters" is catchy. "Radiant Jewels" is easily a prelude to Only Built for Cuban Lynx, Part 2. (Raekwon is back.) "Evil Deeds" is perhaps the hardest track on the disc (and the piano is mesmerizing). "I Wish You Were Here" is both beautiful and heartbreaking. (Thank you, Tre Williams.) "Ill Figures" is laid-back and smooth...yet it cuts like a knife. "Sound the Horns" provides variety and "N.Y.C. Crack" is better than anything on the Bobby Digital albums. (Forgive me Bobby D.)

All in all, "Chamber Music" is a worthwhile collection of eight amazing, full-length tracks and nine better-than-average interludes. Sadly, this joint is too damn short! (Then again...35 minutes of Wu-Tang perfection is better than 35 years of G-Unit bulls---.) This joint, despite its short running time, is otherwise a classic hip-hop gem in the Wu-Tang crown.

If you think of the Wu-Tang debut as the Shaolin Sword in your music arsenal, consider "Chamber Music" as your Shaolin Dagger. It's short, but it's just as deadly.

Wu-Heads unite: purchase "Chamber Music" and rock this album into the future.

Wu-Tang forever.

Peace.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wu back to their roots, July 10, 2009
This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
The Wu are back, great production, all the Wu mc's coming better than they have in a long time plus sharing mic duties will classic 90's mc's, what more could a hiphop head ask for, just wish meth,gza and masta killa were on it too and maybe cappadonna but only if he was in 'only built for cuban linx.../ironman mode. buy this and support real hiphop
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars New chamber, July 1, 2009
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This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
Wu fans might be surprised by how clean this album sounds. Live band provide an interesting alternative angle to the Wu-Tang sound. RZA beats are still top-class. He produced another masterpiece and set a new production standard for hip-hop yet again.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great production but where is method man!?, February 17, 2010
This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
this album is short but has excellent production. i like all the guest appearences, even the fallen Havoc (he actually spits a decent verse like he used to. my only complaint is where is method man? he couldn't have jumped at least on one song?! well, it okay ghost was barely on 8 diagrams but i loved that one too.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars get the CD!, July 14, 2009
This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
Don't download just go and cop this its hot, banging, blah, blah just get it and put into rotation won't disappoint
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good album from some of the Clan, July 2, 2009
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This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
Though it is a good album, I'll get to the 2 negative parts about it first. It's not really a Wu-Tang album, only 5 members are on it (Ghostface & Inspectah Deck each are on 3 songs and RZA, U-God, and Raekwon are on 2), and it has 17 tracks, with 9 skits and only 8 songs. The positives, the 8 songs are solid, 1 almost classic, 2 are ok, the other 6 are good or real good songs. Each song only has 1 or 2 member of the Wu on it and some guests (who thankfully are some legends and greats on the mic that I am a fan of: Cormega, AZ, M.O.P., Kool G Rap, Havoc, Sean Price, Sadat X, Masta Ace. Production is nice as well, and handled on most songs by a combination of people including; RZA, Fizzy Womack of MOP, and some I never heard of, Bob Perry, Noah Rubin, Andrew Kelley, Josh Werner, and The Revelations provide live music with no sampling. Though it's not a full Clan album and rather short, it's good and worth checking out.

#2 - 9.5 (Inspectah Deck, U-God, Masta Ace - tight beat)
#4 - 8.5 (ghostface killah, AZ, inspectah deck)
#6 - 8 (raekwon, cormega, sean price)
#8 - 7.5 (ghostface, rza, Havoc)
#10 - 7.5 (ghostface & tre Williams)
#12 - 8.5 (raekwon, M.O.P, kool g rap)
#14 - 9 (inspectah deck, sadat x, U-god - nice beat)
#16 - 8.5 (RZA f/ thea)

Check all my reviews
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars very good effort from my boys, July 1, 2009
This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
this is quite different than what i expected but it is a pleasant surprise! the beats are not as dirty and grimy as i expected but they still hit the mark hard. the beats are more live with no sampling but they still sound good to any wu tang fan. the only reason i give it four is because there are only eight tracks out of the 17 on here the rest are interludes i though they could have at least given us a solid 10 or 12. any wu fan or hip hop fan go get this and support good hip hop!
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4.0 out of 5 stars Typical Wu, January 17, 2010
This review is from: Chamber Music (Audio CD)
There is nothing new or exciting about this Wu Tang album. There are many good tracks with good beats but it is exactly what a person would expect from the Wu Tang Clan. The intros, interludes, and random spoken stuff is just filler and gets annoying after you hear it the first time. Radiant Jewels is the gem in this album. Musically and lyrically it made me want to listen to the song a second time even before I was through with my first listen. Overall I would give the album the grade of a B-. I will definitely listen to it again but it will not be placed on repeat in my cd player.
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Chamber Music
Chamber Music by Wu-Tang Clan (Audio CD - 2009)
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