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Return of the Wu and Friends (DJ Mathematics Presents)

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Download links and information about Return of the Wu and Friends (DJ Mathematics Presents) by The Wu-Tang Clan. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 59:22 minutes.

Artist: The Wu-Tang Clan
Release date: 2010
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 16
Duration: 59:22
Buy on iTunes $8.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Clap 2010 (Exclusive Mix) [feat. Raekwon, Ghostface, Method Man & U-God] 2:41
2. Respect 2010 (Exclusive Mix) 3:41
3. It's What It Is (feat. Raekwon & Ghostface) (featuring Masta Killa) 3:21
4. Strawberries & Cream (feat. Inspectah Deck, RZA & Ghostface) 4:06
5. Station ID Break (Exclusive Mix) (featuring Gza) 2:14
6. All Flowers (Exclusive Mix) [feat. Raekwon, Method Man, Ghostface, Ica Da Don & Inspectah Deck] 4:00
7. John 3:16 (featuring Method Man) 3:15
8. Treez (featuring Raekwon) 3:45
9. What It Is (feat. RZA, Streetlife & Buddah Bless) 3:37
10. Iron God Chamber (feat. RZA & Method Man) (featuring Masta Killa) 3:43
11. Real Nillaz (feat. Ghostface, Buddah Bless, Raekwon & Eyes Low) (featuring Masta Killa) 4:57
12. Rush (feat. Method Man & GZA) 3:53
13. Da Way We Were (featuring Mathematics) 4:29
14. Early Grave (Exclusive Mix) [feat. ODB & Bad Luck] 2:45
15. Keep Pace (Exclusive Mix) 4:32
16. Spotlite 4:23

Details

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Return of the Wu & Friends is another showcase for the Shaolin crew’s DJ and producer Mathematics, falling right in line with his previous feature, 2007’s Unreleased. Pulled from the years 2000 to 2008, this one has the benefit of a couple more years of source material, but with a new radio show focusing on the crew, plus some prime productions just in the can, Mathematics was certainly on a Wu high as the album saw release. His work on opening cuts “Clap 2010” and “Respect 2010” top anything on Unreleased, and unexpectedly, second-line member Masta Killa delivers one of the key tracks with “It’s What It Is,” a powerful mix of bright horns, karate movie samples, and high-kickin’ lyrics that “leave you with a mouth full of murder sauce.” Shame the unearthed verse from the late ODB is not up the usual nuttiness and the prime material is mostly frontloaded, making the second-half of the disc noticeably less exciting. Still, as fringe collections go, it is worthwhile, especially for fans of Mathematics.