The estate of Ol’ Dirty Bastard will mark the 25th anniversary of the Wu-Tang Clan rapper’s 1995 classic Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version with a deluxe reissue. The original LP, Odb’s debut solo album, was also recently certified platinum by the RIAA, the estate announced Thursday.
The Return to the 36 Chambers reissue will come in a variety of formats, including an expansive digital-only version — out March 27th via Rhino — packed with 43 tracks: the original LP (featuring Wu-Tang cohorts like Ghostface Killah, Method Man, Raekwon, Gza and more), instrumentals,...
The Return to the 36 Chambers reissue will come in a variety of formats, including an expansive digital-only version — out March 27th via Rhino — packed with 43 tracks: the original LP (featuring Wu-Tang cohorts like Ghostface Killah, Method Man, Raekwon, Gza and more), instrumentals,...
- 3/5/2020
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com
There's something very strange when the only write-up I've seen on this year's Black Panel came not from any comics websites, but from the Wall Street Journal. On the other hand, perhaps they were just reading the actual sales figures, and they noted that the best selling comic of 2009 featured a black man.
This year’s panel included, besides moderator and self-crowned Master Of The Universe Michael Davis, author Nnedi Okorafor, entertainment attorney Darrell Miller, former Danity Kane singer Dawn Richard, director and comics writer Reginald Hudlin, artist Denys Cowan, writer Natashia McGough, Wu-Tang Clan’s Prodigal Sunn, and actor Bill Duke.
The WSJ certainly captured the flavor of the panel:
Davis opened the event by beckoning any reporters from conservative media outlets to take his comically incendiary comments out of context, including his announcement that he would not be letting white people into the event and that white people are all better off dead.
This year’s panel included, besides moderator and self-crowned Master Of The Universe Michael Davis, author Nnedi Okorafor, entertainment attorney Darrell Miller, former Danity Kane singer Dawn Richard, director and comics writer Reginald Hudlin, artist Denys Cowan, writer Natashia McGough, Wu-Tang Clan’s Prodigal Sunn, and actor Bill Duke.
The WSJ certainly captured the flavor of the panel:
Davis opened the event by beckoning any reporters from conservative media outlets to take his comically incendiary comments out of context, including his announcement that he would not be letting white people into the event and that white people are all better off dead.
- 7/27/2010
- by Glenn Hauman
- Comicmix.com
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