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In music, insanity sells.
Born in 1968 in Brooklyn, ODB was one of the founding members of Wu-Tang Clan, along with his cousins RZA and GZA. He was known for combining slick lyricism with his own half-sung, often bizarre delivery. As Method Man said, he was the Ol' Dirty Bastard because, "there was no father to his style".
ODB's music was so abrasive and unorthodox, it's surprising that he was such a marquee artist in the
ODB's highlight reel is extensive. There was the time he rode in a limo to pick up his welfare check. And there was that time he interrupted the Grammy Awards to protest Wu-Tang's loss to Puff Daddy and to proclaim that "Wu-Tang was for the children". His rap sheet included assault, theft, drugs, attempted murder, terroristic threats, unlawful possession of body armour, and shooting at the police. And, of course, on the other side, there was the crowning moment of his career,
ODB's crazy public persona certainly took a toll on his private life. Wracked by paranoia and drug problems in his later years, he finally succumbed to an overdose on November 13, 2004.
It doesn't like seem ODB gets enough credit for all the influence he's had on the game. As his son,
Young Dirty Bastard, a semi-notable rapper himself, told me over the phone,
With the tenth anniversary of his death coming this week, I wanted to go out into the streets of New York to see how the people of
First, I headed to the Stapleton Projects in Staten Island to talk to the locals about ODB. It's a notorious Wu hangout that was once referred to as a "concentration camp" by RZA and the place "where the ambulance don't come" by Ghostface Killah.
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Jamel: [Yelling at woman who was standing in the way and telling him not talk to me] Listen bitch, I ain't worried about no police! I ain't doing nothing for the police to be worried about me.
VICE: What does ODB represent to you?
You knew him?
He pulled up on this street?
ODB had a reputation as a real crazy dude. When you were around him did he act like that?
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VICE: What does ODB represent to you?
James:
Any favourite memories of him acting insane?
What do you think ODB means to New York?
Everything is lost, everything is watered down. They don't know where they come from. Everything now is about money.
Everyone I talked to kept telling me to head to Brooklyn, where ODB was from. So the next day, I went to the Bedford-Stuvyesant neighbourhood I asked several people on the street about ODB, and they all lit up at the mention of his name. They said if I continued down Franklin Avenue, I would see his mural. Along the way, I talked with the people I met.
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VICE: What does ODB represent to you?
Kamia:
Do you have a favourite song of his?
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VICE: What does ODB represent to you?
Mark:
Do you think rappers today owe a debt to him?
That's why I don't listen to music today, because I can't relate.
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VICE: So you guys know ODB?
Willy
What's the Queens House?
Did you ever interact with him?
BMW: But before he got with Mariah, he was down with the Wu-Tang. You should have seen the block party that he threw over here. We used to play music with him.
We'd DJ out here. And one time, a while ago, we was playing some music over here, and every block brought their music. And Wu-Tang took down their music, came over here, and started hanging out with us, even helped us put our music away in the van. It was real nice. ODB, he's real cool, and I miss him. He was one of a kind.
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After a while, I found the ODB mural. It was a reinterpretation of his first album cover, the iconic picture of his welfare card. I went to the corner deli and started to do interviews, and everyone there got excited. They told me that ODB grew up on this street. They said that if I waited around a little, I'd meet his uncle, who still hung out on the block. I waited for a half an hour and started to get nervous that he wasn't coming. But they reassured me that he would.
Finally, an old man crossed the street slowly. Everyone hushed up. The man next to me started whispering and nudging me. "That's his uncle", he said. His uncle walked up. "Young homie here is doing a story on ODB", one of them said. The uncle warmly shook my hand and introduced himself as "Cuffy".
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Cuffy, ODB's uncle
What was your relationship with ODB like?
Cuffy:
What was he like as a person?
Did you listen to his music?
What did you think of it?
When you first heard it, what was your reaction?
What do you think about his legacy today?
What was ODB like as a kid?
You tried to help him?
I actually talked to some dude over there who was locked up with him.
I went away for about seven years, or something like that, and when I came back, everyone loved him.
Were you real proud of him?
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After talking with Cuffy,
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