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Ol' Dirty Bastard
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One of the founding members of
the Wu-Tang Clan
, who recorded some of the most influential hip-hop of the '90s,
Ol' Dirty Bastard
was the loose cannon of the group, both on record and off. Delivering his outrageously profane, free-associative rhymes in a distinctive half-rapped, half-sung style,
ODB
came across as a mix of gonzo comic relief and not-quite-stable menace. Unfortunately, after launching a successful solo career, his personal life began to exhibit those same qualities.
ODB
spent much of
1998 and 1999 getting arrested with ridiculous, comical frequency, building up a rap sheet that now reads not so much like a soap opera as an epic Russian novel. At first, his difficulties with the law made him a larger-than-life figure, the ringmaster of rap's most cartoonish sideshow. Sadly, his life inevitably slipped out of control, and the possibility that his continued antics were at least partly the result of conscious image-making disappeared as time wore on. It was difficult for observers to tell whether
ODB
's wildly erratic behavior was the result of serious drug problems or genuine mental instability; bad luck certainly played a role in his downfall, but so did his own undeniably poor judgment. Despite being sentenced to prison on drug charges in 2001, it's worth noting that while he was running amuck
Ol' Dirty
's offenses were largely nonviolent; the saddest part of his story is that, in the end, the only person he truly harmed was himself.
Ol' Dirty Bastard
was born
Russell Tyrone Jones
in Brooklyn in 1969, and grew up in the neighborhood of Fort Green as a welfare child. As he got older, he started hanging out more and more with his cousins
Robert Diggs
and
Gary Grice
; they all shared a taste for rap music and kung-fu movies. The trio parlayed their obsessions into founding
the Wu-Tang Clan
, renaming themselves
Ol' Dirty Bastard
(since there was no father to his style),
the RZA
, and
the Genius
, respectively.
The Wu
grew into an innovatively structured hip-hop collective designed to hit big and then spin off as many solo careers for its members as possible. Buoyed by
the RZA
's production genius and a number of strong personalities,
the Wu-Tang Clan
's first album,
Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)
, was released at the end of 1993 and became one of the most influential rap albums of the decade. Earlier in the year,
Ol' Dirty
had been convicted of second-degree assault in New York, the only violent offense ever proven against him; trouble continued to stalk him in 1994, when he was shot in the stomach by another rapper in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn following a street argument.
Luckily, the injuries weren't serious, and
Dirty
became the second
Wu-Tang
member to launch a solo career (after
Method Man
) when he signed with Elektra and released the
RZA
-produced
Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version
in early 1995. The stellar singles
"Brooklyn Zoo"
and
"Shimmy Shimmy Ya"
both became hits, making the album a gold-selling success. Additionally, his guest spot on a remix of
Mariah Carey
's
"Fantasy"
produced one of the year's unlikeliest hitmaking teams. With the concurrent success of the other
Wu
solo projects, anticipation for the group's second album ran high, and when the double-disc
Wu-Tang Forever
came out in the summer of 1997, it sold over 600,000 copies in its first week of release. Included on the second disc was
"Dog Shit,"
two and a half minutes of perhaps the most bizarre, scatological
ODB
ranting that had yet appeared on record. And then, the saga began.
In November 1997,
Ol' Dirty Bastard
was arrested for failing to pay nearly a year's worth of child support -- around 35,000 dollars -- for the three children he had with his wife, Icelene Jones (by this point, he'd fathered a total of 13 children, beginning in his teenage years). Things picked up in February 1998: he started his own clothing line, dubbed My Dirty Wear, and along with several protégés, he rushed out of a New York recording studio to help save a four-year-old girl who had been hit by a car and lay trapped underneath. The very next day, at the Grammy Awards (where
the Wu
had been nominated for Best Rap Album), there followed the incident that truly established the
Ol' Dirty
legend. During
Shawn Colvin
's acceptance speech for her Song of the Year award,
ODB
rushed the stage seemingly out of nowhere, clad in a bright red suit. He took over the microphone and launched into a rambling complaint about buying an expensive new outfit but losing the Grammy to
Puff Daddy
, whom he described as "good" but not as good as his own group, because "
Wu-Tang
is for the children." Hustled off-stage after this puzzling, oddly timed outburst,
ODB
was the talk of the next day's news reports, and many mainstream outlets had to find ways of avoiding the "bastard" portion of his name. He further confounded the public by announcing in April that he was scrapping his
Ol' Dirty Bastard
alias (which headed up a long list that included Osirus [sic], Joe Bannanas [sic], Dirt McGirt, Dirt Dog, and Unique Ason) and calling himself Big Baby Jesus. None of his explanations in interviews even verged on coherence, and the press never took the switch all that seriously; even the erstwhile Big Baby Jesus himself seemed to forget about the idea after a short time.
The rest of 1998 was a slow downward spiral. In April, he pleaded guilty to a charge of attempted assault on Icelene Jones, resulting in a protection order against him; the following month, a bench warrant was issued for his arrest after he missed two court dates concerning his child support payments (he finally did show up and signed an agreement to pay off the debts). In late June,
ODB
was shot in a robbery attempt in Brownsville, Brooklyn; two assailants pushed their way into
ODB
's girlfriend's apartment, stole some money and jewelry from the rapper, and shot him once. The bullet entered his back and went through his arm before exiting his body, but luckily the wounds were superficial, and several hours after receiving emergency-room treatment,
ODB
ignored the hospital's request for overnight observation and simply walked out. Only one week later,
ODB
was arrested in Virginia Beach for shoplifting, after walking out of a shoe store wearing a pair of 50 dollar sneakers. Adding insult to injury, his SUV was stolen from outside a New York recording studio a couple weeks later. Undaunted,
Dirty
went ahead with his plans to tour, set up his own Osirus Entertainment label, and recorded with a group of protégés called D.R.U.G. (Dirty Rotten Underground Grimies). As a result, he missed several court dates concerning his Virginia Beach shoplifting charge, resulting in an order for his arrest.
That difficulty seemed to matter less when, in September,
ODB
was arrested in Los Angeles for making terrorist threats. He'd been attending a concert by R&B singer
Des'ree
at the House of Blues in West Hollywood, and refused to be escorted outside by security who'd grown tired of his drunken rowdiness; after he was kicked out, he returned and threatened to shoot the security staff -- a felony in California, punishable by up to three years in jail. Not two weeks after posting bail,
ODB
was kicked out of a hotel in Berlin, Germany, for lounging on his balcony in the nude (no charges were filed). He later returned to California, where he was arrested once again in November on
more
charges of making terrorist threats -- this time allegedly threatening to kill an ex-girlfriend (and mother of one of his children).
ODB
pleaded not guilty in both "terrorist" cases, and returned to New York in January. At this point, it was still difficult to view
ODB
as a genuine criminal -- not that his conduct had been exemplary by any means, but there was a possibility that he was simply misunderstood, or that the California criminal justice system was essentially criminalizing the act of being a blowhard.
Shortly after
ODB
's return to New York, he was pulled over for a traffic violation while driving with his cousin. What happened next was never fully clarified. The officers claimed that
ODB
got out of his vehicle and started shooting at them; he was arrested and charged with attempted murder and criminal weapon possession. However, the police were never able to produce a matching weapon, ammunition, or empty ammo shells to support their claims, and there were a multitude of conflicting stories reported from their side as to the exact details of the incident. In February, a grand jury decided there was not enough evidence and dismissed the case, after which an outraged
ODB
filed suit against the arresting officers. Just a couple of weeks later,
ODB
once again fell victim to the vagaries of the California legal system. After citing him for double-parking his car in Hollywood, police discovered that he was driving without a license, and when they searched him, they found that he was wearing a bulletproof vest. This was understandable, given his recent experience in New York, but California had recently passed a law making it illegal for convicted violent felons to wear body armor -- and because of his 1993 second-degree assault conviction,
ODB
fell under that category (in fact, his arrest was one of the very first under the law). In March, now back in New York,
ODB
was pulled over for
another
traffic violation (this time driving without license plates), and police found a small amount of crack cocaine in his SUV, leading to misdemeanor drug possession charges. Five days later,
ODB
was pulled over and cited
again
for driving without license plates, as well as driving with a suspended license. In the face of this impossible legal maze, April brought one small bit of good news -- the terrorist-threat charges involving his ex-girlfriend were dismissed due to lack of evidence. What was more, former O.J. Simpson defense attorney Robert Shapiro signed on as
ODB
's legal representative.
Still,
ODB
's run of ill luck continued. At the end of July, he was jailed in California for failing to pay a portion of his bail from the House of Blues case (in a recent court hearing, he'd acknowledged financial difficulties stemming from his legal bills). He was able to post the money and was released; however, just days later, he was arrested in New York after running a red light. He was
still
driving on a suspended license, but what was more serious, officers discovered not only marijuana, but 20 vials of crack cocaine. He was able to post bail, but didn't return to Los Angeles for a hearing in the body-armor case, and his bail there was revoked and a bench warrant issued for his arrest. In mid-August,
ODB
checked himself into a rehab center in upstate New York, hoping to address his escalating problem with hard drugs; he soon transferred to a different center in California.
Somehow, in the middle of his incredible, headline-dominating run as a bicoastal outlaw,
ODB
had found time to record a new album under the auspices of several different producers, including
the RZA
and
the Neptunes
. Released in September 1999,
Nigga Please
entered the charts at number ten, aided by his position as the undisputed king of hip-hop bad boys; it also spawned a minor hit single in
"Got Your Money."
In November,
ODB
received more good news, of a sort: his sentencing in the two pending California cases (the body armor and the House of Blues) came out to one year in drug rehabilitation and three years' probation, with no prison time. Despite the fact that a resolution was in sight,
ODB
complained during the sentencing hearing that he felt police had been targeting him excessively. That sense of persecution manifested itself in a January 2000 hearing in New York, related to his drug charges; apparently exasperated by all the chaos, a sullen
ODB
ignored the presiding judge, talked dirty to a female DA (in typically bizarre fashion, he reportedly called her a "sperm donor"), and actually took a nap, thereby erasing any inclinations the prosecution had toward leniency. Afterward, he apparently got drunk, violating the terms of his rehab program and probation conditions; upon returning to California, he was kicked out of rehab and transferred to jail. Although he could have faced prison time for breaking probation,
ODB
received a more lenient sentence of six months in rehab.
Up until this point,
ODB
had managed to avoid prison time, since he was clearly a drug addict in need of help. Yet at the same time, his apparent unwillingness to be helped meant that, for better or for worse, he was running out of chances. While he'd suffered some terrible luck in his run-ins with the law, the last straw was entirely of his own making: in October 2000, with just two more months in rehab to go,
ODB
made a run for it. He spent the next month as a fugitive from the law, making his way across the country and secretly recording some new material with
the RZA
.
ODB
turned up in a very public fashion at the November record-release party for the new
Wu-Tang Clan
album,
The W
(which had been dedicated to him, and featured his vocals on one track,
"Conditioner"
; other contributions had been deemed too bizarre for release). He took the stage in the Hammerstein Ballroom in front of hundreds of incredulous, wildly cheering fans, and only added to his mystique by managing to leave the facility without getting arrested, despite the large police presence outside. After a few more days on the lam,
ODB
was captured in a McDonald's parking lot in Philadelphia while signing autographs for a large crowd of fans; in fact, the crowd was so large that the restaurant manager had called police, not knowing what was going on.
ODB
was extradited to New York, where he stood trial on not only his prior drug charges, but also the various traffic violations and a charge that he violated the protection order on Icelene Jones in 1998. After several trial postponements, in April 2001
ODB
accepted a deal from prosecutors that essentially wiped out his other offenses in New York in exchange for a guilty plea to the cocaine possession charges. He received the minimum sentence of two to four years in state prison, and received credit for the eight months he'd already served; moreover, he was allowed to serve the jail time he owed the state of California concurrently. Still, the daunting prospect of state prison was nearly too much for
ODB
to bear; in July, he had to be put on suicide watch pending a psychiatric evaluation, and reports surfaced that he'd suffered a broken leg after being assaulted in a holding facility.
It remained to be seen how
ODB
would hold up under the harsh environment of prison, and whether he would ever resolve his legal problems to the point where he could once again enjoy a productive recording career. Accordingly, Elektra issued the best-of compilation
The Dirty Story: The Best of Ol' Dirty Bastard
in late 2001, despite the fact that he'd only released two albums. In early 2002, some of the material he'd recorded during his fugitive days surfaced on the new album
The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones
, put out by the small D-3 label. With a dearth of actual
ODB
material to rely on, the album was padded out by a number of guest rappers and handled by unknown producers (even
the RZA
steered clear of the affair), and
ODB
himself went on record as knowing virtually nothing about the release. The reviews were almost uniformly scathing, calling
Trials and Tribulations
a shoddy piece of exploitation. In 2003
ODB
was released from jail and quickly signed to Roc-a-Fella Records. The following year found him working on a new album, work that ended suddenly when
ODB
collapsed in a recording studio and died shortly thereafter. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Fan Comments
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Louis Bzdyk
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permalink
)
Jun 27th, 7:38pm
ODB the greatness, never fails. RIP dirty
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Matt Morris
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Jan 23rd, 6:42pm
RIP ODB, Love your work. You'll never be forgotten.
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War-N Bills
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)
Dec 13th, 4:36am
Love this dude.. was a fan of him before i even got into the Wu as a whole. RIP my dude.
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Albums (13)
Download
Message To The Other Side (Osirus Part 1)
(21 songs)
Download
Return To The 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version
(17 songs)
Download
The Definitive Ol' Dirty Bastard Story
(14 songs)
All in Together Now Raw: A Tribute to Ol' Dirty Bastard
(1 Track)
view all
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