Uncontrolled Substance (lost original recordings of Inspectah Deck album; 1995): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{InfoboxLost
|title=<center>Uncontrolled Substance</center>
|image=Inspectah_Deck_-_Uncontrolled_Substance.jpg
|imagecaption=Album cover.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
Inspectah Deck (real name Jason Hunter) is a rapper from the New York borough of Staten Island. He is a member of the 9-man group called the 'Wu-tang Clan' based in the same area. After the group's initial release 'Enter the 36 Chambers' (1993), the members of the group set out to release their own albums in the following years.


'''<big>Background</big>'''
Whilst members of the group such as 'Method Man' and 'GZA' released Tical (1994) and 'Liquid Swords'(1995) respectively, Inspectah's solo album was not to be released until 1999. This album, although still being named '''Uncontrolled Substance''' is vastly different from what the original version was planned to be.


Inspectah Deck (real name Jason Hunter) is a rapper from the New York borough of Staten Island. He is a member of the 9-man group called the 'Wu-tang Clan' based in the same area. After the group's initial release 'Enter the 36 chambers' (1993), the members of the group set out to release their own albums in the following years.
==The Lost Album==
Whilst the recordings for Inspectah's album was done as early as 1993 and a release was slated for 1995, a combination of his label Loud/RCA having bigger releases to promote, signing on other big-name rappers and eventually going under meant that the release had to be delayed to 1997, by which time he would have released it under new Sony ownership of the label.  


Whilst members of the group such as 'Method Man' and 'GZA' released Tical (1994) and 'Liquid swords'(1995) respectively, Inspectah's solo album was not to be released until 1999. This album, although still being named 'Uncontrolled substance' is vastly different for what the original version was planned to be.
After this initial setback, worse news came. He then learned that his producer and fellow clan member RZA's apartment had been affected by a flood. This meant that all of the material produced for the album was rendered damaged beyond repair.<ref>[https://hiphopdx.com/editorials/id.3517/title.remembering-rza-wu-tang-clans-stolen-classic-album-moments Article about the flood in more detail ]</ref> RZA estimates around 300 different songs were lost in this flood, and despite Inspectah's best efforts to restore the water damaged floppy disks they were being kept on it was to no avail. This agonizingly meant he had to start again from scratch, and eventually released the new rerecorded Uncontrolled Substance in 1999, which can be found easily online. <ref>[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=OiwEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA112&lpg=PA112&dq=flood+rza&source=bl&ots=PFENq2zSUO&sig=0Z8_ogAAeknJaPkAAp5ERZtM29o&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Fh6BVLO9EIKuogT04IHIAQ&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=flood%20rza&f=false 'Vibe' magazine article, with RZA being interviewed about the flood ]</ref>


'''<big>The Lost album</big>'''
Due to the original copies being damaged beyond restoration, none of the recordings for the initial release exist online or otherwise. Inspectah Deck went on to say in a 2015 interview with VLAD TV  that his original vision was entirely different to the released one, with songs such as 'Not your average flow' and 'Blowing up the spot' among the lost recordings. <ref>[https://hiphopdx.com/news/id.34407/title.flood-in-rzas-apartment-cost-inspectah-deck-an-album# Article about the 2015 interview ]</ref>


Whist the recordings for Inspectah's album were done as early as 1993 and a release was slated for 1995, a combination of his label Loud/RCA having bigger releases to promote, signing on other big name rappers and eventually going under meant that the release had to be delayed to 1997, by which time he would have released it under new Sony ownership of the label.  
==External Link==
*[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=OiwEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA112&lpg=PA112&dq=flood+rza&source=bl&ots=PFENq2zSUO&sig=0Z8_ogAAeknJaPkAAp5ERZtM29o&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Fh6BVLO9EIKuogT04IHIAQ&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=flood%20rza&f=false 'Vibe' magazine article, with RZA being interviewed about the flood.]


After this initial setback, worse news came. He then learned that his producer and fellow clan member the RZA had had a flood in his apartment, meaning he then lost all of his original recordings. RZA estimates around 300 different songs were lost in this flood, and despite Inspectah's best efforts to restore the water damaged floppy disks they were being kept on it was to no avail. This agonisingly meant he had to start again from scratch, and eventually released Uncontrolled substance in 1999, which can be found easily online.
==References==
{{reflist}}


Due to the original copies being damaged beyond restoration, none of the recordings for the initial release exist online or otherwise. Inspectah Deck went on to say in a 2015 interview with VLAD TV (linked below) that his original vision was entirely different to the released one, with songs such as 'Not your average flow' and 'Blowing up the spot' among the lost recordings.
[[Category:Lost music]]
 
[[Category:Completely lost media]]
'''<big>References</big>'''
 
[https://hiphopdx.com/news/id.34407/title.flood-in-rzas-apartment-cost-inspectah-deck-an-album# Article about the 2015 interview ]
 
 
 
[https://hiphopdx.com/editorials/id.3517/title.remembering-rza-wu-tang-clans-stolen-classic-album-moments Article about the flood in more detail ]
 
[https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=OiwEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA112&lpg=PA112&dq=flood+rza&source=bl&ots=PFENq2zSUO&sig=0Z8_ogAAeknJaPkAAp5ERZtM29o&hl=en&sa=X&ei=Fh6BVLO9EIKuogT04IHIAQ&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=flood%20rza&f=false 'Vibe' magazine article, with RZA being interviewed about the flood ]

Latest revision as of 19:01, 9 May 2020

Inspectah Deck - Uncontrolled Substance.jpg

Album cover.

Status: Lost

Inspectah Deck (real name Jason Hunter) is a rapper from the New York borough of Staten Island. He is a member of the 9-man group called the 'Wu-tang Clan' based in the same area. After the group's initial release 'Enter the 36 Chambers' (1993), the members of the group set out to release their own albums in the following years.

Whilst members of the group such as 'Method Man' and 'GZA' released Tical (1994) and 'Liquid Swords'(1995) respectively, Inspectah's solo album was not to be released until 1999. This album, although still being named Uncontrolled Substance is vastly different from what the original version was planned to be.

The Lost Album

Whilst the recordings for Inspectah's album was done as early as 1993 and a release was slated for 1995, a combination of his label Loud/RCA having bigger releases to promote, signing on other big-name rappers and eventually going under meant that the release had to be delayed to 1997, by which time he would have released it under new Sony ownership of the label.

After this initial setback, worse news came. He then learned that his producer and fellow clan member RZA's apartment had been affected by a flood. This meant that all of the material produced for the album was rendered damaged beyond repair.[1] RZA estimates around 300 different songs were lost in this flood, and despite Inspectah's best efforts to restore the water damaged floppy disks they were being kept on it was to no avail. This agonizingly meant he had to start again from scratch, and eventually released the new rerecorded Uncontrolled Substance in 1999, which can be found easily online. [2]

Due to the original copies being damaged beyond restoration, none of the recordings for the initial release exist online or otherwise. Inspectah Deck went on to say in a 2015 interview with VLAD TV that his original vision was entirely different to the released one, with songs such as 'Not your average flow' and 'Blowing up the spot' among the lost recordings. [3]

External Link

References