DJ Hollywood: The Original King of New York | Medium The Fatback Band drop the first rap record, “King Tim III (Personality Jock)” 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. 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. Don’t get me wrong, they had people rapped before me-syncopated and unsyncopated. Before Hollywood, DJs would usually shout out refrains like “Rock on, my mellow”, “To the beat, y’all,” or “You don’t stop.” This was a game-changing moment for hip hop as it now brought the rapping aspect to the forefront of the music.ĭJ Hollywood: Nobody was doin’ the turntables and the microphone before me. It was the first time anyone who ever rapped entire lyrics over a record. Interview w/ DJ Kool Herc | Davey D DJ Hollywood introduces rapping over breakbeatsġ975: A couple of years after Kool Herc popularised extending record breakbeats, DJ Hollywood, who hailed from Harlem, came up with the idea of rapping Isaac Haye’s lyrics from “Good Love 6-9969” over the percussion section of MFSB’s “Love is the Message.” Actually, she wanted me to play at a party and I went out and got around twenty records that I felt was good enough and we gave a party and charged about twenty five cents to come in and made 300 dollars. My sister asked me to give a party one day. When I was doing that I saw a lot of kids playing outside in the backyard. I was messing around with the music and I started out by buying a few records to play at my house. Kool Herc: Hip-hop started when my father brought a PA system and didn’t know how to hook it up. This innovation is considered the origin of hip hop DJing and production. Using two turntables, Herc was able to isolate the breakbeats of popular records like James Brown’s “Give It Up or Turnit a Loose” and The Incredible Bongo Band’s “Bongo Rock”, creating what he called “The Merry-Go-Round” technique. The culture started here and went around the world. “This is where it came from,” Kool Herc said in an interview with The New York Times about the historic address. 1520 Sedgwick AvenueĪugust 11, 1973: There were a lot of moments, people and events leading up to the creation of hip hop, but when DJ Kool Herc and his sister, Cindy Campbell, threw a block party in the recreation room of their apartment building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx, it would mark the official birthplace of the culture. Let’s not waste any more time, here are the most important hip hop moments, from 1973 to today. This list of important moments is by no means definitive, and we’ll continue to add to it as time goes by. Despite it’s relatively young age, compared to other music genres, hip hop has had rich, diverse history.įrom the culture’s beginnings at block parties and park jams, to its current position as the dominant genre across Billboard and streaming charts, hip hop has come a long way.
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