U-God - "Heads Up" (feat. GZA & Jackpot Scotty Wotty) [Official Video] video free download


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Duration: 02:48
Uploaded: 2015/01/20

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Babygrande is proud to announce the re-signing of U-God of the seminal hip-hop supergroup, the Wu-Tang Clan.

While U-God is currently hard at work on his yet to be announced fifth solo album, he will first re-release his 2014 solo outing, The Keynote Speaker. The album which includes guest appearances from Wu-Tang members GZA, Method Man and Inspectah Deck as well as verses from Styles P, Elzhi and Kool Keith, is executive produced by RZA who also produced on the album. The physical version of The Keynote Speaker includes a newly illustrated fold-out of the album’s cover, a futuristic boom box inspired by U-God and Wu-Tang terminology and slang. A full-size poster of the new album artwork is also available for purchase.

The video for "Heads Up" features fellow Wu-Tang member GZA as well as Jackpot Scotty Wotty. “Heads Up” showcases each distinct lyricist and director Don Tyler captures the tone of the track with this black and white visual, shot in New York.

“Keynote Speaker is such a special album. My team has worked closely with Babygrande to give the album a fresh look and to continue to promote it around the world. ‘Heads Up’ is a classic Wu-Tang style video that brings everything back to the essence,” U-God told Allhiphop.com

Brownsville, Brooklyn native U-God moved to Staten Island as a youth. Growing up on the Island in Park Hill not far from his cousin Method Man, Inspectah Deck and Raekwon were his childhood friends. He later became good friends with Cappadonna, then RZA and Ghostface, and he began rhyming under the alias Golden Arms, based on the Kung-Fu movie The Kid with The Golden Arms. U-God quickly became known to fans for his rugged flow and bass-like voice on Wu tracks "Protect Ya Neck," "Da Mystery of Chessboxin", "Winter Warz", "Knuckleheadz", "Investigative Reports", and "Black Jesus". U-God was featured on 10 tracks from the group's 4x platinum sophomore album Wu-Tang Forever, two of which were the hit singles "It's Yourz" and "Triumph." Around this time, his young son was accidentally shot and injured, an ordeal the rapper documented on the Wu-Tang Clan track “A Better Tomorrow.” On the Clan's third effort, The W, U-God was featured on hit single "Gravel Pit." The track would become a worldwide hit and the highest charting Wu-Tang song in the group's twenty year history.

U-God’s solo career got off to a late start, becoming the eighth member of the group to record a solo album, releasing Golden Arms Redemption in 1999 on Priority Records, which displayed a wide variety of sounds from gritty Blaxploitation funk to urgent string sections, and featured guest appearances from several Wu-Tang members and affiliates. The song "Rumble" was used as the main song for the video game “Wu Tang : Shaolin Style.” “Bizarre,” a single from the album, debuted #7 on the Billboard Hot Rap Singles, propelling the album to Gold status, in spite of Priority Records being on the verge of shutting down. It would be a long time since we heard from him as a solo artist but he remained very active recording verses on over 200 songs like SWV hit rmx for "Anything" from the “Above The Rim” soundtrack, the verse and hook on Ghostface's hit single "Cherchez Le Ghost" and recently featured on the track "Rivers Of Blood" from RZA's Man with the Iron Fists movie soundtrack which was featured on Nike commercial with soccer superstar Neymar Jr.

In 2009 U-God released the album Dopium, his first album with Babygrande, the lead single "Wu-Tang" featured Method Man. The album featured guest appearances by Sheek Louch, Jim Jones, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, GZA, Cappadonna, Method Man, Killah Priest and Scotty Wotty with production by Bloody Beetroots, Felix Cartel and Large Professor.

Babygrande Records, the fourteen year old pioneering indie label, spent most of 2014 in a constant phase of creative redevelopment, re-launched, and is now in the process of signing many new artists across multiple genres. While keeping its roots in hip-hop at heart along with its passion of growing and developing artists, Babygrande is now equally focused on other genres such as indie rock, pop, electronic and more.

For more information on U-God, please visit:

https://www.facebook.com/pages/U-god/8773275063

https://twitter.com/ugodofwutang

For more information on Babygrande Records, please visit:

https://www.babygrande.com

https://twitter.com/babygrande

http://www.youtube.com/babygranderecords

https://soundcloud.com/babygrande

Feel free to discuss this new release in our message boards: http://boards.babygrande.com

Comments

8 years ago

Diego Cruz

U-GOD FOREVER fucking killah dance moves(;

8 years ago

22KingWizard

Never overlook Gza his verses are beyond "Killed" that dude lyrically over kills man Sharp since day one.

8 years ago

HAVOHEJ

BANGING. The first ive actually heard of Scotty Wotty (although i know of him mentioned by the Wu). Dude needs to have a full album with U. What a flow. Nobody has that nowadays, genuine old school like Kool G. You would have been a millionaire if you were out in the 90's. Keep spittin OG

8 years ago

T-800/1000 Model

Damnit GZA where is Liquid Swords 2 & the Dark Matter album at?

8 years ago

JHS J-ssun

Babygrande got off to a good start around '02 w/ (then still relevant) Jedi Mind Tricks, Jean Grae, Blue Sky Black Death & so forth; one could perceive it as a bit of a honkey rap label but wtf, I can still fuck with JMT '96-'04 & BSBD did great work on ambience & beats for Holocaust the Sign of Hell's Winter among others, & dope remixes, of Kamachi's groovy '04 Guru collab (w/ Kwestions tight cuts on the original track intact) in particular. Babygrande meant (almost) as much to my musical exploration as Rawkus & later Def Jux did late 90's/early '00s & Cold Chillin' did late 80's. U-God aint no GOAT like GZA, or even close to my constant #1 Wu-Trooper INS, but Dopium was aight & this song got soul. Masta Killa's '04 LP was good too, & INS 7L&Eso collab Czarface is dope as fuck so it seems some of the black sheep of the Clan have gotten their acts together. Lotta buzz around Ghost & he got a high lowest level so to speak but since he only tend to details & let others work out both themes & chronology & the lion's share of the lyrics (on his latest coupla concept LPs, hes open with it which honors him) its hard to tell how sharp he really is from an artistic/intellectual angle. Summa summarum: I though Babygrande was dead, Enemy Soil dragged at least 2-3 of their high profile acts (profitwise, JMT had to be a huge loss) with them, but Im glad to see theyre up & runnin. Though I would prefer a pure hiphop label

8 years ago

JHS J-ssun

Babygrande got off to a good start around '02 w/ (then still relevant) Jedi Mind Tricks, Jean Grae, Blue Sky Black Death & so forth; one could perceive it as a bit of a honkey rap label but wtf, I can still fuck with JMT '96-'04 & BSBD did great work on ambience & beats for Holocaust the Sign of Hell's Winter among others, & dope remixes, of Kamachi's groovy '04 Guru collab (w/ Kwestions tight cuts on the original track intact) in particular. Babygrande meant (almost) as much to my musical exploration as Rawkus & later Def Jux did late 90's/early '00s & Cold Chillin' did late 80's. U-God aint no GOAT like GZA, or even close to my constant #1 Wu-Trooper INS, but Dopium was aight & this song got soul. Masta Killa's '04 LP was good too, & INS 7L&Eso collab Czarface is dope as fuck so it seems some of the black sheep of the Clan have gotten their acts together. Lotta buzz around Ghost & he got a high lowest level so to speak but since he only tend to details & let others work out both themes & chronology & the lion's share of the lyrics (on his latest coupla concept LPs, hes open with it which honors him) its hard to tell how sharp he really is from an artistic/intellectual angle. Summa summarum: I though Babygrande was dead, Enemy Soil dragged at least 2-3 of their high profile acts (profitwise, JMT had to be a huge loss) with them, but Im glad to see theyre up & runnin. Though I would prefer a pure hiphop label

8 years ago

thenobodyman7

This is Wu-Tang music 

8 years ago

RegentDevil2

Individually all of Wu can still spit, just need to give RZA 0 oversight if you want any new group CD to not suck.Rae said it best, he's a hip hop hippie now.

9 years ago

spearPYN

Lyrics are on point... What's missing is RZA's magic touch on the production... but even he can't reproduce his own old pre-flood style of music...

9 years ago

Jay Robert

How they filming this video on the middle of the road, u can tell they just filmed it with normal traffic going by lol

9 years ago

Wu-tang Ninja

Good 

9 years ago

Lord Jaguar

Wutang hip hop remains authentic thanks to cats like U-GOD. Feel me? Who else is able to bring MCs like Scotty Wotty to the spotlight ?

9 years ago

BrotherHoodXhERU

Yeah...that Scotty Wotty is that nigga...been feeling his vibration ever since I heard him on "Dopium"

9 years ago

Giannhs Basileiou

scotty is the shit..

9 years ago

Xtremedia01

GZA is a WU GOD!!

9 years ago

Machine Aguilera

Check out Machine on YouTube under Machine915highbreed

9 years ago

Paulina Martinez

Puro wutang clan, Silao Guanajuato México, Piedad 12 Pura Vida

9 years ago

Powerule

The GZA is always on point and U-God, the underrated member of the Clan, typically regarded as the weak-link, delivers. However, it's the presence of the mystery man, Scotty Wotty, that makes this song. We've heard about him as a Staten Island underground legend, but he's rarely been seen over the years (supposedly due to repeat incarceration). 

9 years ago

Terrence Lukes

WU TANG FOREVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

9 years ago

schprnk

At last this video!! Still I need that "Fire" video from this album!!

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