There are all these Biggie/Tupac shows and movies coming out—and even a Steve McQueen documentary on Tupac. But do you have your own theories on who killed them?
Oh, we know who did it. They told already. Everybody told on each other already. Orlando. It’s not like I’m snitchin’, right? Everyone knows he did that shyt, the one they said was the shooter all along and who looked like Pac. His uncle told on him, Keffe D [Duane Keith Davis]. He basically said, “Yeah, he shot him.” And Suge’s baby mama [Theresa Swan] basically told on the dude [Wardell “Poochie” Fouse] that killed Biggie. And they’re both dead. They’re not here to defend themselves, but that’s what the word on the street is. It grinds my gears though to hear these new cats start attackin’ people that aren’t here to defend themselves. The whole Tupac thing, I don’t care how y’all young nikkas feel about Tupac and shyt…
Who’s dumb enough to shyt on Tupac? Oh, that Lil Xan kid…
Yeah. And people were tryin’ to say, “So what if he’s not rockin’ with Tupac? He has a right to say that,” and it’s like, no, he don’t got a right to say that. The only reason he has a right to say that is because Pac did that shyt first. Pac walked so they could run. These fukkin’ idiots. That’s like me tryin’ to shyt on N.W.A. It’s because of N.W.A that I don’t got a sense of my fukkin’ curse words on my records and I can say “fukk the police” and get away with that shyt if I wanted to. We held our OGs in high regard.
I wanted to talk to you about hip-hop OGs, because you’re pretty much there. But your generation is really the first where the OGs are still A-list.
But there’s a reason for it, and it’s like I said before: KRS-One and all those dudes walked so we could run. For real. They knocked down so many barriers without knowin’ they were even doin’ it. They were softening up the blow. If all those guys had just gave up, we wouldn’t be here now.
I think it also had to do with radio’s anti-hip-hop bias. You had classic rock stations dedicated to the older generations of performers that granted them longevity, but you never had any rap stations that played the classics.
That’s a great point. That is a great point. Wow. I remember when hip-hop was only played on the weekends in New York. I remember that. And then somebody said, fukk that, let’s play these kids all week. It’s always somebody who takes that step—takes that chance—and says, let’s ride out with these kids and see what they about. That’s my biggest issue with the newer cats: you don’t even gotta pay homage to me, but don’t shyt on somebody’s legacy—especially if you’re uninformed of the role they played in the business. There’s a reason why we hold Tupac in high regard: Pac spoke in a way that a lot of us couldn’t speak. We weren’t eloquent enough or educated enough to say the words that he was sayin’ but we felt them when he said it because that was the way we felt, we just couldn’t put it in words. So there’s nothin’ you can take away from that man—or Biggie. I don’t give a fukk who spit a hot 16. At the end of the day, what kind of person are you? That’s what really counts.
I’m a longtime fan of the Wu. The first album I heard was Wu-Tang Forever, since I was 12 when it came out. “A Better Tomorrow” was my favorite track off it. So I gotta ask, what the fukk is going on with Once Upon a Time in Shaolin? The Feds have it?
I believe the Feds confiscated it.
It’s become a fukking sideshow.
It has. It has. And that’s what made me hate it even more. I thought it was a dope idea at first, but I figured that we were going to be giving the music away. I thought people were going to be able to go into a museum and listen to it, and I thought, “Oh, that’s a dope fukkin’ idea,” and then all this other shyt started happening, so then I was like, “You know what? If it was me, I would just say fukk it and give it away for free.” But then all the time and effort that went into it, that [producer] Cilvaringz put in, that doesn’t help him since he’s got a family to feed also, so I distanced myself from it. I wanted to know little to nothing about it.
I’m sure you know about how it got sold to Martin Shkreli, this comically evil ass.
But you know, I think he was playing a character. I mean, that was his character, but with Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, he was definitely trollin’.
Were there attempts made by the Wu to rescue the album from him?
Yeah, some people were tryin’ to buy it from him, but he was asking for too much. I guess when it goes back on the open market we’ll see what happens.
It really is crazy to think about, though: Wu-Tang made the most valuable album in history and it’s locked away in a room somewhere guarded by the Feds.
Yeah. And Harvey Weinstein is free. It’s a strange world. What the fukk. But I haven’t heard anything on the album—only the songs I did, and I didn’t hear anybody else on ‘em because they only sent me instrumentals. I definitely know I’m on three joints. But honestly, just give the shyt away free. It’s like with Black Panther—I’m glad I seen it early, because I would have been very disappointed with all the hype. So I tell people, “You know, it’s not as good as all the hype, but it’s a great movie, and I like what it stood for.” I knew what the comics stood for when it came out. Stan Lee was way ahead of his time with that. They had a few mishaps with Luke Cage and the whole blaxploitation thing, but with Black Panther they got it right.
You know, I remember copping Tical 2000 as a kid and there’s that brief Trump interlude on it where he’s saying to go buy the album. It sounds like someone put a gun to his head.
That was Russell’s [Simmons] friend. I don’t know Donald Trump—never met the man—but I was on my second album, I wanted all these cameos, and every cameo I asked for, I got. I had Chris Rock, Janet Jackson, a few cameos here and there, and at the end of the day, that was a surprise because I hadn’t asked for that one. He did it on the strength of Russell asking him.
Do you regret that it’s on there?
I don’t care. It was a different time, a different place. What he’s doing in the White House concerns all of us; at the same time, people voted for the muthafukka. What are you gonna do about it? He’s in there now, so cope with it.
Hip-hop’s always had an interesting relationship with Donald Trump. He’s mentioned in a lot of raps, and was cast as a paragon of wealth.
Yeah, he is. We fell for it too. We fell for it too.
Tupac didn’t. There’s a great MTV interview from 1992 where he calls out Trump’s greed.
Wow. Wowwww. Pac was way ahead of his time. Pac could tell you in a heartbeat whether anyone was a snake or a salesman or not.
U-God’s memoir recently came out, and it doesn’t put RZA in the greatest light.
You know, those are U-God’s truths—that don’t mean that they’re true. Perception is crazy. He even wrote a lot of stuff about me, and he mentioned something about my mother-in-law that I know for a fact ain’t true; something about his son that I know for a fact isn’t true. It’s always been a tumultuous relationship. Think Vince McMahon and all the stuff he’s put up with over the years with all his wrestlers—he’s always the focal point of the blame. It’s the same with RZA. I’m not sayin’ it isn’t warranted, because some of it is warranted. We were all young and learning on the job.
Like putting his brother [Mitchell “Divine” Diggs] in charge of Wu management.
That, and we kind of fed into the fact that they threw him into the leadership role, and he took on the leadership role and he did a good job with it, for what it’s worth. But you can’t learn that stuff on the job, and some things are going to fall by the wayside, and some people are going to be unhappy. Heavy is the crown. So he’s the focal point of a few people, and some of it is warranted, some of it is not, but U-God has a lot of other things he has to answer for outside of the RZA comments because he mentioned people around our way who had nothing to do with Wu-Tang Clan at all, though they were probably part of his life, and some of these guys have open cases and his truth isn’t their truth. We’re talking about gun violence, murder, drugs, all kinds of shyt, and you can’t do that to people. People remember things differently, and somewhere in between lies the truth. From my perspective, he got a lot of shyt wrong. He got a lot of shyt wrong, and you can’t do that. He might as well be like that guy on Oprah’s show [James Frey], where he fabricated a lot of shyt. A Million Little Pieces of shyt.
So what’s the state of the Wu right now?
Are you kiddin’ me? He’ll be on tour with us later. Won’t be no sweat off nobody’s brow.
But U-God stuff aside, what is the state of the Wu as a unit?
I was hoping everybody would grow. By the time we got to this age, I wanted to see everybody in a suit and tie, working in some shape, form or fashion in the industry at an executive level. That was the plan, at least. I can only speak for myself when it comes to the crew. I know I’m solid, and if there’s a Wu-Tang project I’m already in without being asked, but when it comes to touring, whole different ballgame.
Is it because of the pay splits?
That’s some of it. They wanted to do a tier system, which I thought kind of draws a line in the sand if you ask me and alienates a lot of people. And in the same sense, you can look at it as you have some individuals who make a certain amount as an individual, but when they’re with the group they’re makin’ three, four times the amount that they would make. Then you have some individuals who make a certain amount when they’re by themselves, but when they’re with the crew they make less—sometimes half of what they usually get.
You’re clearly talking about yourself.
[Laughs] No, I mean…but you know. Then it becomes a problem where, if that person who’s used to making a certain amount is getting half of what he gets and he wants his whole thing now, something else has to suffer. So when those individuals making three to four times what they actually get have a problem with losing maybe a quarter of that, that’s when it’s like, “Oh, so it doesn’t work both ways?” If you’re makin’ three to four times the amount and someone isn’t getting their just due, boom, I’d have no problem giving it. But the reality of the situation is, “Nah, I’m just as important,” which is true, they are; and in the same sense, those same promoters you went to I can go to and get that amount without going on the road with you guys.
You’ve been involved in a lot of iconic shyt. In addition to Wu-Tang, your solo records, and the Biggie and Pac albums, you’ve been in a ton of great movies and TV shows. The first time I saw you onscreen was in Cop Land. You threw Peter Berg off the roof, and he’s now a big-time Hollywood director.
Yeahhh. And that’s what started it for me. And I missed one call from the guy, and now he’ll never hire me. I love you, Peter! I’m sorry I didn’t answer the phone that time. He cursed my ass out in a voicemail. Always return those calls, because you never know. I was a dikkhead, I should have fukkin’ called him back, but I didn’t. He just wanted to chat, and I had no idea what kind of moves he was makin’ but it didn’t matter at that point. I should have been a fukkin’ gentleman and called the guy back. Sorry, Peter. Lesson learned.
Belly’s become something of a cult classic too.
I think a lot of that has to do with the performances—mainly X. X carried that movie.
Still one of the cooler opening sequences ever. Hype killed that.
Yeah. But then it got amateurish when they got to DMX’s crib right after they did the robbery. Trained actors would’ve known how to transition from that to that, because when they got to the house they’re takin’ off their coats and relaxin’, and you don’t even see the fukkin’ money. I don’t know what Nas was doin’ and X was actin’ like what they just did never happened. They were on a whole ‘nother day but these nikkas just robbed the club and killed the fukkin’ lady! Then, if that was X’s house, what happened when I tried to kill his chick? Was it a different house? You know what I’m sayin’? So there were little things here and there but I’m not knockin’ Belly. Hype [Williams] had to fight for every bit of that shyt. They were tryin’ to shut him down left and right, and he fought really hard for it. We did some real pirate-y shyt on that one. And for what he had, he did a good job. And X carried that movie. But when that lady came around with that baby oil though? I was like, “Yo, back up. I want no part of that.” X went for that, Nas went for that. You see how greasy they were lookin’ and shyt? That lady went crazy. I don’t know what look Hype was lookin’ for.
You know, I always thought you and Redman could host a variety show.
Me and Doc could definitely do a variety show but it would turn me off after a while because there’s something about being in people’s faces all the time. I like being gone…and then I pop up again better than ever. TLC used to do that. I remember, after their first album with the boy clothes and shyt, it had been a few years and they still hadn’t had new music out, and then they came with the “Waterfalls” and they were lookin’ right. They had a whole team behind them. I never had that. I look at Cardi B now with the stylist, hair and all that—I never had that. Wu-Tang just started gettin’ shyt like that and still ain’t on that level. But Ludacris, X, they used to take care of those dudes where everything was laid out—outfits, wardrobes, you name it. We never, ever had that shyt. It kind of pisses me the fukk off. I wish I would have had that same care, man.