You can't say that Ghost doesn't have a point, though.Ī lot of people seem to forget that The Rza actually has production credits on Bulletproof Wallets.
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So to begin this "reunion" album, Raekwon and Ghostface have another conversation a la "Shark N-s (Biters)", except that this time Rae is the level-headed dude and Ghostface is the apprehensive cat. But for now, let us hide behind these Bulletproof Wallets (which, honestly, conjures up a very ridiculous image of bullets bouncing off of your ass like Flubber). He would fulfill his Epic contract by dropping what is known in the business as "the bullshit greatest hits album", and jump ship to The House That Rick Rubin and Russell Simmons Built, which is still considered a questionable career move to this day. The story goes that Ghostface accused Epic Records (as he was apparently moved over from the at-this-point defunct Razor Sharp Records) of not being one hundred percent behind Bulletproof Wallets, what with the label not providing the financial backing to clear most of his samples, leading to an album that not only sold very few copies (thanks to a lack of promotion and no successful singles), but an album that was far removed from Dennis's vision. Maybe this deletion was a blessing in disguise.) In a bizarre twist, although the liner notes list the songs in the wrong order, the disc itself actually has the correct sequence, although it includes something called the "Figure 8 Skit", which also doesn't exist. (To be honest, I've heard this song, since, as we can all expect, it leaked to the Interweb almost immediately, but I wasn't very impressed by any part of the track. Another victim of Epic Records's accounting staff. Needless to say, this song is nowhere to be found. The album booklet, the back of the packaging, and even the fucking sticker on the front of the disc advertises a track called "The Sun", featuring Raekwon, The Rza, and fucking Slick Rick, over a beat by Prince Rakeem himself. Remember what I wrote about sample clearance problems during my Supreme Clientele write-up? And the multiple tracklisting problems? Here's where it all comes to a head.
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Hopefully, Ghostface's immediate goals had nothing to do with any sort of financial compensation, because Bulletproof Wallets was the first of many discs in the Tony Starks catalog to not find a mainstream audience, even though he tried to reach out to the fans by including Raekwon on the majority of his songs, in a throwback to Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Dennis Coles recorded his third album, Bulletproof Wallets, around the same time that The Wu collective disc The W was created.