S.H. Fernando Jr. is a journalist whose work has been published in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, Spin, and Vibe. After graduating from Harvard and the Columbia University School of Journalism, he began his career as a music journalist for The Source magazine. The author of The New Beats: Exploring the Music, Culture & Attitudes of Hip-Hop, he now lives in Baltimore, MD.
One of SLATE's "Must-Reads for Summer" (2021)
"This sweeping history of the Wu-Tang Clan, the nine-man rap crew
from Staten Island whose eclectic sound transformed the genre,
traces the journey of its members from their childhoods in New York
City housing projects to their current role as elder statesmen of
American hip-hop. If the Clan's initial success was surprising, in
an early-nineties rap scene dominated by a slick, West Coast style,
its longevity has been astonishing; its various artists have
produced nearly a hundred albums. Fernando dutifully narrates the
group's origin story, but his real contribution lies in a careful
analysis of how its mastermind, RZA, that 'mystic, majestic magus
from the slums, ' created a dynasty."--New Yorker
"An authoritative history of seminal hip-hop collective the Wu-Tang
Clan.... Fernando vividly evokes the hardscrabble landscape of the
group's home turf of Staten Island, where RZA first brought them
together with an ambitious vision.... The go-to source for anyone
interested in one of the most significant hip-hop groups of all
time."--Kirkus Reviews
"An undisputed labor of love, this is the account diehard fans have
been waiting for."--Publishers Weekly
"Playing chess, not checkers, author S. H. Fernando Jr. has written
a blunted history of the Wu-Tang Clan that reads like a textual
tapestry weaving together New York history, old school hip-hop,
gritty futurism, crack corners, Five-Percent Nation knowledge,
kung-fu flicks, Time Square tricks, Blaxploitation aesthetics,
vintage soul, Asian philosophy, Black power, and streetwise
poetics. Like the Wu crew, Fernando was driven by passion,
knowledge and the desire to drop science. Master-mixing
journalistic discipline and research with gonzo enthusiasm, From
the Streets of Shaolin: The Wu-Tang Saga is a masterful
contribution to the culture and beyond."--Michael A. Gonzales,
Senior Writer, Wax Poetics
"S.H. Fernando Jr. is the original Wu-Tang chronicler. His early
work is foundational and his latest tome delivers the titillating
travels of these original men with more flavor than Flav."--Sacha
Jenkins, Director, Wu-Tang Clan: Of Mics and Men
"So much has been written about the Wu-Tang Clan, but finally we
have the entire story in one place. S. H. Fernando Jr., one of the
first ever journalists to cover the group, walks us through not
only the backstories of the founding members, but also the specific
conditions that led to Wu-Tang's formation. Economic/racial
inequality, the drug trade, the teachings of the Nation of Gods and
Earths, kung fu cinema, and the early days of New York hip-hop are
explained in full detail, as well as production techniques and the
machinations of the music industry, with analyses of the albums
(both as a group and solo projects) that took the world by storm
and helped define a generation. This is an essential text for any
fan of hip-hop culture or American history in general."--Ben
Merlis, author of Goin' Off: The Story of the Juice Crew & Cold
Chillin' Records
"To truly tell the story of a group like Wu-Tang, a writer needs to
see so much more than just the music, and look deeper into the
culture, sociohistorical context and sheer rawness of the streets
that these young gods emerged from. It's rare that a writer so
poignantly unravels the riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an
enigma that is the Wu. S.H. Fernando Jr.'s unprecedented early
access and immersion into the golden era of hip-hop lends to a
deeper story of Wu-Tang's brotherhood, visual inspirations and the
gritty ecosystem that informs Wu-Tang's come up story. From the
Nation of Gods and Earths to The Zulu Nation to Raekwon's immortal
Snow Beach Polo parka, Fernando lyrically illustrates why the life
and times of the Wu stands as a great American story. Beautifully
nuanced and lushly written, Fernando's telling of the Wu-Tang story
shows (and proves) that it can, indeed, all be so simple."--Vikki
Tobak, author and curator of Contact High: A Visual History of
Hip-Hop
"Wu-Tang Clan led a revolution, and S.H. Fernando Jr. was on the
front lines--at the shows, in the studio, and on set for the video
shoots where these nine hip-hop warriors changed the world. With
vivid reporting and sharp critical analysis, From the Streets of
Shao-Lin offers a chronicle of the Wu in real time, and truly
allows the reader to enter the 36 Chambers."--Alan Light, former
Editor-in-Chief of Vibe and Spin magazines, author of What
Happened, Miss Simone?: A Biography and Let's Go. Crazy: Prince and
the Making of Purple Rain
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