News & Updates

Wu-Tang Clan Co-Founder Oliver ‘Power’ Grant Dead at 52

"Everything that we learned was hard knock life," said Power, who gathered the money to make the Wu-Tang Clan's debut single and executive produced Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)

Published by

Oliver “Power” Grant, a pivotal player in the Wu-Tang Clan saga who executive-produced their albums, and oversaw their vast business empire, including the Wu Wear clothing line, has died of unknown causes. He was 52.

His death was first confirmed by the hip-hop music site Okayplayer. “Power helped build a global legacy rooted in independence, ownership, and culture,” the outlet noted. “His belief in creative control and community empowerment helped shape not only a group, but a dynasty that changed music forever.”

“Rest in Power, Power,” Wu-Tang Clan posted on its official Instagram account. Fellow Wu-Tang member Method Man wrote, “Paradise my Brother safe Travels!!” on Instagram alongside a photo of himself with Grant. “Bruh I am not ok.”

Grant grew up in the Park Hill projects of Staten Island alongside the future members of the Wu-Tang Clan. In 1992, he helped gather the necessary financing to create their debut single “Protect Ya Neck.”

“I think I came with most of the money,” he told Passion of Weiss in 2011. “I was more the financial guy and Ghost and RZA were the guys that had the musical talent…Everything that we learned was hard knock life, you figure it out as you go along, and take cues from those that are actively doing things. A lot of it was trial and error.”

In 1993, Grant served as the executive producer on their debut LP Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers). Not long afterwards, he founded their wildly successful clothing label Wu Wear. “We were so hot and on fire throughout those first years that phones rung off the hook for anything Wu-related,” he said in 2011. “Wu was so fresh and so new, the money that I was earning from the record business, I was spending actively just trying to get a start in business.”

Under the stewardship of Grant, Wu Wear cut a deal with Macy’s, and opened up four retail stores across the country. At the peak of its popularity, Wu Wear grossed $25 million annually. “The Wu brand and logo was subliminal,” Grant said. “It’s just like when you see a Pepsi and say let’s have a Pepsi together. The logo and the Wu was like an international communicator. It’s like if you familiar with Gucci or Louis Vuitton, you just identify and go towards it because it’s familiar. You identify to people with that aesthetic.”

In the 2019-2023 Hulu series Wu-Tang: An American Saga, Grant was portrayed by Marcus Callender. “The first conversation we ever had, we spoke for like three hours,” Callendar said in 2023. “It was a very surreal moment. He never gave me a pointer and said, ‘Do it like this, do it like that.’ It was never like that. All he told me was stories.”

From Rolling Stone US.

Recent Posts

Gorillaz Take Us Through the Peaks and Pits of ‘The Mountain’ in New Animated Short Film

In the eight-minute animated short soundtracked to “The Mountain,” “The Moon Cave,” and “The Sad…

February 28, 2026

Blackpink’s New Song ‘Go’ Is a Visual Magnum Opus

Blackpink is trading the neon pink for a sci-fi aesthetic that catapults the bar for…

February 27, 2026

Blackpink’s Comeback Mini Album, ‘Deadline,’ Is Here

The group also shared a dynamic music video for their anthemic song "Go"

February 27, 2026

‘Fossils 7’ and the Return of the Rock Legends of Bengal

Fresh off an electric set at Royal Stag Boombox in Kolkata, the band discuss the…

February 27, 2026

Niall Horan’s New Era Is About to Begin: ‘Album Is DONE’

The singer confirmed his fourth solo album is on the way

February 27, 2026

Gnarls Barkley Return With Reflective Single ‘Pictures’

CeeLo Green and Danger Mouse will release Atlanta, their third and final album as Gnarls…

February 27, 2026