As RZA told Hip-Hop Connection magazine back in 2006, “You had Snoop and Dre dominating with this really low and funky but powerful bass sound, so I wanted to show them how New York bass did it, that really gritty bass sound – and make it louder! I wanted things to be tough from the very beginning right to the end.” Dre had formulated in Los Angeles and taken into the mainstream. Released in 1993, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) resonated like a rugged New York City response to the slick and melodic g-funk sound that Dr. The Wu-Tang Clan’s debut album changed the sound of hip-hop.
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