The Name Game

Wu-Tang Clan monikers, Keller, Kimya, funk, black metal and comedy Wu-Tang Clan monikers, Keller, Kimya, funk, black metal and comedy

(Jan. 19, 2012)  What’s in a name? All sorts of things when you’re talking Wu-Tang Clan. The highly influential hip hop clan of Wu was founded in the early ‘90s by three cousins, Robert Diggs, aka RZA (short for Ruler Zig-Zag-Zig Allah, aka Bobby Digital, Prince Rakeem, The Abbot, Bobby Steels), Gary Grice, aka GZA (short for God Zig-Zag-Zig Allah, aka The Genius and Maximillion) and Russell Jones, aka Ol’ Dirty Bastard (nicknames O.D.B., Dirt Dog, Dirt McGirt and many more) whose name, like Wu-Tang Clan, comes from an obscure martial arts film, Ol’ Dirty and the Bastard. The Wu-Tang name and some of the group samples and mythology come from a Kung Fu movie, Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang (which incidentally is also the name of the latest record by Wu member Raekwon).  

Roll-call of those added to the crew over the years: Clifford Smith, aka Method Man (Meth, Methtical, Shakwon, etc.) who took his name from a character in the Kung Fu flick The Fearless Young Boxer; Dennis Coles, aka Ghostface Killah (nicknamed Ghostdini, Tony Starks, Ironman, Pretty Toney, Starky Love, The Wallabee Kingpin) who borrowed his name from another Kung Fu movie, Mystery Of Chessboxing; Corey Woods, aka Raekwon (Shallah Raekwon, Raekwon the Chef, Lex Diamonds, who uses his 5 Percent Nation [of Islam] name); Elgin Turnerm aka Masta Killa (Noodles, High Chief) who derived his from the film Shaolin Master Killer; Jason Hunter, aka Inspectah Deck (Rebel INS, Rollie Fingers) who uses his graf tag name; and Jamel Arief, aka U-God, who, well, he’s named after God (and you).

Wu-Tang Clan
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All of the above, save for the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard (dead from a drug OD in 2004) will be at the Mateel on Monday night to throw down rhymes and keep hip hop alive. (ODB will be there in spirit.) Humboldt-based rapper Never Die opens the show with backing from The Hip Hop Lounge.  

Looping one-man-jamband Keller Williams has a new album out, as usual with a one-word title. Bass puts the focus on the low-end (no, it’s not dubstep), but he’ll be playing tunes from all his records when he brings his guitars, his FX rig and his dog to Arcata Theatre Lounge Friday for a Passion Presents show.

Kimya Dawson is a funny, rough-around-the edges, lo-fi anti-folk songwriter from Olympia’s K Records scene, not someone you’d expect to be on a high profile platinum-selling record. But that’s what happened a few years ago when her music was featured on the soundtrack for the surprise hit movie Juno. She’s on tour with a newish album Thunder Thighs, full of smart, funny sing-along-able songs like, “I Like My Bike” and, my fave, “The Library,” a paean to libraries and a protest against cuts to their budgets. She sings her songs Saturday at The Depot with sweet uke picker Lyndsey Battle opening.

The Seventh annual Humboldt Council of the Blind benefit show on Saturday at the Alibi brings you two brand new local bands: The Go Aways, with HCB prez Lil’ Jimmy Forbes on bass, Tommy Chase on guitar and Shawn Hobbs on drums; and Radios In Caves with Jesse Pearson from The Buffy Swayze on vocals, along with John and Jaquinn from The Great Salvation and Kris Swan. Jimmy notes that the HCB benefit comp Making Blindness Fashionable (with tracks by 20 local bands) is now sold out, so he’s gathering music for another, Vision & Sound, due in March. If your band has something to contribute, send it to Jimmy at methbogrecords@sbcglobal.net.

Saturday is the 102nd anniversary of the birthday of gypsy guitar master Django Reinhardt, and to celebrate, local guitar wizard Tom Toohey, who specializes in Django-style lightning-fast picking, is throwing a party at Westhaven Center for the Arts with Bon Swing, a variable membership Hot Club-ish combo, this time including Tom’s friends Jessie Elias (from Santa Cruz) and Alex Anaya (from SF) on guitars with Baron Wolfe on upright bass.

Ready for something really heavy? Ambient black metal monsters Wolves in the Throne Room are back in town for a Saturday show at Nocturnum behind a new disc, Celestial Lineage. Also on the bill, semi-local Ash Borer (one guitarist lives in Portland), which is making a name on the national black metal scene, and Speed of Darkness, a female-fronted outfit from Whale Gulch that mixes metal and folk influences.

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