Exclusive from www.rapamania.com #100HipHopPioneersandLegends
HIP HOP HISTORY 12/16/2016 The ORIGINAL SUGARHILL GANG FINALLY GOT
THEIR NAME BACK! Due to disputes with the label they were forced to use
the name Rappers Delight. Original members- Wonder Mike and Master Gee
along with Hen Dog, who replaced Big Bank Hank (R.I.P) and has been
performing with the group for the past 15 years. The dispute with their
record label over the name is finally over thanks to Scorpio and
Mele Mel who worked along with Leland Robinson who is the only
surviving member of the Robinson Family, to give the group their name
back. After all the confusion of which group would show up at concerts-
you can now bet that you will see the Original members Wonder Mike,
Master Gee and alumni member Hen Dog. Right now the 2 groups are working
on a Sugarhill Reunion Tour as we speak with Grandmaster Furious 5
Mele Mel, Scorpio and the Sugarhill Gang. We will have more information
in a few days.
Booking contact! Furious5@comcast.net and Hwmcbling@gmail.com
FOR MORE TRUE SCHOOL HIP HOP Visit http://www.rapamania.com
GIVING YOU THE HIP HOP NEWS ON THE TRUE CULTURE OF HIP HOP visit us www.Rapamania.com ARE YOU HIP HOP? featuring what the culture is all about from Exclusive interviews, Documentaries, Old school Hip Hop Videos, Performances, Flyers, Graffiti/Aerosol Art and more. 40 years of Hip Hop keeping the Founding Fathers, Pioneers and Legend of Hip Hop in the mix
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Sunday, December 13, 2015
NEW YORK! "Shelter From The Streets " Bus Tour Provided by Book Bank Foundation
Book Bank Foundation Glenn Toby and Sponsered by Rapamania Van Silk
Join VJ Uncle Ralph McDaniels Ralph McDaniels Of Video Music Box @videomusicbox On December 17, 2015 @ 9AM For The Book Bank Foundation's @thebbf Annual "Shelter From The Streets " Bus Tour. We Are Serving ALL 5 Borough's Of New York City, Including Long Island. Bringing Inspiration, Love, Light & Solutions To Overcoming Poverty. As We Distribute Much Needed Food, Clothing, Medical Supplies, Books, Toy's, Personal Hygiene Items For The Lost, The Lonely & The Forgotten. VJ Ralph McDaniels Has A Heart For His Community. He Thinks Music, Video, Film & Art Are A Powerful Platform For Learning. We Are Changing The World One Word At A Time" For More Information Contact: D'Anthony @toneycaponey or Rahiim @info@thebbf.org or Call (800) 956-3395 Visit www.thebbf.org #100PioneersofHipHop For more info visit http://bookbankfoundation.org Supported by www.rapamania.com
HIP HOP THROWBACK Chiefrocker Busybee and the World Famous DJ Brucie B
#TBT HIP HOP THROWBACK Chiefrocker Busybee Chiefrocker Busybee and the World Famous DJ Brucie B Now this is a classic Hip Hop Pioneering emcee Busybee. We all know that Busybee is one of Hip Hop's jewels and as far as his career goes from his battle with Kool Moe Dee to his performance in the first Hip Hop Movie "Wild Style". But people never mention Brucie B yep one of the culture's unsung heroes and yet humble as ever. Brucie B from the Bronx, New York, Odgen Ave where I use to go visit him was a interesting person. On one hand he has been around the Culture because he followed in the footsteps of DJ Hollywood, Luvbug Starski and Eddie Cheba leading up to the likes of Kid Capri, Ron G and Dj S&S. Brucie B would be at the after-hour spot The Hilltop on Edward L Grant or you might catch him at the Rooftop Skating Rink in Harlem. No matter what he was playing he would entertaining people all over. Kool Dj Red Alert always talks about Brucie B. Brucie B also during the Original DJ Mixtape era you either had a Brucie B, Kid Capri, Dj Hollywood, Ron G, S&S , Showtime aka J Mo Ice tape and the demand paying $30 dollars at Rock and Will meant you was on point and hot on the streets. Brucie B also became Busybee's Dj when he was signed to Strong City Records. Still today one of the most respected DJ's in New York that carters to a particular crowd that wants to party and hear certain new songs but keep you partying from his classics and style of play of those records. Brucie B one of the best DJ's still in the game.. For more True School Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com
The Records Shack on 125st Landmark owned by SIKHULU SHANGE
HIP HOP HISTORY! Who remember The Records Shack on 125st owned by SIKHULU SHANGE? I use to see Aftika Bambaataa, Kool Dj Red Alert, Kool Herc, Dj Hollywood and others going there to get records. SIKHULU had many rare records. He lost his store on 125st because they didn't renew his lease and he became a 125st Vendor after 36 years of having a store
HARLEM UPTOWN'S Legendary Record Shack on 125th Street across from the Apollo Theater boasts a great BIG selection of R & B, Gospel, Oldies & Electronics of ALL KINDS(TV's, DVD Players, Radios, mp3 players, headphones & MORE)!
African Music CD's have the latest artists from Angelique Kidjo &
Oliver Mtukudzi to Ladysmith Black Mambazo! Founded by South African
businessman, SIKHULU SHANGE over 30 years ago, the Harlem Record Shack
remains THE ONE stop SHOP for WHAT IS HOT! The VINYL is precious, the
staff is wise & Brother Sikhulu Shange is a wealth of BLACK HISTORY
& MUSICAL KNOWLEDGE Kyle Brinson #100HipHopPioneers #areyouhiphop #rapamania For more True School Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com
BROOKLYN NEW YORK! HIP HOP HISTORY BIRDEL'S RECORDS JOE LONG CLOSE STORE IN 2011!
BROOKLYN NEW YORK! HIP HOP HISTORY BIRDEL'S RECORDS JOE LONG CLOSE STORE IN 2011! How many dj traveled all the way to Brooklyn to get their vinyl from Birdel's? I use to go there to get my records back in the early 80's. Actually he had moved to a smaller store of Fulton Street.
Joe Long has tried closing his legendary Brooklyn music shop, Birdel’s Records, before.
Two years ago, Mr. Long posted a going-out-of-business sign in the windows of his Bedford-Stuyvesant storefront, which opened in 1944. With the decline of the music industry and of his profits, and the fact that no family member wanted to take over, he’d had enough. Mr. Long, now 73, began working at Birdel’s in 1957 and had owned the shop since the late 1960s. He was ready to retire, he said.
But to hear him tell it, the neighborhood wouldn’t let him.
“They said, ‘You’re an icon; you’re an institution in the community for all these years,’ ” Mr. Long recalled.
Though Mr. Long relented and took the signs down, little changed. So earlier this month he posted them in his windows again. And this time, he said, it’s for real: Birdel’s, the neighborhood staple that is among the last in a dying breed of New York City vinyl shops, and where a young Notorious B.I.G., the famed Brooklyn rapper, honed his chops listening to James Brown and Temptations records, will close on Friday, Mr. Long said.
“I hung on and hung on and hung on,” he said. “I can’t go on.”
Mr. Long’s immediate plans include traveling far from New York, where he has lived since 1954: first to North Carolina, where he will visit family, then perhaps to Aruba or Ghana.
One recent day, as calypso music blasted from an old television near the cash register, customers dug through Mr. Long’s specialties — gospel and oldies — as well as some contemporary CDs, and friends and family members helped pack up and sort through the estimated 100,000 45s and 10,000 LPs at Birdel’s, a dusty stockpile Mr. Long said he would part with for $25,000 to $30,000.
As is, of course.
Jeffrey Joe, 41, was rummaging through record-filled cardboard boxes that Mr. Long’s cousin had retrieved from the shop’s storage areas. A collector and D.J., Mr. Joe said he had heard of Birdel’s only two months ago, but had spent many hours since hunting through piles of Mr. Long’s 45s. He estimated that he had spent about $600 on 1,000 records.
Among his finds: Lee Dorsey singles, rare funk records from 1974, jazz 45s that have disappeared from the flea markets.
“This is one of the last places in New York with an original stockpile of records from the ’50s, from the ’60s, from the ’70s,” said Mr. Joe, who has been collecting records for more than 20 years. “The coolest thing is that a lot of it — I’d say 80 percent of it — is stuff I’d never heard of before.”
For others, it was an emotional farewell.
“I shudder to think of the day when he is no longer here and I can’t get words of wisdom,” said Edmon Braithwaite, 52, who began shopping at Birdel’s in the early 1980s and said Mr. Long had become a mentor through a local business association. “It’s a huge loss to the community.”
Despite Mr. Long’s professed commitment to close his shop, some Birdel’s stalwarts refuse to believe him.
“When I saw that sign, I said, ‘He ain’t going nowhere,’” said Bernice Layne, 60, who has been shopping at Birdel’s since 1963. “God has a way of working out miracles.”
Mr. Long, who was standing nearby, replied, “Yes he does, but he ain’t going to work one for me.
Saturday, December 12, 2015
HIP HOP HISTORY! THE CHILL TOWN Jersey City Documentary
HIP HOP HISTORY! THE CHILL TOWN Jersey City Documentary a Must watch and learn! Like I said if you wasn't moving around HOW WOULD YOU KNOW! ALL #100HipHopPioneerandLegends MUST BE RESPECTED KNOWN AND UNKNOWNS THEY PUT IN WORK ALSO! Being Close minded you will never Win....
VANSILK For more True School Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com The biggest Hip Hop Documentary Collection http://www.rapamania.com/#!hip-hop-documentaries/cec2. #100HipHopPioneers #HipHopPOWs #Areyouhiphop
Documentary film by A. "Champagne " Lloyd: Starring Chill Rob G., Lakim Shabazz, Joey Time, Master Cee, Dj Thurmie Thurm, Dj Wimpy Bee, Dj Nickey Barnes. Peter Barnes, Prince Kharique, L A Sunshine (Treacherous 3), Ms. Mary Brown, Cool Sir. Brown, Chief Chuck a Luck, Dj Edub Da General, Big Lord, ShahKing, and Cameo's by Greg Nice ( Nice & Smooth), Stevie D.(Force Md's) , Ralph McDaniel ( VMB), KEITA Ki and Dj Lord Yoda X ( Crash Crew, Zulu Nation) and more....
.Synopsis:THIS DOCUMENTARY FILM USES A MIXTURE OF INTERVIEWS,EMCEEING, AND VIDEO FOOTAGE, TO CONVEY THE STORY ABOUT SEVERAL HIP-HOP MUSIC ARTIST WHO DEVELOPED THEIR TALENTS IN THE STREETS OF CHILL TOWN, J.C AND TOOK IT TO RECORD LABELS, RECORD STORES,RADIO STATIONS AND WORLD TOURS,; AND YET THEIR TALENTS HAD NOT BEEN GIVEN THE RESPECT THAT IT DESERVES FROM THE MUSIC INDUSTRY. THIS FILM WILL DISPLAY THE RAW PROFESSIONAL TALENT THAT WAS ROOTED OUT OF CHILL TOWN J C.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppgLMMQHDu8
FOR MORE HIP HOP DOCUMENTARY Visit http://www.rapamania.com/#!hip-hop-documentaries/cec2
HIP HOP HISTORY From Rahiem aka Todd Williams
HIP HOP HISTORY From Rahiem aka Todd Williams #100HipHopPioneerandLegends AreyouHipHop Good morning beautiful XOXOXOXO I feel this needs to be addressed because there's a contingency of people who are claiming to be pioneers of Hip-hop who are not! If you were not there and actively participating in park jams and have no flyers to substantiate your claim in addition to not having released ANY records circa 1979-1983 you are NOT a pioneer of Hip-hop nor a pioneer of early rap recordings...the definition of the word pioneer is...develop or be the first to use or apply (a new method, area of knowledge, or activity! So if you came on the scene in 1985 and made a ripple in the pond, you're a legend NOT A PIONEER! So therefore all the people throwing the word pioneer around simply because someone else gave you the label and you never bothered correcting them is basically helping to perpetuate the (inaccuracies). With all due respect to those regarded as legends...here is the definition of the word legend...an extremely famous or notorious person, especially in a particular field. Now that we've established the definition of these 2 words perhaps we can apply them accordingly instead of labeling whoever someone else says is a pioneer or legend as such! This information is being disseminated to institutions of higher learning as well as tv networks and it's obvious there are some people who feel as though they could potentially get left out of the mix and not get paid for telling their half truth as a result of them not being present during the inception of the culture! If the topic of conversation is about the culture's inception, you can speak about it whether you actively played a role or was just an observer, but to speak as though you made a difference during the time nobody knew who you were and you had no notoriety is helping to perpetuate the inaccuracies and you're leaving yourself open to be challenged/rebutted/exposed! HBO doesn't know shit about the inception of our culture which is why they called ANYBODY to attend the meetings and speak about our culture's inception! That does NOT qualify you just because you spoke to HBO! You are part of our problem and you will be exposed!!!!! It's impossible if you started in 1985 or later that you are a pioneer when clearly the culture had been going on since 1973! From For more True School Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com HIP HOP S GLOBAL!
HIP HOP IN QUEENS With Ralph McDaniels Glenn Toby and DMC from RUN DMC
HIP HOP IN QUEENS With Ralph McDaniels Glenn Toby and DMC from RUN DMC Supported by Rapamania.com
Out The Kings From Queens, At The Queens Library Hip Hop Lecture Series. I'm Discussing My Life Experiences, Career Path, Mini Workshop "The Road To Riches"At The Queens Public Library 204-01 Hollis Avenue, Hollis, New York Wednesday December 16, 2015 @ 4pm. Listen To Darryl "DMC" McDaniels Lecture On December 22, 2015 At Central Library 89-11 Merrick Blvd Jamaica, NY Hosted By & Moderated By VJ Ralph McDaniels Rappers Write Childrens Books & Comic Books
#thebookbankfoundation #thebbf #meetlilg #thestopfilm #queenspubliclibrary #videomusicbox #hiphopeducation #queenslegends #hiphoppioneer #oldschoolhiphop #nycpubliclibrary DjLady Love Kool Red
Out The Kings From Queens, At The Queens Library Hip Hop Lecture Series. I'm Discussing My Life Experiences, Career Path, Mini Workshop "The Road To Riches"At The Queens Public Library 204-01 Hollis Avenue, Hollis, New York Wednesday December 16, 2015 @ 4pm. Listen To Darryl "DMC" McDaniels Lecture On December 22, 2015 At Central Library 89-11 Merrick Blvd Jamaica, NY Hosted By & Moderated By VJ Ralph McDaniels Rappers Write Childrens Books & Comic Books
#thebookbankfoundation #thebbf #meetlilg #thestopfilm #queenspubliclibrary #videomusicbox #hiphopeducation #queenslegends #hiphoppioneer #oldschoolhiphop #nycpubliclibrary DjLady Love Kool Red
the #100 HIP HOP PIONEERS AND LEGENDS!
#100HipHopPioneerandLegends
Photo Grid #6 more pioneers added HIP HOP is a Culture represented by
many in the beginning, there are many stories because everyone grew up
in different sections of the Bronx. But remember we still have Harlem
Manhattan,Brooklyn,Queens,Staten Island, Long Island, New Jersey and so
on. Some migrated from different places and the respect is owed to the
forgotten Pioneers who helped built this culture. And yes we talking the
infant stage of this small community in
the beginning when the truth was being told. Personally I respect
everyone who warrant respect and so do everyone else who respects each
other. Collectively numbers is Power and Power hold weight and everyone
should be on the same agenda of Protecting and Articulating the Truth
and actual timelines of this Culture. I keep saying the truthful
interviews are the ones done in the beginning. THE 100 HIP HOP PIONEERS
represents the Pioneers of this Culture and the number could be 150 or
200 but we are calling it 100 HIP HOP PIONEERS. Everyone of Pioneers
status is Welcome from Artists, Dj's,BBoys/Girls, Graffiti and Aerosol
Artists and and those who contributed to this Culture before 1983. To
define time is to fact check all timelines. For more True School Hip Hop
visit www.rapamania.com AGAIN EVERYONE IS WELCOME OF PIONEERS STATUS! #Areyouhiphop #rapamania #HIPHOPPOWs All Pioneers are Welcome to email your name and photos to newhiphopculture@gmail.com with Social Media, Bio and Contact!
They Made New York! Props to KOOL Herc featured in Time Magazine!
On July 14, 2015, T magazine assembled some of the artists, writers,
performers, musicians and intellectuals who defined New York’s
inimitable and electrifying cultural scene of the late 1970s and early
’80s. There were longtime friends (and some rivals) in the group, but
overall, the mood was one of celebration. And why not? Every generation
thinks it’s uniquely special, but this generation really is: These are
the people who came to, and stayed in, New York when it was at its
worst, and in so doing, created what was arguably the most important
multidisciplinary artistic movement that the city has ever seen.
Continue reading the main story
Related CoveragThe photographs in this story are by the late Peter Hujar (1934-87), one of the key figures in New York’s downtown art scene. Here,
Why Can’t We Stop Talking About New York in the Late 1970s?SEPT. 10, 2015
But while this historic gathering was notable for its presences, it was equally so for its absences: a whole group of people (the artists David Wojnarowicz, Peter Hujar, Robert Mapplethorpe, Keith Haring, Tseng Kwong Chi and Felix Gonzalez-Torres among them) who were lost to AIDS. Those who remain are survivors — of a plague, of time and, most of all, of the wonders and the ravages of the era.
For more True School Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com
Continue reading the main story
Related CoveragThe photographs in this story are by the late Peter Hujar (1934-87), one of the key figures in New York’s downtown art scene. Here,
Why Can’t We Stop Talking About New York in the Late 1970s?SEPT. 10, 2015
But while this historic gathering was notable for its presences, it was equally so for its absences: a whole group of people (the artists David Wojnarowicz, Peter Hujar, Robert Mapplethorpe, Keith Haring, Tseng Kwong Chi and Felix Gonzalez-Torres among them) who were lost to AIDS. Those who remain are survivors — of a plague, of time and, most of all, of the wonders and the ravages of the era.
For more True School Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com
KOOL HERC VS PETE DJ JONES By Mark Skillz
Well written by Mark Skillz and since this was written 10 years ago alot of fact checking has been done. Just because you were mentioned do not mean you were there in the very beginning...
R.I.P TO THE LATE PETE DJ JONES AND KOOL DJ AJ!
One Night At the Executive Playhouse
Pete DJ Jones vs. Kool DJ Herc
By Mark Skillz
MarkSkillz@aol.com
Back in the good old days of 1977 when gas lines were long and unemployment was high, there were two schools of deejays competing for Black and Latino audiences in New York City: the Pete D.J. Jones crowd and the devout followers of Kool D.J. Herc. One group played the popular music of the day for party-going adult audiences in clubs in downtown Manhattan. The other played raw funk and break-beats for a rapidly growing, fanatic - almost cult-like following of teenagers in rec centers and parks. Both sides had their devotees. One night the two-masters of the separate tribes clashed in a dark and crowded club on Mount Eden and Jerome Avenue called the Executive Playhouse.
The First Master: The Wise Teacher
You can't miss Pete D.J. Jones at a party - or anywhere else for that matter, he is somewhere near seven feet tall and bespectacled, today at 64 years old he is a retired school teacher from the Bronx, but if you listen to him speak you immediately know he ain't from New York - he's from 'down home' as they say in Durham, North Carolina. But no matter where he was from, back in the '70's, Pete Jones was the man.
"I played everywhere", Mr. Jones says in a voice that sounds like your uncle or grandfather from somewhere down deep in the south, even though he's been in New York for more than thirty years. "I played Smalls Paradise, Leviticus, Justine's, Nells - everywhere."
"Looky here", he says to me in the coolest southern drawl before he asks me a question, "You ever heard of Charles Gallery?"
"Yes", I said, as I tell him that I'm only 36 years old and I had only heard about the place through stories from people who had been there. "Oh", he says in response, "that was one helluva club. Tell you what, you know that club, Wilt's 'Small's Paradise'?"
"Yep", I said, "that place is internationally known - but I never went there either."
"That's ok", he says still as cool as a North Carolina summer breeze, "When I played there GQ and the Fatback Band opened for me."
"No way - are you talking about 'Rock-Freak' GQ, the same people that did 'Disco Nights?'
"One and the same", he says. He suspects that I don't believe him so he says, "Hey, we can call Rahiem right now and he'll tell ya." As much as I would love to speak with Emmanuel Rahiem I pass, I believe him.
In his heyday Pete DJ Jones was to adult African- American partygoers what Kool Herc was to West Bronx proto- type hip-hoppers, he was the be all to end all. He played jams all over the city for the number one black radio station at the time: WBLS. At these jams is where he blasted away the competition with his four Bose 901 speakers and two Macintosh 100's - which were very powerful amps. At certain venues he'd position his Bose speakers facing toward the wall, so that when they played the sound would deflect off of the wall and out to the crowd. The results were stunning to say the least. His system, complete with two belt drive Technic SL-23's (which were way before 1200's) and a light and screen show, which he says he'd make by: "Taking a white sheet and hanging it on the wall, and aiming a projector that had slides in it from some of the clubs I played at." These effects wowed audiences all over the city. He went head to head with the biggest names of that era: the Smith Brothers, Ron Plummer, Maboya, Grandmaster Flowers, the Disco Twins, "Oh yeah", he says, "I took them all on."
On the black club circuit in Manhattan at that time - much like the Bronx scene - deejays spun records and had guys rap on the mike. "I ran a club called Superstar 33, ask anyone and they will tell you: That was the first place that Kurtis Blow got on the mic at", says a gruff voiced gentlemen who, back then, called himself JT Hollywood - not to be confused with D.J. Hollywood, whom JT remembers as, "An arrogant ass who always wanted shit to go his way."
"I wouldn't call what we did rappin' - I used to say some ol' slick and sophisticated shit on the mike", said a proud JT.
"We spun breaks back then too", Pete Jones says, "I played "Do it anyway you wanna," 'Scorpio', 'Bongo Rock', BT Express, Crown Heights Affair, Kool and the Gang, we played all of that stuff - and we'd keep the break going too. I played it all, disco, it didn't matter, there was no hip-hop per se back then, except for the parts we made up by spinning it over and over again."
There have been so many stories written about hip-hop's early days that have not reported on the guys that spun in Manhattan and Brooklyn in the early and mid '70's, that many crucial deejays of that time feel left out.
"Kool Herc and guys like that didn't have a big reputation back then", explains Jones, "they were in the Bronx - we, meaning guys like myself and Flowers, we played everywhere, so we were known. Their crowd was anywhere between 4 to 70. Mine was 18-22. They played in parks - where anybody could go, no matter how old you are you could go to a park. We played in clubs."
With a sense of urgency Mr. Jones says, "I have to clear something up, many people think that we played disco - that's not true. There were two things happening in black music at that time: there was the "Hustle" type music being played - which was stuff like Van McCoy's "Do the Hustle" - I couldn't stand that record. And then there were the funky type records that mixed the Blues and jazz with Latin percussion that would later be called funk. Well, hip-hop emerged from that."
He places special emphasis on the word 'emerged'. He says that because "If you know anything about the history of music, you know, no one person created anything, it 'emerges' from different things.
The Second Master: The Cult Leader
There must have been a height requirement for deejays in the '70's, because like Pete DJ Jones, Kool DJ Herc is a giant among men. In fact, with his gargantuan sized sound system and 6'5, 200 plus pound frame, the man is probably the closest thing hip-hop has ever seen to the Biblical Goliath. Today, some thirty years since his first party in the West Bronx, Kool Herc is still larger than life. His long reddish-brown dreads hang on his shoulders giving him a regal look - sort of like a lion. His hands - which are big enough to crush soda cans and walnuts, reveal scarred knuckles, which are evidence of a rough life. During our conversation, Kool Herc, whose street hardened voice peppered with the speech patterns of his homeland Jamaica and his adopted city of New York made several references to 'lock up', 'the precinct' and the 'bullpen', all in a manner that showed that he had more than a passing familiarity with those types of situations.
As the tale goes Kool Herc planted the seeds for hip-hop in 1973 in the West Bronx. Along with his friends Timmy Tim and Coke La Rock, and with the backing of his family - in particular his sister Cindy, the parties he threw back then are the food of urban legend. In the 1984 BBC documentary "The History of Hip Hop" an eight-millimeter movie is shown - it is perhaps the only piece of physical evidence of those historic parties. In the film, teenagers of anywhere between 17-20 years old are grooving to the sounds of James Brown's "Give It Up or Turn It Loose". Young men wearing sunglasses and sporting fishermen hats with doo rags underneath them, are seen dancing with excited young women, all while crowded into the rec room of hip-hop's birthplace: 1520 Sedgwick Ave.
As the camera pans to the right, the large hulking figure of Kool Herc takes the forefront. Sporting dark sunglasses and wearing a large medallion around his neck, Kool Herc is decked out in an AJ Lester's suit. He isn't just an imposing figure over his set; he looms large over his audience as well. His sound system - a monstrous assemblage of technology, was large and intimidating too, so awesome was it that his speakers were dubbed the 'Herculords'. When Kool Herc played his gargantuan sized sound system - the ground shook. And so did his competition.
Legend has it that with his twin tower Shure columns and his powerful Macintosh amplifiers, he is said to have drowned the mighty Afrika Bambaataa at a sound clash. "Bambaataa", Herc said with the volume of his echo plex turned up and in his cool Jamaica meets the Bronx voice, 'Turn your system down…"
But the mighty Zulu chief was unbowed.
TO READ THE REST OF THIS STORY FOLLOW UP NEXT AFRIKA BAMBAATAA visit http://hiphopnews.yuku.com/topic/1044#.VmxK3eJqDIU
R.I.P TO THE LATE PETE DJ JONES AND KOOL DJ AJ!
One Night At the Executive Playhouse
Pete DJ Jones vs. Kool DJ Herc
By Mark Skillz
MarkSkillz@aol.com
Back in the good old days of 1977 when gas lines were long and unemployment was high, there were two schools of deejays competing for Black and Latino audiences in New York City: the Pete D.J. Jones crowd and the devout followers of Kool D.J. Herc. One group played the popular music of the day for party-going adult audiences in clubs in downtown Manhattan. The other played raw funk and break-beats for a rapidly growing, fanatic - almost cult-like following of teenagers in rec centers and parks. Both sides had their devotees. One night the two-masters of the separate tribes clashed in a dark and crowded club on Mount Eden and Jerome Avenue called the Executive Playhouse.
The First Master: The Wise Teacher
You can't miss Pete D.J. Jones at a party - or anywhere else for that matter, he is somewhere near seven feet tall and bespectacled, today at 64 years old he is a retired school teacher from the Bronx, but if you listen to him speak you immediately know he ain't from New York - he's from 'down home' as they say in Durham, North Carolina. But no matter where he was from, back in the '70's, Pete Jones was the man.
"I played everywhere", Mr. Jones says in a voice that sounds like your uncle or grandfather from somewhere down deep in the south, even though he's been in New York for more than thirty years. "I played Smalls Paradise, Leviticus, Justine's, Nells - everywhere."
"Looky here", he says to me in the coolest southern drawl before he asks me a question, "You ever heard of Charles Gallery?"
"Yes", I said, as I tell him that I'm only 36 years old and I had only heard about the place through stories from people who had been there. "Oh", he says in response, "that was one helluva club. Tell you what, you know that club, Wilt's 'Small's Paradise'?"
"Yep", I said, "that place is internationally known - but I never went there either."
"That's ok", he says still as cool as a North Carolina summer breeze, "When I played there GQ and the Fatback Band opened for me."
"No way - are you talking about 'Rock-Freak' GQ, the same people that did 'Disco Nights?'
"One and the same", he says. He suspects that I don't believe him so he says, "Hey, we can call Rahiem right now and he'll tell ya." As much as I would love to speak with Emmanuel Rahiem I pass, I believe him.
In his heyday Pete DJ Jones was to adult African- American partygoers what Kool Herc was to West Bronx proto- type hip-hoppers, he was the be all to end all. He played jams all over the city for the number one black radio station at the time: WBLS. At these jams is where he blasted away the competition with his four Bose 901 speakers and two Macintosh 100's - which were very powerful amps. At certain venues he'd position his Bose speakers facing toward the wall, so that when they played the sound would deflect off of the wall and out to the crowd. The results were stunning to say the least. His system, complete with two belt drive Technic SL-23's (which were way before 1200's) and a light and screen show, which he says he'd make by: "Taking a white sheet and hanging it on the wall, and aiming a projector that had slides in it from some of the clubs I played at." These effects wowed audiences all over the city. He went head to head with the biggest names of that era: the Smith Brothers, Ron Plummer, Maboya, Grandmaster Flowers, the Disco Twins, "Oh yeah", he says, "I took them all on."
On the black club circuit in Manhattan at that time - much like the Bronx scene - deejays spun records and had guys rap on the mike. "I ran a club called Superstar 33, ask anyone and they will tell you: That was the first place that Kurtis Blow got on the mic at", says a gruff voiced gentlemen who, back then, called himself JT Hollywood - not to be confused with D.J. Hollywood, whom JT remembers as, "An arrogant ass who always wanted shit to go his way."
"I wouldn't call what we did rappin' - I used to say some ol' slick and sophisticated shit on the mike", said a proud JT.
"We spun breaks back then too", Pete Jones says, "I played "Do it anyway you wanna," 'Scorpio', 'Bongo Rock', BT Express, Crown Heights Affair, Kool and the Gang, we played all of that stuff - and we'd keep the break going too. I played it all, disco, it didn't matter, there was no hip-hop per se back then, except for the parts we made up by spinning it over and over again."
There have been so many stories written about hip-hop's early days that have not reported on the guys that spun in Manhattan and Brooklyn in the early and mid '70's, that many crucial deejays of that time feel left out.
"Kool Herc and guys like that didn't have a big reputation back then", explains Jones, "they were in the Bronx - we, meaning guys like myself and Flowers, we played everywhere, so we were known. Their crowd was anywhere between 4 to 70. Mine was 18-22. They played in parks - where anybody could go, no matter how old you are you could go to a park. We played in clubs."
With a sense of urgency Mr. Jones says, "I have to clear something up, many people think that we played disco - that's not true. There were two things happening in black music at that time: there was the "Hustle" type music being played - which was stuff like Van McCoy's "Do the Hustle" - I couldn't stand that record. And then there were the funky type records that mixed the Blues and jazz with Latin percussion that would later be called funk. Well, hip-hop emerged from that."
He places special emphasis on the word 'emerged'. He says that because "If you know anything about the history of music, you know, no one person created anything, it 'emerges' from different things.
The Second Master: The Cult Leader
There must have been a height requirement for deejays in the '70's, because like Pete DJ Jones, Kool DJ Herc is a giant among men. In fact, with his gargantuan sized sound system and 6'5, 200 plus pound frame, the man is probably the closest thing hip-hop has ever seen to the Biblical Goliath. Today, some thirty years since his first party in the West Bronx, Kool Herc is still larger than life. His long reddish-brown dreads hang on his shoulders giving him a regal look - sort of like a lion. His hands - which are big enough to crush soda cans and walnuts, reveal scarred knuckles, which are evidence of a rough life. During our conversation, Kool Herc, whose street hardened voice peppered with the speech patterns of his homeland Jamaica and his adopted city of New York made several references to 'lock up', 'the precinct' and the 'bullpen', all in a manner that showed that he had more than a passing familiarity with those types of situations.
As the tale goes Kool Herc planted the seeds for hip-hop in 1973 in the West Bronx. Along with his friends Timmy Tim and Coke La Rock, and with the backing of his family - in particular his sister Cindy, the parties he threw back then are the food of urban legend. In the 1984 BBC documentary "The History of Hip Hop" an eight-millimeter movie is shown - it is perhaps the only piece of physical evidence of those historic parties. In the film, teenagers of anywhere between 17-20 years old are grooving to the sounds of James Brown's "Give It Up or Turn It Loose". Young men wearing sunglasses and sporting fishermen hats with doo rags underneath them, are seen dancing with excited young women, all while crowded into the rec room of hip-hop's birthplace: 1520 Sedgwick Ave.
As the camera pans to the right, the large hulking figure of Kool Herc takes the forefront. Sporting dark sunglasses and wearing a large medallion around his neck, Kool Herc is decked out in an AJ Lester's suit. He isn't just an imposing figure over his set; he looms large over his audience as well. His sound system - a monstrous assemblage of technology, was large and intimidating too, so awesome was it that his speakers were dubbed the 'Herculords'. When Kool Herc played his gargantuan sized sound system - the ground shook. And so did his competition.
Legend has it that with his twin tower Shure columns and his powerful Macintosh amplifiers, he is said to have drowned the mighty Afrika Bambaataa at a sound clash. "Bambaataa", Herc said with the volume of his echo plex turned up and in his cool Jamaica meets the Bronx voice, 'Turn your system down…"
But the mighty Zulu chief was unbowed.
TO READ THE REST OF THIS STORY FOLLOW UP NEXT AFRIKA BAMBAATAA visit http://hiphopnews.yuku.com/topic/1044#.VmxK3eJqDIU
Friday, November 20, 2015
Public Enemy’s 1988 WNYU Radio Concert Still Moves The Needle (Audio)
1988 was a benchmark year for Public Enemy. The same calendar year
that Chuck D, Terminator X, Professor Griff, and Flavor Flav released It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, the crew appeared on WNYU radio, 89.1 on the FM dial.
This week, the New York University station recently uploaded the appearance to Soundcloud. The 10-plus-minute spot features lots of hard rapping, razor sharp scratching, Gil Scott Heron and David Bowie beat-drops. The sum of its parts is a moment of sound in a P.E. medley that needs to be accessible in the digital era. Although the bass hits didn’t preserve the best, this is an amazing glimpse at what a Public Enemy set felt like in ’88—with an ill album out, and the energy of a Hip-Hop nation behind them.
If you like Public Enemy on radio, make sure you’re up on Chuck D’s Rapstation platform.
Listen to Public Enemy 1988 WNYU RADIO CONCERT
https://soundcloud.com/wnyu/public-enemy-live-on-wnyu-1988
FOLLOW http://ambrosiaforheads.com
This week, the New York University station recently uploaded the appearance to Soundcloud. The 10-plus-minute spot features lots of hard rapping, razor sharp scratching, Gil Scott Heron and David Bowie beat-drops. The sum of its parts is a moment of sound in a P.E. medley that needs to be accessible in the digital era. Although the bass hits didn’t preserve the best, this is an amazing glimpse at what a Public Enemy set felt like in ’88—with an ill album out, and the energy of a Hip-Hop nation behind them.
If you like Public Enemy on radio, make sure you’re up on Chuck D’s Rapstation platform.
Listen to Public Enemy 1988 WNYU RADIO CONCERT
https://soundcloud.com/wnyu/public-enemy-live-on-wnyu-1988
FOLLOW http://ambrosiaforheads.com
Wednesday, November 18, 2015
‘Rap Tees’ Catalogs Two Decades of Hip-Hop Merchandising
The
new photo book “Rap Tees: A Collection of Hip-Hop T-Shirts 1980-1999”
by DJ Ross One documents 500 shirts, from hip-hop’s dawn — the first
item is a Sugar Hill Gang shirt from 1980, a year after that group
released “Rapper’s Delight,”
widely considered the first commercial hip-hop single — to its
turn-of-the-millennium ubiquity. All the shirts are advertisements, but
they go about their job in vastly different ways: Some emphasize logos,
others favor slogans or let photos do the talking; a rare few let
artists have their way.
Commercialism
has long been one of hip-hop’s prime ambitions. Yet “Rap Tees”
(powerHouse) suggests that for many years hip-hop had in fact been
under-merchandised. It’s striking how many of the best shirts weren’t
official or for sale. Several were promotional items, given out to
tastemakers and fans. And many weren’t by the musicians at all, but
bootlegs made on the cheap and distributed broadly.
That
means that this book begins as a document of the hip-hop industry’s
efforts to branch out beyond music, and by the end shifts to the flea
markets, swap meets, sidewalk stalls and parking lots where street-level
entrepreneurs, recognizing that rabid fans were also underserved
customers, collected money that the rappers and their record labels were
leaving on the table.
DJ Ross One,
a tenacious and sharp-eyed collector, owns about half of the shirts in
the book, and he tracked down and photographed the rest. His list is
organized by artist and by region, in more or less chronological order.
Over
the two decades covered here, the nature of the hip-hop T-shirt
evolves. In hip-hop’s first true corporate era, from the mid-1980s
through the early 1990s, the artist logos were essential. About 20
shirts in the book depict the classic Run-DMC logo — bold white capital
letters, “Run” stacked atop “DMC,” sandwiched between two red lines.
Some are on elaborately designed sweatshirts made in partnership with
Adidas, the first example of the fashion world aggressively embracing
hip-hop.
The
book devotes extensive sections to the logos of the Beastie Boys, based
on the Harley-Davidson mark, and Public Enemy, perhaps hip-hop’s most
iconographically adept act. In addition to around two dozen Public Enemy
shirts, “Rap Tees” reproduces pages from Rapp Style, the group’s
mail-order catalog, which offered items like jackets, T-shirts, hats and
mugs. Rap music’s loudest and most radical polemicists were also its
most effective salesmen and branding experts.
Saturday, November 14, 2015
VIDEO UFC RHONDA ROUSEY GET KNOCK OUT BY HOLLY HOLM!
Holly Holm shocks the world with head kick KO over Ronda Rousey
By Damon Maritn
Holm was touted as the toughest challenger to Rousey's title ever since she signed to the UFC, but she walked into the fight as much as a 20-to-1 underdog.
That all changed as soon as the fight started as Holm showed poise and a picture-perfect strategy used to dismantle Rousey in less than six minutes.
Every time Rousey engaged or tried to push forward, Holm circled away and refused to allow the former Olympian to bully her across the cage as she's done with so many opponents before her.
Holm's best weapon was her straight punch. She popped Rousey continuously, and as the former champ’s nose and mouth started to bleed, it was clear this was a much different fight than she had ever been in before.
Rousey eventually scored a takedown with a headlock but Holm stayed patient and even slipped out of an armbar attempt from the submission specialist. Holm actually ended up taking Rousey down later in the round, but immediately backed out of her guard to get the fight back to the feet.
From there, Holm kept her composure as she popped the champion a few more times and as she went to the corner, the challenger looked confident after getting the fight to the second round for only the second time in Rousey's career.
Holm wasted no time setting the pace in the second round as she stunned Rousey right away during a scramble. Rousey started to get up off the mat and just as she lifted her hands and turned, Holm absolutely blasted her with a left high kick that sent the California native crashing back to the mat.
Holm followed up with a couple more strikes on the ground as referee Herb Dean swooped in to stop the fight before Rousey could take any more damage.
A stunned Melbourne crowd erupted as Rousey laid prone on the canvas and Holm celebrated her win with a blistering knockout just 59 seconds into the second round.
Holm prepared for the fight with coaches Greg Jackson and Mike Winkeljohn, who are well known as being two of the best strategists in the entire sport, and it seems like they picked apart every one of Rousey's tendencies and it paid off in the Octagon.
"I have to say that everything that we worked on presented itself in the fight. Every kind of grab that she tried to get and clinch on the cage. I have not spent this much time in the gym before any fight in my life," Holm said after the historic win.
"Everything we worked on happened tonight and that actually happened to be something we worked on to try and angle the clinch. I didn't want to kick her to the body because we didn't want her to grab onto us and it just was there."
Holm may have been the underdog going into the fight, but she fought like the 18-time boxing champion who ruled her sport for most of her career before moving to MMA full time. Holm paid homage to her team for helping to get her ready and it paid off huge as she put Rousey down in impressive fashion to win the UFC women's bantamweight title.
"I just felt like how could I not do this?" Holm said. "I have the best coaching from stand up to grappling to wrestling, look at this time right here, this right here is priceless."
This marks the first loss in Rousey's mixed martial arts career and after she was helped up to a stool following the knockout, she made her way out of the Octagon before speaking to UFC commentator Joe Rogan. Rousey was undoubtedly stunned not only from the knockout but watching Holm put together the most flawless performance of any opponent she's ever faced. According to a report from TMZ Sports, the former champ was transported to the hospital immediately after exiting the Octagon.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
HIP HOP LANDMARK HARLEM WORLD DISCO
HIP HOP LANDMARK HARLEM WORLD DISCO! Photo by Chuck Foster! 1st I like to thank the late Jack Taylor the owner of Harlem and O C the manager The Harlem World Crew Son of Sam, Charlie Rock and special shout out to the Late DJ Randy who grew up with me at John Adams Projects as a child along with Dj Darryl. Harlem World was special it went from an adult disco to one of the hottest Hip Hop Clubs. As a flyer guy for the late Kool Dj Aj back in late 1977 Aj is always stated in all my interviews about who put me on and got me started as a promoter. Mandiplite was also someone along with Mike and Dave I have done shows with. But Harlem Wotld was the place to be & you had all the rappers coming from the from everywhere Johnny Wa and Rayvon, dj Spivey, Captain Riock, dj Red alert who is from Harlem walking distance really Dr Jeckyll and Mr Hyde, dj Kayslay aka Graf writer then known as Dez. There was a little kid who wanted to get in Harlem World name Doug E Fresh with his boy Loose Bruce. There were many who came to every show and then there are some telling stories about events that happened at Harlem World or certain shows and wasnt even at that event. In the end now it really doesn't matter because it was a phenomenal thing happening. I gave many shows there and help promote many shows there with KOOL DJ AJ. Actually we were the only 2 who did alot of shows there with the exception of the Harlem World Crew. Since they were the house they got to pick the good dates of the calendar. But lets remember while Harlem World was poppin, we still had competition on certain nights depending who you booked. Summertime was rough because Djs would come outside and who want to be in a club and paying when you could get to hear the music and whomever was on the mic for free. Business was good after Sumner was over. but the competition from other promoters at spots like the Celebrity Club, Randys Place could hurt any promoter if everyone did show the same night and it depend on who you had. But the Bronx was no different with the Savoy Manor, Stardust Ballroom, Club 371, T Connection, Ecstacy Garage and others spots could hurt your party. Part 1
For more True School Hip Hop Visit www.rapamania.com
Monday, November 9, 2015
LUVBUG STARSKI FORREST PROJECTS HIP HOP LANDMARK!
LUVBUG STARSKI FORREST PROJECTS HIP HOP LANDMARK! Also the home of Graffiti writer Phase 2, rappers Trickey Vic and Tipski. So early in the era moving around the Bronx as a teenager. Even though my claim is John Adams Projects, but my birth was Paterson Projects where 18 Park is a Hip Hop Landmark and I went to P S 18. But finally going to 163st to get some Johnson's BBQ Ribs there was some music coming from the park, the guy who had that section on lock was a guy named Trump (R.I.P) and this was before AJ was out in the parks. There was this young guy outside with music at the basketball court those half moon backboards.lol. And his name was Starski now there were others there as well and to be honest I can't remember their names. But his system was loud it did echo back to almost my block at night we knew someone was out having a park jam. Luvbug timeline was around 1974 when he was outside. Eventually I got to become cool with him and he found out later that after AJ started giving parties I was down with him. Lovbug was one of thr Bronx hottest dj because his rapping on the mic Dj Hollywood style was thr basic for rapping Dj's back then who could do it . Luvbug did a few songs and was one of the house dj's for Disco Fever once Sal decided Disco wasn't working no more at the club. Luvbug Starski moved around the Bronx, Manhattan, Queens playing with the likes Kool Herc, Afrika Bambaataa, Reggie Wells,Eddie Cheba, the late Pete Dj Jones, Dj Sesame Disco Twins and others .His story is one to be told. Another Hip Hip Pioneer, Still doing his thing in 2015. FOR MORE TRUE SCHOOL HIP HOP Visit www.rapamania.com
HIP HOP LANDMARK HOME OF THE CRASHCREW,,PROMOTERS MIKE AND DAVE. HARLEM
HIP HOP LANDMARK HOME OF THE CRASHCREW AND PROMOTERS MIKE AND DAVE. HARLEM My story about this crew which started out as the Force of Five Mc,s in the late 70's Reggie Reg, Gee Man, La Shu Bee, Barry Bistro, EK Mike C and DJ Darryl C (R.I.P) along with Disco Dave who with his brother Mike were the promoters. This was a self contained unit in which Mike and Dave owned their own sound system as well and use to bring the music out in their park as well. Mike and Dave,were very smart to the game & really kept to themselves whereas they were making a dent in the game with their parties. Mike and Dave had the Crashcrew do alot of shows which they gave in places like the Karate Club, I.S 201, Savoy Manor any place Mike and Dave could rent. But the Savoy Manor in 149 st was as far they would go into the Bronx . So eventually it happened Kool Dj Aj join forces and Mike and Dave with Kool Dj Aj started promoting parties together. By them linking with AJ gave them a Bronx pass to do parties further up in the Bronx because they were linked with Aj and Busybee. Which in turn gave AJ now to do parties with the Crashcrew, and then there was a young Biz Markie, a young Rob Base who wanted to get on and yes they carried record crate and as all that. But that Mike and Dave and Aj partnership didn't last long after AJ I started doing parties with Mike and Dave and we started going out to Queens where they put on a Queens rapper named Sweety G & they we were promoting MasterDon & the Death Committee, a young Dougie Fresh, the Boogie Boys, along with the Crashcrew. So doing the Queens parties was hectic coming from Harlem and making sure certain Queens rappers were cool. So I made sure that Divine and them were cool knowing they were tight as Hell. The Olympia Palace, Martin Van Buren High School were the spot we did the jams at . But we respected the crews out iof 40 projects, Baisley, and those who we knew could just set iit off back then but it never happened. Mike and Dave was also the 1st Rap promoters to release record under their label The Crashcew "Highpowered Rap and The Boogie Boys. Much Props to the crew from Lincoln Projects.
FOR MORE TRUE SCHOOL HIP HOP Visit www.rapamania.com
CEDAR PARK BRONX NEW YORK KOOL HERC HIP HOP LANDMARK!
CEDAR PARK BRONX NEW YORK KOOL HERC HIP HOP LANDMARK! 1520 Sedgwick Ave, Echo Park and Arthur Park Hip Hop Landmarks. The careers of many Hip Hop Pioneers and lets clear the facts a Hip Hop Pioneer would be 1st generation up until 1983 if you were on prominent flyers or did a recording and on a flyer. Then the Pioneers who were part of the scene from the inside or promoters who gave these jams. But getting back to Cedar Park where many jams where held as I traveled around playing basketball at Cedar Park and the other basketball court along side further up Sedgwick Ave because my friends lived in River Park Towers. This was Kool Herc park, 23 Park was that of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious 5 or 63 Park to Mean Gene, Theodore, and Flash was there before the Furious 5 became a group. My point is that the Pioneering Dj's had their section of the Bronx where they basically came from. Personally I never got to see Kool Herc at Cedar Park because he moved on to other Parks such as Echo and Arthur Park. I know some pioneers add some hot sauce to their stories but we must maintain our Hip Hop History in a correct manner. The Culture of Hip Hop have many Landmarks and Historical location which must be brought out as part of the Culture for the future ahead of us. For more True Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com Honoring the Pioneers and Legends of the Culture
DJ Hollywood: The Original King of New York by Mark Skillz
By Mark Skillz
In 1970s Harlem, one man with a golden voice and a great idea transformed party rocking forever
Those old enough to remember call him the Godfather of Rap. He was the King of New York when hustlers wore sharkskin suits. He was the Jay-Z of the 70s. Now he’s kissing 60-years-old and can still rock a party. There’s no million dollar check waiting for him or royalty money from a hit single. Those days have passed. Now, it’s about the love he’s always had playing music.
But don’t get it twisted: in his heyday, he made money. More
than any other rapper in his era. And this was before records. Not
Herc, nor Bam, or Flash, or Starsky were making $500 a show back then.
“I
was in demand,” he told me. “People wanted that, that, that… seasoning.
And once I realized that it was me they wanted, I figured, well,
they’ll have to pay a couple of extra dollars to get me.” And they did.
Lines stretched for blocks to hear what the flyers advertised as the
“golden voice” of DJ Hollywood.
“Before
me,” he proclaimed, in the same kind of prophetic voice that the guy
who discovered fire many millenniums ago may have used, “there was none.
And after me…” he pauses and reflects, “there was all.”
“Nobody was doin’ the turntables and the microphone before me. Nobody,” he emphasizes. “Don’t get me wrong,” he continues, “they had people [who] rapped before me—syncopated and unsyncopated. I can’t take nothin’ away from people like Oscar Brown Jr., Pigmeat Markham, the Last Poets, Gil Scott Heron, the Watts Prophets, Rudy Ray Moore, I used to listen to all of ‘em. I can’t take nothin’ from none of ‘em… but none of ‘em was doin’ what I was doin’ with the turntables and a mic.”
His
influence on the genre he helped to pioneer is evident in the styles of
DJ’s Kid Capri, Biz Markie and Lovebug Starski, as well as rappers who
specialize in crowd participation like Kurtis Blow and Doug E Fresh.
The only public acknowledgement he’s received for his hand in the creation of rap was back in 2005 on VH1’s Hip Hop Honors. For
the most part, he gets left out of the story because many of his
contemporaries, like Afrika Bambaataa and Kool Herc, have dismissed him
as having been “disco.”
“Can you believe that? Disco?”
he asks me, apparently annoyed at the idea. “What the fuck is that? So,
okay, I’m disco, aight, aight,” he says, “I’m the disco nigga that made
all of you niggas in hip-hop do what this nigga in disco was doin’.”
To
understand his contributions, we have to travel back in time to the
world inhabited by a fourteen-year-old runaway named Anthony Holloway.
TO READ MORE OF THIS ARTICLE Visit https://medium.com/cuepoint/dj-hollywood-the-original-king-of-new-york-41b131b966ee
THE OFFICIAL KURTIS BLOW SIGNATURE T-SHIRTS COLLECTION!
THE OFFICIAL KURTIS BLOW SIGNATURE COLLECTION! Coming Soon, Pre Order your Shirts! http://www.rapamania.com/#!rapamanaia-store/c1ldr
ALL SIZES from Sm to 4XL
All designs were approved by Kurtis Blow
Official shirts from the Artists by the Artists.
http://www.rapamania.com/#!rapamanaia-store/c1ldr
ALL SIZES from Sm to 4XL
All designs were approved by Kurtis Blow
Official shirts from the Artists by the Artists.
http://www.rapamania.com/#!rapamanaia-store/c1ldr
Saturday, November 7, 2015
HIP HOP LANDMARK BRONX RIVER THE HOME OF THE ZULU NATION & AFRIKA BAMBAATAA
BRONX RIVER THE HOME OF THE ZULU NATION & AFRIKA BAMBAATAA AND HIP HOP and all the Pioneers who came through over the last 40 years. Where do you start? Well for one this Community Center should consider a Historical Landmark which the NYCHA should think about..Just think about all the famous rappers who performed there and the thousands of people globally who visited Bronx River Community Center. Afrika Bambaataa and the Zulu Kings and Nation gave Hip Hop a home in the Bronx on a consistent basis because we always knew once a year that the Zulu Nation Anniversary was in November.
There are many Historical places in The Bronx that help birth this Culture and as well in other boros of New York. If Kool Herc gave birth to Hip Hop at 1520 Sedgwick or Cedar Park Disco King Mario to Bronxdale, then St Mary's Park is where Kool Dj Aj gave birth to Hip Hop and Luvbug Bug Starski Forrest Houses and so on. That is something we all should think about. For more True School,Hip Hop visit www.rapamania.com
HIP HOP LANDMARK THE AUDUBON BALLROOM!
HIP HOP LANDMARK THE AUDUBON BALLROOM!Manhattan, New York Why this would be a Hip Hop Landmark for one reason because this is where we lost our great Malcolm X and where many of Hip Hop Pioneers performed back in the 70's. The same stage where Malcolm X was assassinated on is the same stage that these groups performed on. Even though that the Ballroom had many rooms that were smaller and the Audubon Ballroom over the years had many Culture events there. Such Hip Hop Pioneers who performed there like Dj Hollywood, Luvbug Starski, Kool Kyle, Mean Gene, the Coldcrush Brothers, Grandwizard Theodore and The Fantastic 5, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious 5, The Funky 4 plus 1, Crashcrew and the countless Hip Hop acts and battle held there. Many of these shows were promoted by pioneering Hip Hop promoter Ray Chandler who was Flash and the Furious 5 first manager as well the late Kool Dj Aj. My one story at one of these events was that I personally got stuck up one night after a party at the Audubon. But some of the greatest Hip Hop parties were gave their up until around 1983.
THE HIP HOP LANDMARK HOME OF THE LATE KOOL DJ AJ MOORE HOUSES
THE HIP HOP HOME OF THE LATE KOOL DJ AJ MOORE HOUSES & ST MARY'S PARK! Kool Dj Aj gave his birth of Hip Hop to his neighborhood Moore Houses 149st & Jackson Ave, St Mary's Park which was connected to Moore Houses. I knew Aj when he he started back then his boy was graffiti legend Kase both from Moore Houses .But AJ really lived across the street with his grandmother in St Mary's and his neighbor was the late Pigmeat Markham who made "Here Comes the Judge. Aj would go up to Forrest Houses where Luvbug Starski & grafitti writer Phase 2 lived and came outside with music around 1975 could be earlier a year. So between Moore Houses, my projects John Adams which was 152 st Jackson Ave, into Westchester Ave and Tinton Ave, and walk up 8 block you was at Mckinnley and Forrest Houses that's how close we all was.
So my choice of who rocking tonite was great back then depending who was out either Kool dj Aj or Luvbug Starski park jams. My project dj''s never blew up into Hip Hop dj Jerry and his crew was out as well. But his younger brother Kuda aka Dj Randy(RIP)and our friend Dj Darryl became the dj and Hip Hop Crew at the Harlem World Disco. But AJ first emcees were Kenny Gee ,then Sonny Gee in the early days. Aj got put on by doing parties with Flash & Luvbug Starski and him seeing Promoter Ray Chandler sparked him to become a promoter and I was one of his flyer guys handing out flyers. Cowboy used to come and emcee for AJ when he came outside with the music and eventually Busybee became his permanent emcee doing alot of historical Hip Hop jams. I started giving my own parties as R.C PAC JAM then a little later on Mike and Dave and myself started doing parties together. But Kool DJ AJ set it off in that area of the Bronx Mott Haven section South Bronx. Later on after the game changed he became Kurtis Blow dj.He concepted the song "If I Ruled the Worked which Kurtis Blow recorded and was also rewarded with his own Dj song "AJ SCRATCH by Kurtis Blow. 2015 AJ was laid to Rest In Hip Hop Heaven Aaron O'Bryant My Brother A HIP HOP PIONEER.
FOR MORE TRUE SCHOOL HIP HOP Visit www.rapamania.com
Tuesday, November 3, 2015
To My Hip Hop Brothers Kool Herc & Afrika Bambaataa
HIP HOP HISTORY! To My Hip Hop Brothers Kool Herc & Afrika Bambaataa and the rest of the 1st generation of the Hip Hop Culture..We are living in a time of 40 plus years of this culture that was created by young black teens from the Bronx, because only a handful are originally from the South Bronx as stated by the geographic map. From the West, North, East and South Bronx the contribution during the mid 70"s and transformation of Disco where alot of the early dj's who played Disco also became part of this culture in a matter of months not years. Everybody had dj's in the parks everywhere not just N.Y everywhere and it just so happened we changed the game and gave it a name But the tireless discussion by all of who did what 1st and who created this 1st and timelines now being changed, some flyers altered is not good at all. Respectfully the earlier documentary that were filmed in the beginning happened to be the most accurate information back then when we all praised each other. I don"t get it Disco King Mario is not here to defend himself and all of us as elder statement of this Culture 1st Hip Hop generation need to band together in a more efficient way. Not every Hip Hop group was inspired by Kool Herc or Afrika Bambaataa because the next generation after us was too young. Some were inspired by Luvbug Starski, DJHollywood, Pete Dj Jones and the list goes on. There were many guys who were record and crate carriers, what about the early rap promoter, what about the guys who were down and never had a hit song and his story gets No Attention I call them the UNSUNG HIP HOP HEROES. Everybody contributed in the beginning and all the early documentary when those interviews were done are more accurate because those were the real and honest stories. I really don't care who did what anymore because the acknowledgement is not there and at 59 years old I know better .So are we really preserving The Culture or everyone Legacy? I wish all my Hip Hop brothers and sisters from the 1st generation before records to understand that we all have to praise each other like it was back in the 70's. And to refresh all memories you can visit www.rapamania.com
TO SEE ALL THE EARLY HIP HOP DOCUMENTARY Visit http://www.rapamania.com/#!hip-hop-documentaries/cec2
PEACE
VANSILK
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