Q&A: RZA on the nostalgic origins of his first classical album, 'A
Ballet Through Mud'
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[October 05, 2024]
By RYAN PEARSON
LOS ANGELES (AP) — RZA’s hoarding habit led to his newest adventure in
music: a ballet and surprisingly traditional classical album he calls “A
Ballet Through Mud.”
Early in the pandemic, the 55-year-old Wu-Tang Clan founder, born Robert
Diggs, was rummaging through a bag of old spiral notebooks he found in
his library. He pulled out a blue Mead notebook full of rhymes, phone
numbers and movie ideas that he’d written as a teenager growing up in
Staten Island.
Looking through the books, a series of storytelling raps stood out —
ones that he’d deemed too “immature” to use when he started his first
group with cousins Russell Jones and Gary Grice, who later took the
names Ol’ Dirty Bastard and GZA/Genius.
He’d been studying music theory for years and had already composed the
scores to 10 films. So, noodling along on the keyboard, he began
crafting melodies that matched the emotions of one of his teenage
rhyme-stories about six friends, “Joe Is A Nerd.” Was it an opera,
potentially?
He kept going, finding further inspiration and building out
orchestration, until his wife weighed in: No vocals needed. After
watching a documentary about Alvin Ailey on a flight, he sought out
dancers to visualize his imagined narrative, and eventually collaborated
with the Colorado Symphony for two performances in February 2023.
RZA sat down at his office in suburban Los Angeles to speak with The
Associated Press about the nostalgic genesis of the project, the growing
bridge between the worlds of classical and hip-hop and his hopes for
what happens next with his composition and ballet.
What are you feeling as you look through that notebook? Are you
sitting at the piano with those words in front of you and just sort of
seeing where it goes?
I’m remembering my high school buddies, my high school crushes, my high
school heartbreak, all that’s happening. And I just saw it and ... It’s
kind of like how Elton John would do with Bernie Taupin lyrics. I
started writing music, composing music. And as the music started to have
its own voice, its own speaking, all the emotions that I was trying to
capture would be captured.
But it was like there was no need to put lyrics over it. And I fought
myself about that over and over until maybe after about six songs. Then
the music took on a life of its own.
How did you end up linking up with the Colorado Symphony?
We had a great time when we did the Wu-Tang concert with them. They have
all the charts for the Wu-Tang, and so I know that (resident conductor)
Chris (Dragon) gets me.
And then I get on with (Chief Artistic Officer) Tony Pierce and Tony’s
like, “That sounds great. We would love to be a part of it. But also, we
have started this program called the Imagination Program, where they’re
striving to help bring more young people to the orchestra. They’re
striving to spread the culture.”
It’s a synergy there. And so we agreed to do that. And he’s like, yo,
it’s a three-year process. You can develop your own stuff and play with
it along the path.
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Musician, actor and filmmaker RZA poses for a portrait at his
office, Wednesday, Aug. 28, 2024, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris
Pizzello)
The ballet reminds me of your
interest in martial arts and the early John Woo movies.
They are balletic. But you think of them in a more macho way than
Alvin Ailey did. You have to have a sensitive side now. And that
could be the side of hip-hop that I was fighting against. But then
you realize as an artist, this is a genius. As I get older, as an
artist, my boundaries become more artistic versus more confined to a
box.
What are your hopes for what happens next with the ballet?
I created it. I think other people should play with it. I would love
to see a high school take it and play it and dance it and share it.
That would be the greatest.
Like it actually goes to high schools or go to freshmen in college
or go, you know, places where people young can express it and feel
it. It’s not complicated like Beethoven’s Ninth, Tchaikovsky. But
yet, because of the proper use of the orchestra, it’s still big.
The first intention is that for somebody to listen to this, go
through the story that it gives them in their own mind and enjoy.
That’s the first thing. This is a gift. So that’s what feels so good
about it. It’s like, yo, I could’ve bought a Bentley or something.
Nah.
I made a piece of music that caused some emotions, you know, put
people to work, you know, everybody made a few dollars who did it
right? Bought back to the community. Music has given me a lot. I
gave a gift back.
We’ve been seeing more and more collaborations between hip-hop
artists and orchestras. Nas has done many concerts with full
orchestras, Cypress Hill did recently. What’s your take on this and
where it goes?
Wu-Tang performed at Coachella (in 2013). I only agreed to do it if
I could have the orchestra back me. Hip-hop samples from orchestras
all the time. Barry White, we love Isaac Hayes because he was
orchestrating and composing, Quincy Jones — these are my mentors
right here. So, it was natural for us.
And I’m happy that the culture is doing it. There was a hip-hop
violinist a few years ago that was dope. There’s a dope orchestra in
Atlanta right now, the all Black (Orchestra Noir). They’re bananas
with it. They’ll drop some Future on you. I think Metro Boomin tried
something recently.
I feel like a pioneer of it. Like in 1997, I’m bringing in real
violins into my sessions to create “Reunited” and other songs on
“Wu-Tang Forever.” But the idea is that somebody young could start
with it, not end up with it like I ended up here. Start with a
violin, cello, trumpet, brass — start with those with that
knowledge. So then when you start creating with the technology you
have now, the sky’s the limit.
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