Bangkok Post

Disgraced mogul selling - or breaking - Wu-Tang album

- Martin Shkreli.

Disgraced pharmaceut­ical executive Martin Shkreli is selling his coveted single copy of a Wu-Tang Clan album — but he might also destroy it.

The 34-year-old businessma­n — whose price hike of a critical HIV drug and smug demeanour have earned him the moniker “The Most Hated Man In America” — in 2015 bought Once Upon A Time In Shaolin, of which the celebrated rap ensemble made a sole edition.

A month after his conviction for securities fraud, Shkreli late on Tuesday put the album for sale on eBay — and with characteri­stic bravado said that he had never fully listened to it.

“At any time I may cancel this sale and I may even break this album in frustratio­n,” he wrote in a note for the auction, which will run through Sept 15.

The double-CD, for which Shkreli paid $2 million in what was considered the most expensive ever purchase of a musical recording, was selling on Wednesday afternoon for a little more than $200,000.

Shkreli insisted he did not need money but rather was trying to make a larger point. He was roundly criticised for buying the album, i ncluding by Wu-Tang Clan member Ghostface Killah who said the work should belong to “the people”.

“I decided to purchase this album as a gift to the Wu-Tang Clan for their tremendous musical output. Instead I received scorn from at least one of their [least-intelligen­t] members, and the world at large failed to see my purpose of putting a serious value behind music,” Shkreli wrote.

“I will be curious to see if the world values music nearly as much as I have.”

Shkreli said he would donate half of the sale’s earnings to the Oregon Health and Science University for research in drugs in rare diseases.

But he later clarified that he would only make a donation if he knew his donation would be accepted.

The Wu-Tang Clan, reflecting the group’s fascinatio­n with fantasy narratives, made just one copy of Once Upon A Time In Shaolin and stored it in a vault in Morocco while auctioning it.

The Wu-Tang Clan declared that the album could not be made available commercial­ly until the year 2103 but indicated that its owner was free to share it to private parties.

Shkreli flirted with releasing the music and played some of it on video-sharing site Periscope in November as he gloated over Donald Trump’s victory in the presidenti­al election.

RZA, generally considered the leader of the Wu-Tang Clan, has said that the group approved the sale of the album before Shkreli made headlines by jacking up the price of HIV drug Daraprim from US$13.50 (447 baht) to US$750 a pill overnight.

A Brooklyn jury last month found Shkreli guilty on three unrelated counts of securities fraud, although he was acquitted on the most serious charge.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand