Wu tang clan videos youtube
“We would never have authorized anyone to put together a project and call it a Wu-Tang Clan record without us ever looking at it, hearing it, or being in the same room together,” Neris said.īloomberg reached out to Shkreli for comment on whether he thought he’d been conned into buying a less-than-genuine Wu-Tang album. “We’re very detailed about the quality and how we put our best foot forward,” Neris said. “It’s not an authorized Wu-Tang Clan album,” said Domingo Neris, who reps charter Wu-Tang rapper U-God. The three men are also disgruntled over never having heard the album in its entirety and not knowing to what extent their work is on it - and whether they should be compensated with a chunk of Shkreli’s $2 million. “How it became a Wu-Tang album from there? We have no knowledge of that,” Ellis said. They dismiss the producer who put it together, Tarik Azzougarh, aka “Cilvaringz,” as a newcomer to Wu-Tang.Īrtists were told that their recordings would be “for a Cilvaringz album,” said one of the managers, James Ellis, who reps core Wu-Tanger Method Man. The three say artists who rapped for the album - some as long as five years ago - never knew they were working for Wu-Tang at the time and never authorized it being used on the album. The one-of-a-kind, 21-track double-CD - titled “Once Upon A Time in Shaolin” - was made by “a little-known producer with a peripheral link to the storied rap group,” Bloomberg said after on-the-record interviews with a trio of artists and managers connected to the project. Notorious “Pharma Bro” and convicted fraudster Martin Shkreli may have himself been defrauded - when he shelled out $2 million for the only copy of Wu-Tang Clan’s “secret” collector’s album last year, Bloomberg reports.