The global hip-hop community is in mourning as it reflects on the profound legacy of a man whose name may not have been on every album cover, but whose DNA was woven into every stitch of the culture. Oliver “Power” Grant, a foundational pillar of the Wu-Tang Clan’s stratospheric rise, has passed away at the age of 52. While the world focused on the lyrical gymnastics of Method Man, Ghostface Killah, and the RZA, Grant was the strategic engine in the shadows, transforming a group of Staten Island emcees into one of the most recognizable and enduring brands in modern entertainment history.
In the early 1990s, when hip-hop was still fighting for its seat at the corporate table, the Wu-Tang Clan emerged not just as a musical collective, but as a revolutionary business model. Oliver Power Grant was instrumental in shaping that early vision. He understood instinctively that music was merely the entry point into a much larger cultural movement. While other artists were content with standard record deals, Grant and the executive team behind the “W” logo were busy redefining the concept of artist autonomy.
One of Grant’s most enduring achievements was his role as a pioneer in the world of urban fashion. Long before every major rapper had a clothing line, Grant helped launch Wu-Wear in 1995. At a time when luxury brands often snubbed the hip-hop community, Wu-Wear became a defiant symbol of self-sufficiency. It was the first time an artist-led brand successfully transitioned from concert merchandise to a global retail powerhouse, proving that creativity and business strategy could be one and the same. Grant’s entrepreneurial mindset set the blueprint for the “mogul” era of hip-hop, directly influencing the career paths of future titans like Jay-Z, Diddy, and Kanye West.