Cold World (GZA song) explained

Cold World
Cover:GZA - Cold World.jpg
Type:single
Artist:GZA featuring Inspectah Deck
Album:Liquid Swords
Released:October 10, 1995
Genre:Hip hop
Length:5:30
Label:Geffen
Producer:RZA
Chronology:GZA
Prev Title:Liquid Swords
Prev Year:1995
Next Title:Shadowboxin'
Next Year:1996

"Cold World" is a song by American rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member GZA, released on October 10, 1995, as the second single from his second studio album Liquid Swords (1995). It features fellow Wu-Tang member Inspectah Deck and singer Life. The song contains samples from "In The Rain" by The Dramatics and "Plastic People" by The Mothers of Invention, interpolations from "Rocket Love" by Stevie Wonder and "Love Me In A Special Way" by DeBarge, the film Shogun Assassin.

Background

In regards to his writing approach to the song, GZA stated "Normally, when I hear a beat, I already know where to go with it. I can picture the track and just vibe off it. As soon as I heard the beat to 'Cold World,' I knew it would be another inner-city story."[1]

Composition

The song opens with dialogue excerpt from Shogun Assassin.[2] It features gritty and surreal lyrics, while the production uses a simple musical variation, with the beat containing a strong bassline, crispy drums and hi-hats, in addition to occasional plucked guitars echoing eerily and the sound of a snowstorm howling into the background.[3] [4] The chorus is sung by Life and takes lyrics from Stevie Wonder's "Rocket Love".[5] Lyrically, the song narrates a tale of murder on New Year's Eve.

Critical reception

Steve "Flash" Juon of RapReviews wrote of the song, "The instrumental alone is a Wu-banger, but when hearing Inspectah Deck provide the guest verse following GZA's it not only solidifies the dopeness of the cut but damn near upstages GZA's reputation as the tightest lyricist in the Clan".

Remix

The song later received a remix, in which Life's feature was replaced by American singer D'Angelo.

Notes and References

  1. Ma, David. The Making Of Liquid Swords (page 2). Wax Poetics. Retrieved 2010-07-31.
  2. Web site: November 8, 2010. GZA's 'Liquid Swords' Turns 15 Years Old - XXL. XXL Mag. en.
  3. Juon, Steve 'Flash'. Review: Liquid Swords. RapReviews. Retrieved on 2009-08-03.
  4. Web site: Cohen. Ian. GZA: Liquid Swords: Chess Box Deluxe Edition. Pitchfork. July 27, 2012. July 27, 2012.
  5. Fernando. S. H. Jr.. GZA/Genius: Liquid Swords. Rolling Stone. November 30, 1995. May 12, 2020. 66–67. https://web.archive.org/web/20020930074016/http://www.rollingstone.com/recordings/review.asp?aid=27463&cf=6207. September 30, 2002. dead.