Music Apple Deveondi
Hip-hop,
cultural movement that attained widespread popularity in the 1980s and ’90s;
also, the backing music for rap, the musical style incorporating rhythmic
and/or rhyming speech that became the movement’s most lasting and influential
art form.
Origins and the old school
Although widely considered a
synonym for rap music, the term hip-hop refers to a complex culture comprising four
elements: deejaying, or “turntabling”; rapping, also known as “MCing” or
“rhyming”; graffiti painting, also known as “graf” or “writing”; and
“B-boying,” which encompasses hip-hop dance, style, and attitude, along with
the sort of virile body language that philosopher Cornel West described as
“postural semantics.” (A fifth element, “knowledge of self/consciousness,” is
sometimes added to the list of hip-hop elements, particularly by socially
conscious hip-hop artists and scholars.) Hip-hop originated in the
predominantly African American economically depressed South Bronx section of
New York City in the late 1970s. As the hip-hop movement began at society’s
margins, its origins are shrouded in myth, enigma, and obfuscation.
Graffiti and break dancing, the
aspects of the culture that first caught public attention, had the least
lasting effect. Reputedly, the graffiti movement was started about 1972 by a
Greek American teenager who signed, or “tagged,” Taki 183 (his name and street,
183rd Street) on walls throughout the New York City subway system. By 1975
youths in the Bronx, Queens, and Brooklyn were stealing into train yards under
cover of darkness to spray-paint colourful mural-size renderings of their
names, imagery from underground comics and television, and even Andy
Warhol-like Campbell’s soup cans onto the sides of subway cars. Soon,
influential art dealers in the United States, Europe, and Japan were displaying
graffiti in major galleries. New York City’s Metropolitan Transit Authority
responded with dogs, barbed-wire fences, paint-removing acid baths, and
undercover police squads.
The
beginnings of the dancing, rapping, and deejaying components of hip-hop were
bound together by the shared environment in which these art forms evolved. The
first major hip-hop deejay was DJ Kool Herc (Clive Campbell), an 18-year-old
immigrant who introduced the huge sound systems of his native Jamaica to
inner-city parties. Using two turntables, he melded percussive fragments from
older records with popular dance songs to create a continuous flow of music.
Kool Herc and other pioneering hip-hop deejays such as Grand Wizard Theodore,
Afrika Bambaataa, and Grandmaster Flash isolated and extended the break beat
(the part of a dance record where all sounds but the drums drop out),
stimulating improvisational dancing. Contests developed in which the best
dancers created break dancing, a style with a repertoire of acrobatic and
occasionally airborne moves, including gravity-defying headspins and backspins.
In the
meantime, deejays developed new techniques for turntable manipulation. Needle
dropping, created by Grandmaster Flash, prolonged short drum breaks by playing
two copies of a record simultaneously and moving the needle on one turntable
back to the start of the break while the other played. Sliding the record back
and forth underneath the needle created the rhythmic effect called “scratching.”
Kool Herc was widely credited as
the father of modern rapping for his spoken interjections over records, but
among the wide variety of oratorical precedents cited for MCing are the epic
histories of West African griots, talking blues songs, jailhouse toasts (long
rhyming poems recounting outlandish deeds and misdeeds), and the dozens (the
ritualized word game based on exchanging insults, usually about members of the
opponent’s family). Other influences cited include the hipster-jive announcing
styles of 1950s rhythm-and-blues deejays such as Jocko Henderson; the Black
power poetry of Amiri Bakara, Gil Scott-Heron, and the Last Poets; rapping
sections in recordings by Isaac Hayes and George Clinton; and the Jamaican
style of rhythmized speech known as toasting.
Rap first came to national prominence in the United States with the release of the Sugarhill Gang’s song “Rapper’s Delight” (1979) on the independent African American-owned label Sugar Hill. Within weeks of its release, it had become a chart-topping phenomenon and given its name to a new genre of pop music. The major pioneers of rapping were Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, Kurtis Blow, and the Cold Crush Brothers, whose Grandmaster Caz is controversially considered by some to be the true author of some of the strongest lyrics in “Rapper’s Delight.” These early MCs and deejays constituted rap’s old school.
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