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风格
#东岸说唱 #硬核说唱
地区
欧美

艺人介绍

by Steve Huey

Inspectah Deck was one of the Wu-Tang Clans lesser-known members, despite his talent as both an MC and producer. Born Jason Hunter, Deck earned the first part of his nickname as the quiet, watchful eye in the corner; his other aliases included Rollie Fingers, Fifth Brother, and Rebel INS, the latter a graffiti name tag he used as a youngster. Deck was born in Brooklyn but grew up on Staten Island, attending school with several future Wu members. He was heard on most of the key tracks from the groups classic 1993 debut, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), including the singles C.R.E.A.M. and Protect Ya Neck. He made guest appearances on most of the ensuing Wu-Tang solo projects, with particularly attention-grabbing work on Raekwons Only Built 4 Cuban Linx and Genius Liquid Swords. However, the release of his own solo debut — which was rumored to have been completed in 1995 — was postponed indefinitely. Meanwhile, Let Me at Them, effectively a Deck solo track that was credited to the Clan, appeared on the Tales From the Hood soundtrack in 1995. Deck was an overlooked presence on the Clans sprawling second album, Wu-Tang Forever (1997); among other appearances, he produced the track Visionz and contributed the essentially solo The City. In 1999, he finally released his debut solo album, Uncontrolled Substance, which featured a number of less-exposed Wu-Tang affiliates as guests, not to mention more of Decks own production. The record sold pretty well, climbing into the Top Five of the R&B charts. Deck subsequently returned to the Wu-Tang fold for the albums The W and Iron Flag. In 2003 the rapper released his follow-up, The Movement, and three years later The Resident Patient came out.


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