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Whether judged strictly by his work with
Wu-Tang Clan or as a solo artist,
Ghostface Killah is an indisputable giant. A masterful storyteller whose range extends from graphic crime fantasies to stirring autobiographical recollections, the rapper first appeared with his Staten Island group's trail-blazing
Enter the Wu-Tang (1993) and started building a vast solo discography with
Ironman (1996). His platinum-certified debut strengthened a partnership with
the RZA, whose bracing mutations of dusty soul have either soundtracked or influenced much of his best output. After an occasionally commercial early period with Epic that yielded a second classic,
Supreme Clientele (2000),
Ghost moved to
Def Jam, where he released six additional solo LPs highlighted by his fourth Top Ten pop album, Fishscale (2006). Throughout the following decade,
Ghost added to his legacy with a series of creatively unrestricted works, many of which were whole-album collaborations, conceived with the likes of the
RZA-inspired
Adrian Younge,
BadBadNotGood, and
Czarface. These included the two-volume Twelve Reasons to Die (2013 and 2015),
Sour Soul (2015), and
Czarface Meets Ghostface (2019).
The rapper born Dennis Coles emerged from his native Staten Island as part of
Wu-Tang Clan, who released their first single in 1992 and became one of the strongest hip-hop institutions the following year with
Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers). On the album's fifth and final single, "Can It Be All So Simple,"
Ghostface rhymed about his intent to "make more hits with Rae and A," singling out fellow
Wu-Tang members
Raekwon and
the RZA. He quickly achieved his goal. In August 1995, a few months after
Enter the Wu-Tang was certified platinum, "Tony Starks (Ghost Face Killer)" was billed as guest star on
Raekwon's
RZA-produced
Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Among the tracks featuring
Ghost were the preceding lead single "Heaven & Hell," a remix of "Can It Be All So Simple," and the Top Five Billboard rap hits "Criminology" and "Ice Cream." During the same year,
Ghost linked with
Raekwon and
RZA on other
Wu-Tang projects, namely
Ol' Dirty Bastard's
Return to the 36 Chambers and
GZA's
Liquid Swords, and took part in the making of yet another classic, Queensbridge duo
Mobb Deep's
The Infamous. These appearances, plus subsequent headlining contributions to the soundtracks of
Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood and Sunset Park, primed
Ghost for his own solo breakout.
Signed to major-label Epic via an arrangement with
RZA boutique label Razor Sharp,
Ghostface Killah became the fifth
Wu-Tang member to release a solo album when
Ironman was racked in October 1996. Continuing
Wu-Tang's unprecedented spate of spin-off releases, the LP entered the Billboard 200 at number two and topped the R&B/hip-hop chart.
RZA served as producer.
Raekwon and
Ghost's fellow Razor Sharp signee
Cappadonna were featured throughout. Its deep R&B foundation and wide emotional range were promoted in the choice of singles, including the strong-arming and deceptively intricate "Daytona 500" (assisted by
the Force M.D.'s) and the bleak autobiographical ballad "All That I Got Is You" (featuring
Mary J. Blige). The album was certified gold within three months (and years later went platinum). Between one-off featured roles and his group's return with
Wu-Tang Forever,
Ghost put solo activity on hold. He and
RZA also spent time in Africa, an experience that fueled the writing of
Supreme Clientele, the second
Ghostface Killah LP. Production-wise,
RZA handled a few tracks on his own and vacated his seat for affiliate beatmakers such as
Ju-Ju (
the Beatnuts), Hassan (
the U.M.C.'s), and
Carlos Bess, though he did touch every cut in some capacity. The album went Top Ten pop and number two R&B/hip-hop upon its February 2000 release, and shortly thereafter went gold, pushed by "Apollo Kids" and "Cherchez LaGhost," both of which charted.
"Cherchez LaGhost" actually became
Ghost's biggest single as a lead artist -- a number three hit on Hot Rap Songs. That song's comparatively lighter approach carried into
Bulletproof Wallets, which rather expeditiously arrived in November 2001 as
Ghost's third solo album. Like "Cherchez LaGhost," "Ghost Showers" was built on one of
August "Kid Creole" Darnell's high-spirited compositions, and was almost as successful, topping out at number 11 on the rap chart. Veering even farther away from
RZA-style grime was another single, "Never Be the Same Again," a smooth contemporary R&B production with then-hot
Bad Boy artist
Carl Thomas on the hook. Only four weeks after the album's arrival, however,
Wu-Tang Clan returned again with Iron Flag, highlighted by the hard-hitting "Uzi (Pinky Ring)," on which
Ghost was back in his familiar raw form.
Ghost's next move,
The Pretty Toney Album, issued in April 2004 as his first full-length for
Def Jam, gunned for pop success with the
Missy Elliott collaboration "Tush." It was otherwise more street-oriented than
Bulletproof Wallets, outfitted with tougher productions from the likes of
RZA,
No I.D.,
Nottz, and
K-Def. Only a few months after it became
Ghost's third album to reach the pop Top Ten, the group
Theodore Unit -- primarily an outlet for
Ghost and
Trife da God, but open to several other artists -- released the album 718 on the independent Sure Shot label.
Theodore Unit ground to a halt, but not before welcoming Sun God,
Ghost's son.
Ghost's
Def Jam phase was productive. In 2006 alone, he released his second and third albums for the label. First was Fishscale in March, trailed by
More Fish in December. The former was particularly successful, landing within the Top Ten of the R&B/hip-hop and Billboard 200 charts, and both featured some of his best collaborations with R&B artists, such as "Back Like That," with
Ne-Yo, and a version of
Amy Winehouse's "You Know I'm No Good." The production personnel on the albums included
Pete Rock,
MF Doom,
J Dilla,
Madlib, and
Hi-Tek, all revered veterans. Three additional
Def Jam albums followed during the next five years. The Big Doe Rehab had the misfortune of being released only one week before
Wu-Tang Clan's
8 Diagrams in December 2007.
Ghostdini Wizard of Poetry in Emerald City, a highly libidinous set, followed in September 2009. The
Def Jam alliance concluded in December 2010 with
Apollo Kids, a brief and patched-together collection with
Busta Rhymes,
Black Thought, and
Jim Jones mixing it up with
Wu-Tang members. Production credits for these later
Def Jam LPs were quite variable, with only Fishscale collaborators LV & Sean C present on all three. Between the release dates,
Ghost unloaded guest verses by the bushel, most effectively on
Raekwon's well-received Only Built 4 Cuban Linx...Pt. II. He also put together
Wu Massacre with Rae and
Method Man.
Ghost's recordings throughout the 2010s, supported by a series of independent labels including
RZA's Soul Temple, tended to be conceptual and/or whole-album collaborations that enabled him to indulge in the rapper's love of pre-disco R&B. During these years,
Ghost also participated in various
Wu-Tang Clan and related projects, such as the proper album
A Better Tomorrow. He lengthened his solo discography with Twelve Reasons to Die and its sequel, both of which were produced by
Adrian Younge with giallo scores and dark psychedelic soul epics in mind. (
The Brown Tape, an alternate version of the first volume, was produced by
Apollo Brown.) Issued respectively in April 2013 and July 2015, the Twelve Reasons LPs preceded and followed the December 2014 release
36 Seasons, for which
Ghost worked extensively with the Revelations, and the February 2015 arrival
Sour Soul, recorded with another retro-contemporary act,
BadBadNotGood. During the next few years,
Ghost was active mainly in supporting roles on tracks by
Raekwon,
RZA's
Banks & Steelz,
Dabrye, and
Logic (the last of whom orchestrated the posse cut "Wu-Tang Forever"). In February 2019,
Ghost returned with
Czarface Meets Ghostface, a collaboration with
7L,
Esoteric, and
Wu-Tang's
Inspectah Deck. Solo album
Ghostface Killahs, featuring guest appearances by several
Wu-Tang members and production by Danny Caiazzo, was released by Music Generation Corp. later in the year. ~ Andy Kellman