🙋🏾♂️In '71 and 72' and most of '73, Kool Herc, STUDIED Disco King Mario's: Break Beats, Block Parties and 2 Turn Tables!
@FBA_AllTHEWAY2 жыл бұрын
Busta had to be drunk when he was said hip hop came from caribbean culture!🤣😂
@carbon69512 жыл бұрын
FACTS!!! Also, at 20:32 they admitted that rapping came from Pigmeat Markham.. He said they were emulating him.
@Leggobeest71075 ай бұрын
Busta rhymes was right
@diallomahdi89083 жыл бұрын
I learned a lot from MichaelWayneTV. Shout out to Kool DJ Dee, Disco King Mario, Tyrone the Mixologist, Cholly Rock and Sunshine (R.I.P).
@mack26293 жыл бұрын
We don't need it to make sense , we need THE TRUTH !! THAT'S IT !! Told by those WHO WERE THERE !!
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
That is true
@missshannon97903 ай бұрын
And krs-NOT-then-one ain't one to teach.
@gboogie360 Жыл бұрын
The culture was already created and in place before the music came. Before the actual music of hip hop, it was how ppl talked, dressed, danced, partied. So much goes into the culture before music. It already existed. The music was just to icing on the cake. Not everybody was with the movement. Alot blacks and puerto ricans wasn't vibing to it, was still into disco.. it was the young ppl in the streets, most of the gang members. Then the music, the rhyming over beats. Us puerto ricans were there, contributed. But NEVER CREATED IT.
@malcolmxbox Жыл бұрын
There is a massive corporately funded movement to credit Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans as the creators of hip hop. As FBA it’s critical that we gatekeep our culture. 🇺🇸
@bahapanties3 жыл бұрын
You gotta hurry up and get these guys together because it's getting late for a lot of the elders. These guys would be in there 60's and 70's right now in October 8, 2021.
@RBOONE572 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video and your work respect from 🦬 Buffalo New York
@chopitupradio42863 жыл бұрын
This is a great documentary. Your idea of getting all the greats together is imperative to dispel the myths about HipHops origin. We need to settle this thing once and for all. Let the Caribbean’s come with their facts, and we FBA’s will come with ours.
@coolcazc2 жыл бұрын
Well said. I'm Mixed Caribbean / White. Most of Reggae came from a mixture Of Shuffling Blues 50s jazz Boogie esp New Orleans like the Neville brothers. Also Mento Local Folk music talking over guitar. They were totally influenced by US music They Jamaicans would set up Sound Systems an play the latest Afro American dance tunes. Touch It talk and Rhyme imitating the Jazz Jive Talkers and disc Jockeys Like Wolfman Jack and Jive talk over the Shuffling Blues in JA Accents they would challenge other Sound system in the Dance by doing version excursion then go studio and imitate Blues Boogie Rhythm but it was off beat to the Rhythm. It's never changed. Herc brought that to West Bronx's but instead of reggae he spun Funk but he played in a JA sound system style . Before Herc was doing his Party sessions . Gangs in the Bronx's were already doing Block Sessions and Talking giving dedications over Disco Beats. Here's the point these two styles were slightly different. Herc did bring a Jamaican Element but changed the music to suit the crowds taste but the Gangs in Bronx's dale were already the first playing block parties talking and rhyming. Both Styles Merged . So Herc weren't the first but he was the best.
@maazi.naaniya91582 жыл бұрын
Is that break dancing
@litebeingimmortal73752 жыл бұрын
I still don't understand what did herc bring to hip hop that wasn't already here?
@carbon69512 жыл бұрын
The only thing Herc bought into Hip-Hop was a bunch of hating-azz Jamaicans disguised as Hip-Hop fans.. Other than that, Herc didn't add a thing.
@DJGorny943 жыл бұрын
Man... You should write a book! Let's straight the history of Hip Hop! Shout out from Poland!
@Khaliqri3 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1970 so I knew nothing about 71-76. I caught wind of Hip Hop in 1977 from my older siblings. I appreciate these videos for putting everything into perspective.
@sslyshalom3333 жыл бұрын
Khaliq, I was born in 1971. I am a South Bronx baby......by the time I knew what HIPHOP was, it was 1977, when I first moved to Monroe Projects in the Soundview section of the Bronx. They were in the park right across the street, JAMMIN, in Story Avenue park. I STILL remember that. Monroe is right up the street from Bronxdale projects, so Michael WayneTV makes all the sense in the world to me.
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
@@sslyshalom333 who was the DJ and what year was that
@markeyosef15792 жыл бұрын
@@stanleyshack26 hip hop didn't start with a DJ. That came later on. Although there were many DJs prior to Kool hurc. The black spads created hip hop and it went from there.
@IAMHIPHOP9742 жыл бұрын
71-75 disco
@sslyshalom3333 жыл бұрын
SOUNDVIEW, the SECTION, NOT the PROJECTS, has been IGNORED in OUR FOUNDING ROLE in HIPHOP HISTORY....Michael Wayne, YOUR CHANNEL is VERY IMPORTANT as to SHATTERING the MYTHS of HIPHOP's TRUE ORIGINS. THANK U, O.G. This is from a HIPHOP CULTURALIST from MONROE PROJECTS !
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
word shout out to Monroe Story Ave
@sslyshalom3333 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 , thank you. I just sent an e-mail to Tariq Nasheed, who made HIDDEN COLORS. He has a website dedicated to Foundational Black Americans, as you most likely know already. I told him to tune in to your youtube channel, because yall are FROM the BEGINNING of HIPHOP. He already mentioned MARIO on his channel, but once he starts watching YOUR VIDEOS? I am sure, he will speak more on this on HIS platforms, which will allow the TRUTH to circulate more around the WORLD.
@brandypopejohnson20722 жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏾 for asking all the right questions
@sdatkb3 жыл бұрын
ADOS let’s grow
@beyondthecypherwithillskil99383 жыл бұрын
Dope content and valuable knowledge. I've learned a lot from your channel. RESPECT! This topic of other ethnicities in hiphop, specifically breaking, is mad important and a hot topic.
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
word it is important... than you
@sterlingturner54202 жыл бұрын
FBA created hip hop culture. No latinos,jamaicans,Asians or anyone else had anything to do with the creation of hip hop. Blacks invented it and it's our culture.
@ray14113 жыл бұрын
I was around in the 80s in Brooklyn and Puerto Ricans were still a minority of Hip Hop fans.
@aferrer742 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/horCg4yChdFnhKuIo close out our roundup of the Latinx originators of hip-hop, we’ll be talking about CRASH. Born John Matos, CRASH was part of the OG graffiti artists who painted on subway trains in New York. Like other iconic graffiti originators, he has collaborated with major brands, including Levi’s, Fender, and Absolut Vodka.What many do not know is that the majority of the people who were influenced and later contributed to hip hop were Latinos. Puerto Ricans are MCs', break dancers like the Rock Steady Crew, and Graffiti artists (Sal Rojas, Brown Pride).Another b-boy crew with Latinx members, which was there during the birth of Hip-hop, is the New York City Breakers. Hailing from the Boogie Down Bronx, the original five members were: Chino “Action” Lopez, Tony “Powerful Pexster” Lopez, Noel “Kid Nice” Mangual, and Matthew “Glide Master” Caban. The group shared hip-hop all over the world, with many people, including the King and Queen of Norway, Prince Andrew, and President Reagan (making them the first hip-hop group to perform for a sittingPuerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.New York City Breakers🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷
@TheGeeLuv2 жыл бұрын
Yes! someone is telling the truth!
@photus032 жыл бұрын
fascinating history. but what about dj disco wizz? he was grandmaster caz's dj partner? big love from the uk
@3737raider3 жыл бұрын
This is long overdue.
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
thank you for your comment ... appreciate you
@Loveamericasave3 жыл бұрын
How can we get this corrected. I don't like Googling, who's the founder of hip-hop and seeing Kool herc name, when it's a lie!!!!
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
Brown sugar you me anyone can submit information into Google ir wikipedia's because herc, bambaata, and Grandmaster flash are saying there is only 3 truely fathers of Hip Hop that is DJ herc, Afrikin bambaata, grandmaster flash not African American DJs only from the caribbeans.
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
caribbeans people are saying they started Hip Hop, and Disco this information is on the internet. Some of caribbean people are trying to Gangsta, steal African American Music. Some of these guys are Lairs, Lairs.
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
African Americans Invented Hip Hop.
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
caribbean people played a part in hip Hop, but they do not invent Hip Hop.
@Loveamericasave3 жыл бұрын
@@stanleyshack26 will do
@gboogie360 Жыл бұрын
Charlie Chase(founding member of cold crush)... Pumpkin... Mr Schick, DJ Julio, Mr Nice, Jimmy Mac from mean machine... the so called Real Roxanne.. Devastating Tito from fearless 4.. Master OC was also a member of fearless 4.. prince whipper whip... Ruby Dee... dj disco whiz who ALSO created the 1st mix plate in 1977, thats the 1st mixed dub recording ever in hip hop... this is all from the 70s... i didn't even name ppl behind the scenes. We were definitely there, contributed, but didn't create it. We were a small minority is 100% facts.
@harrypool713 жыл бұрын
Ask Busta to show us evidence of traditional Hip Hop in today’s Jamaican culture, in Jamaica. The genre of reggae music that they claim Hip Hop originated didn’t even become that big and died out itself.
@KneegrowthPeriodTV3 жыл бұрын
I think Busta maybe referring to the Sound system culture in Jamaica, sounds clashing other local sounds and emcees toasting over instrumentals which goes back to the early 60's. Do you know of any examples of emcees rocking over instrumentals on a sound system during the 60's or before?
@harrypool713 жыл бұрын
@@KneegrowthPeriodTV that’s the problem. It’s an attempt to try to crow bar something similar into the historical timeline. What you just did was label toasters as “Emcees “ in attempts to connect the two. They didn’t call themselves Emcees. Black Americans already “ Rapped” on records since the 50’s and there’s plenty of pre- Hip Hop evidence in many of their work as well as Dolomite, George Clinton, James Brown, etc. The elements were already in place without the need the for Jamaican influence. FBA have never needed any influence for any of the many branches of culture that we originated. So again, what happened to the so-called sound clash art form that so called influenced 90% of Hip Hop?!?!? And where’s the successful “ emcees” and “ DJ’s” that flourished in Jamaica as there home base?!?!?
@3rdeyesolace3 жыл бұрын
@@harrypool71 well said. The elements were there but hiphop united them
@KneegrowthPeriodTV3 жыл бұрын
@@harrypool71 Crow bar is a bit of a stretch I think especially when referring to a genre of music that borrows from everywhere. Personally I don’t see the difference between toasters and emcees, they’re both mic controllers riding a riddim to control or excite the crowd they just have different accents and flow. Also being successful does not override importance and relevance in my opinion but you would have to define what you deem to be successful so I could properly answer your question. Anyway my only question to you was do you know of any Herc and Coke la rock type situations that were occurring during 60’s in America as I’m generally interested in Hip Hop History. Thanks
@harrypool713 жыл бұрын
@@KneegrowthPeriodTV Where’s the early interviews, documentaries, movies that mention “ Jamaica “ or Reggae influence?!?!?. Are you aware that the majority of Jamaicans in NYC in the beginning didn’t even like Hip Hop music?!?!? Go listen to BDP’s “South Bronx”. He clearly states that. It wasn’t integrated amongst the different black people like people think. Go watch “The Education of Sonny Carson”. That’s a movie that contains the evidence of early, pre-Hip Hop. It’s pretty much all there.
@a.musaahmad52293 жыл бұрын
Salute to you my brother keep putting these videos out. The true history has to be told.
@carbon69512 жыл бұрын
They said at 20:32 that they were emulating Pigmeat Markham's 1960s "Rap" songs.. I've been saying for years Pigmeat Markham put out the first Rap Record.
@djpioneer9373 жыл бұрын
Brother, you definitely need an Instagram page. It would make it easier to spread your message. You and phase should also consider going on other peoples podcast so you can spread this truth. You should cross pollinate with Jayquan. His KZbin channel is called the foundation. He is also skeptical about the origin stories of hiphop
@chilldaddy36633 жыл бұрын
Jayquan ain’t spreading these guys words
@propane7183 жыл бұрын
Indeed..yall need more exposure..
@chopitupradio42863 жыл бұрын
I totally agree.
@hiphophistorian54763 жыл бұрын
The first bboys were all black...the OG Puerto Rican bboys even admit to this in numerous interviews. The Puerto Rican bboys came along around 1977 by their own admission, w Rocksteady as we now know them is more between that time and early 1980s
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
word
@seanwright87863 жыл бұрын
Facts. I seen a hip hop documentary years ago when one of the members of Rock Steady mentioned that. The year he mentioned was '77. He also was emphasizing that they're correctly called "B-boys" not break dancers
@josequiles62783 жыл бұрын
tha stupe the puertorican charlie chasse stare whip the cold crush brothers en 1975 He was Dj end He was Dj before and 1973 o 1974
@tshakashakur22202 жыл бұрын
Jimmy Dee & Jimmy Lee were the two who started Rock Steady Crew.
@josequiles62782 жыл бұрын
Breakedance is was before Hip Hop in 1969 they have fottos puertorican dance whit big radio in the souht Bronx ny Hip Hop is multiculturar is not black people music the more influence music in the Hip Hop was puertorican salsa Hip Hop take the beats n the dance from salsa salsa was in the Bronx ny from 1940 back then black people no dance look for this forhad univercity profesor marc Naison why began in the Bronx
@LeoThaLast2 жыл бұрын
This is so informative. I hope u linked up with Tariq Nasheed. He's making a Hip Hop doc and it would be interesting to see the final product of that union💪🏾
@deejay51023 жыл бұрын
Trevor George Smith Jr was born in *1972 in long island somewhere....* his date of birth alone automatically disqualifies him from knowing firsthand who created hip hop. Based on the timeline you provided Trevor was still a baby when the culture of hip hop was being founded...he wouldn't know firsthand who was the first break dancers, graffiti artist, emcees, djs, etc...
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
word
@Rsh4102 жыл бұрын
0
@gaffle-4113 жыл бұрын
Probably not a single, solitary b-boy in Jamaica prior to 1985. Gtfoh!
@kirktheprofessorfindley24993 жыл бұрын
I can give you some names, they have Spanish last names. I don’t know if they are Puerto Rican or not. They played in the park and soundview area with Mario and other Spades DJays. One of them is supposedly writing a book about DJ Mario.
@deejay51023 жыл бұрын
give us the names....
@tonytaino78242 жыл бұрын
This is dope!
@TheCulture..Starts19712 жыл бұрын
Tony Taino thank you
@firstandsevenmedia3 жыл бұрын
AWESOME!!!!! I LOVE THIS BREAKDOWN!!! I would love your opinion on graffiti being on record starting as early as '64 in Philly.... Cornbread was writing in '64
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
firstandseven... yes cornbread was graffiti writing way back... however as far as NYC we acknowledge The Spades as the 1st graffiti crew 1970 - 1977
@propane7183 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 i heard it started in the late 60s in ny
@SupastarJKwik2 жыл бұрын
#Cornbread #NorthPhilly #1965
@reefreef1866 Жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 Do you have any videos on how bee boxing began? If not it would be nice of you would ask the elders how this part of hip hop became popular and started. Listen to DJ Phase about the break beats, he is a drummer and a musician. Real musicians are on another level and understand how music is arranged and composed.
@badapplenyc2 жыл бұрын
Black Americans created Hip Hop but Puerto Ricans were always around. It was a natural progression to participate in the culture since we all lived around each other.
@draftday80782 жыл бұрын
False. Where were the P.R and in the 60’s and 70’S?
@badapplenyc2 жыл бұрын
@@draftday8078 All over the Bronx. Where are you from?
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
DJ Pete Jones Also started the extended break beat the get down part before herc
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
These African American DJs Grandmaster DJ Flowers, King Disco Mario, Pete DJ Jones, Kool DJ Dee, and Plummer Started, and INVENTED HIP HOP playing the break beat, the getdown part, extending the break beat, playing the same copy of the same record on two turntables, playing James Brown, the Bongo song, playing Funk Music, and Disco. Cueing, Mixing, Blending, Dropping the record needle on the record, chopping, and Scratching in 1960s before DJ herc the Jamaican said he invented Hip Hop in 1973. Someone is lying, lying, and it is DJ herc the Jamaican is lying he copy from these African American DJs that I mentioned above already.
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
African Americans set the stage started, made, and invented Hip Hop in the late 1960s before herc the Jamaican who he said he started Hip Hop in 1973 Hip Hop was already invented in 1960,
@stanleyshack263 жыл бұрын
Yes African American DJs Started,Made, and Invented Hip Hop in the late 1960s before herc the Jamaican who herc said he started Hip Hop. He is a lair.
@sicariodu95463 жыл бұрын
@@stanleyshack26 You sound confuse with your garbage timeline!!???Djs were scratchin and shoppin beats in the 60s!!!???LOL!!Who you think your foolin!!???LOL!!BIg low end speakers and sound system started in Jamaica in the 50 s PERIOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Just get of here with your funny claims!!!!!REmixes were invented in Jamaica by engineers like KIng Tubby in the 60s.Most of the techniques and equipement used by djs in the world have been influenced by the spin back and the mix theory of Flash(Barbados)
@kdub81263 жыл бұрын
@@sicariodu9546 Jamaicans who were seasonal workers in Florida brought the sound system back. Learn your history.
@MrAliBey2 жыл бұрын
Definitely our culture. There are a lot of us who use FBA and Freedmen but don't use #ADOS because it is an lgbt group
@TheCulture..Starts19712 жыл бұрын
MrAliBey... Michael Waynetv wanna support all of our organizations whether we agree with them 100% or not ... as far as #ADOS being lgbt... i don't know that... but i have heard the rumors... are you saying that the founders of ADOS is lgbt or are you saying that the organization became dominating by lgbt?
@MrAliBey2 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 The leadership is a crew of gay black women, one is a half white half Jamaican female and then they have a gay white boy in their leadership. FBA and Freedmen are about maintaining and building the natural black family unit i.e. man, woman and child whereas ados like blm is not. We've gotten into big arguments with them about it
@TheCulture..Starts19712 жыл бұрын
@@MrAliBey yeah but MrAliBey... how do you KNOW for a factshe is "half caucasian half jamaican"... when and where did the female leaders say they're gay? Those may be just rumors to further divide us... show and prove brother
@mbp3333 жыл бұрын
Being from soundview,all the elderstatesman I speak to say hip hop started in soundview.🤷🏾♂️🤔🤨🧐🙄
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
word shout out Money Boss Players!!
@VinylMan7182 жыл бұрын
Wow, this clip brings back some of my fondest memories. It’s a shame I was too young to document this but I used to live in Puerto Rican building on top of the drugstore on Croes ave. I remember going to a couple of jams and being put on top of the speakers to position tweeters, (We we’re skinny and light) lol I must’ve been 10 years old at the time. I vividly remember Disco King Mario and Tex D, I believe he had a nephew that went by BiBi and we used to play skully’s with Louie, Pollo and all the kids from 1040 and 1690. I also spotted fat Mike (RIP) who used to work for Eddie back in day. I’m glad I got to witness some of this history even though I was still young. God bless.
@grandmixerdeelob2 жыл бұрын
Bro , Dj phase ( on the turntables in this video ) said he went by the name bibi
@philipdeshazor85743 жыл бұрын
Thank You WayneTV... Peace...
@incemarketers81682 жыл бұрын
Documentation is key. GET IT!
@wwrecords12 жыл бұрын
🤷🏿♂️Has anyone done a video on just on "The 21 Days of Summer"? The 1973 Block Parties by Disco King Mario.
@skbosdgame84353 жыл бұрын
The truth for real credibility will never come out b/c one thing this video didn’t touch on...is there’s rivals crew and gangs that will be bias against each other when one side wanna claim which neighborhoods start doing first! I witnessed that in the eighties, it’s called BEEF. I give credit to Dj Mario MC he said Mario wanna get the records like Kool Herc and start doing what Dj Kool Herc was doing.
@randee45503 жыл бұрын
this video is straight bullshit
@coolcazc2 жыл бұрын
The Gangs were Playing Disco and talking over the Beats before Mario > Black Spades. plus i've seen footage Porto Ricans talking over Disco in the Streets. Later Herc Deffo brought a Jamaican element he was influenced by his Uncle a Sound system Owner In JA. He just changed from reggae to Funk.
@coolcazc2 жыл бұрын
Please Feel Free To Correct Me if I'm Wrong . But 4 Elements contributed to Hip Hop Culture. 1. - After The Killings of many different Gang Members .Gangs had a Sit down meet and took a Truce and some Gangs took to the Street as a form of Bonding and peace they would spin whatever Tunes they had mainly Disco and Funk and some members would take a Mic give out out dedications. 2. Black Spades pushed out the dealers and promoted these Block Sessions. Block Parties Rock. They accepted 2 G8 Pioneers originally from Carolina King Disco Mario and Kool D they started in Bronx Dale Park, 72 - 73. 3. Then Kool Herc Came who's Uncle had a Sound System in JA He first tried to play Reggae and Toasting but party goers weren't feeling the reggae vibe so he started spinning funk grooves and beats but in JA Sound system style touching it back and extending the beats doing Merry go round in the West side of Bronx's Sedgwick and Ceasars 4 The Style came from the Bronx Kids who Mario let manipulate he Sound equipment they cut Disco / Funk breaks Chic's Party Time Mc Like Busy B would Rhyme. as a anti white corporate ,anti Disco movement Bronx Dale kids sported new swag and garments. Many Modern legends were born.
@dryinkdryink6752 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂Its black culture and music. The other groups went to black spaces to enjoy and participate in the culture
@muptahu243 жыл бұрын
king charlie started the boom system and street party from brookland
@tammaratillman16163 жыл бұрын
Interview me. YASSS #truthspitter #MCShortyTee aka QueenEmprest I was in the game before Cheryl aka Salt Sweet Tee etc. I was all over took it South N.C. I played so many groups. I won't shut up.
@BANGBANGBOOGIES3 жыл бұрын
Shout out to Taylor Block, 100 Park Art... You know the Vibes!
@propane7183 жыл бұрын
I mentioned cholly rock..fuji..the twins etc to crazy legs several years ago in the comments section of an interview he did on london real on yt..he said he had never heard of these dudes..he got it from jojo and the other founder of rsc..i appreciate michael wayne tv. But this needs more light..maybe a well edited doc like the founding fathers doc..respect
@themightyfp3 жыл бұрын
Vlad ain’t hiphop
@quintonguidryb1-fba3 жыл бұрын
: Vlad is a Culture Vulture and agent. 🖕😡🖕 him !
@soulknob3 жыл бұрын
I am responding to the narrator who is questioning where did Kool Herc get his "Hip Hop" style when it came to fashion. There was no thing called "Hip Hop" at the time. Herc came to this country in '68, apparently he adopted the clothing style that everyone else was rocking back then. Lee Jackets and pants, Playboys, Cons, 69ers, Mock necks, etc. Before people started wearing Sheepskins, they were rocking Cortefiel coats.
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
soulknob ... your half right when you said "THERE WAS NO THING CALLED "HIP HOP" AT THE TIME... Your right , At that time the cultural movement was not officially named Hip Hop yet... however there was a thing called "Hip Hop"... Hip Hop was a phrase used by luvbug star ski ... and Hip Hop was a derogatory term to describe break boy dancing at the time... in any event.. there was slang and fashion that the young bronx teenagers lived by... and obviously kool herc copied and emulated that teenage bronx slang fashion (culture).
@markstrong9523 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 I've just discovered your channel and subscribed. My mind is blown. Great work! I've been into hip hop for 40 years now, a year or so before it was called that. Like a lot of people, I heard rappers delight in 79/80. From there, I got to discover kurtis blow, funky 4 + 1 and some others in 81. Then in 81/82 I bought the adventures of grandmaster flash on the wheel of steel, and then The Message album. I always thought it was Cowboy that coined the term "hip hop". But I recently heard starski was using it before him. So confused lol. Anyway, big up to the Bronx for changing my life forever. B-Boy forever and still spray. Peace
@soulknob3 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 Hey Michael Wayne...before Luvbug was an MC and before brothers were rocking the floor people were wearing the clothing that I mentioned. Some of them are styles from the 60's. Mr. Clive Campbell apparently wore the same styles as his friends, after he arrived here. That was the point I was making to the narrator. He (the narrator) asked about his "Hip Hop" style. The styles of clothing preceded it.
@rigo11243 жыл бұрын
Back to the roots!
@harrypool713 жыл бұрын
💪🏿💪🏿💪🏿💪🏿 Thank you
@RealDealy3 жыл бұрын
I think you should hook up with the “universal hip hop museum” on Instagram. They are building a huge spot in the Bronx, so this is the perfect time to show them this stuff I linked this video, and the Busta rhymes one, but you should show them the tapes you have of the blackspades members. You are the first to get these answers cause everyone else would be scared to death to go asking around, especially in the 80’s, and 90’s. God works in mysterious ways cause the internet allows us to hear directly from the horses mouth! And with the museum opening, facts can be set in stone for all to see. No more myths!
@chilldaddy36633 жыл бұрын
Not gonna happen
@RealDealy3 жыл бұрын
@@chilldaddy3663 why?
@chilldaddy36633 жыл бұрын
@@RealDealy can’t let people change history
@Meta4ce3 жыл бұрын
@@chilldaddy3663 This is the real history. Are you Jamaican?
@Loveamericasave3 жыл бұрын
@@Meta4ce you know he is they want to take that lie and run with it
@themightyhebrew7777 ай бұрын
FACTS
@marquesmurray3 жыл бұрын
In my opinion Puerto Ricans didn't become Latino or separate from blacks until Dominicans showed up. You had older PR parents that didn't like black people, but it wasn't that bad. So when Puerto Ricans were in hip hop, I didn't see them as different from blacks back then. But somewhere in the 80's, it definitely changed to me.
@kayadavid10372 жыл бұрын
Do u not have eyes? U may have been cool with PR's but unless they were Black PR's who came as babies or were born in the U.S. it would be easy to distinguish them visibly & audibly.
@Defaultname000122 жыл бұрын
This thought process is why we are now forced to defend ourselves from these culture vultures. Black Americans have been welcoming to our detriment. Now that the gates are going up these immigrants are panicking because they know their gravy train is coming to an end. ALL latinos have an anti black culture. Blanquemiento is a cultural term meant to whiten the race, through reproduction. They have specific derogatory names for bkack people, specifically black Americans - such as prieto. It’s sad that so many BA’s let these people rock them to sleep because they’re only cool with us when they’re out numbered or are in a position to benefit.
@aferrer742 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/horCg4yChdFnhKuIo close out our roundup of the Latinx originators of hip-hop, we’ll be talking about CRASH. Born John Matos, CRASH was part of the OG graffiti artists who painted on subway trains in New York. Like other iconic graffiti originators, he has collaborated with major brands, including Levi’s, Fender, and Absolut Vodka.What many do not know is that the majority of the people who were influenced and later contributed to hip hop were Latinos. Puerto Ricans are MCs', break dancers like the Rock Steady Crew, and Graffiti artists (Sal Rojas, Brown Pride).Another b-boy crew with Latinx members, which was there during the birth of Hip-hop, is the New York City Breakers. Hailing from the Boogie Down Bronx, the original five members were: Chino “Action” Lopez, Tony “Powerful Pexster” Lopez, Noel “Kid Nice” Mangual, and Matthew “Glide Master” Caban. The group shared hip-hop all over the world, with many people, including the King and Queen of Norway, Prince Andrew, and President Reagan (making them the first hip-hop group to perform for a sittingPuerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.New York City BreakersDJ Disco Wiz
@deadpoo47072 жыл бұрын
Peutoricans were only spectators of a force that could not be stop.
@aferrer742 жыл бұрын
@@deadpoo4707 😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣OK my dude Hip-Hop began as an expression of poverty- stricken inner city minority youths who grew up during the 1960s and 1970s. It is a musical form that incorporates a shared, lived urban experience that revolved around music-rhyming and dancing; often makes a social statement against the harsh realities they must deal with on a daily basis; and graffiti. While African Americans concentrated on serving as disc jockeys and master of ceremonies, Puerto Ricans and other Latino Caribbeans contributed heavily to the hip hop aspects of break dancing and graffiti (6)Although it is widely acknowledged that hip-hop began in the early 1970s in the South Bronx, New York, the mainstream media view it as an African American cultural expression. African American tend to view it as exclusively their own, and even Puerto Ricans and other Latinos tend to view it as "black" music. However, its birth and development were a joint creative effort of African American and Latino Afro Caribbean youngsters, particularly, Puerto Ricans. Some researches have suggested that Puerto Ricans' significant role has often been overlooked due to the lack of knowledge concerning Puerto Ricans in general, their small population in comparison to African American throughout the Unites States, and their relatively recent arrival, as opposed to the long history of African Americans in the US.Puerto Ricans have played a fundamental role in the development of hip-hop since its inception in the early 1970’s. In those days they were primarily celebrated for their contributions to breakdancing and graffiti, but although their presence wasn’t as profound on the mic or in the DJ booth since day one there were definitely Ricans putting it down across all elements. “I wanna remind everybody that may not know - how the origin of hip-hop was started. The origin of hip-hop was started by the power of Black and Puerto Rican people. In case you needed to be reminded,” Busta said to cheers from the Coliseo de Puerto Rico crowd. “A lot of motherf**kers wanna try to gentrify our culture. A lot of motherf**kers wanna try to act like they conveniently forget who fathered this s**t. Black people and Puerto Rican people together. We created the greatest culture in the f**king world and its called hip hop. Facts!”Puerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.Pumpkin was a legendary music producer, of Afro-Costa Rican/Afro-Panamanian descent, and known as the King of the Beat. Born Errol Eduardo Bedward, Pumpkin was right there at the beginning of hip-hop, working with OG artists such as Treacherous Three, Grandmaster Caz, Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, and Spoonie Gee, from 1979 to 1984.Hip-Hop is one of the most vibrant products of the late 20th century youth culture. Now York Puerto Ricans have been key participants, as producers and consumers of the culture and hip-hop art forms since hip-hop's very beginning during the early 1970's in the South Bronx. Puerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.Pumpkin was a legendary music producer, of Afro-Costa Rican/Afro-Panamanian descent, and known as the King of the Beat. Born Errol Eduardo Bedward, Pumpkin was right there at the beginning of hip-hop, working with OG artists such as Treacherous Three, Grandmaster Caz, Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, and Spoonie Gee, from 1979 to 1984.Errol Eduardo Bedward, known as Pumpkin was a musician, percussionist and band leader. He was renowned for being the one behind many break beats and hip hop tracks from 79' to 84' such as Spoonie Gee, Treacherous 3, Grandmaster Caz, Fearless Four, Funky 4, Dr Jeckyll & Mr HydeWe continue showcasing Latinx OGs who were pioneers of the hip-hop element of graffiti with Lee Quiñones. The legendary Nuyorican artist was part of a group of artists who created art on New York subway trains, and is considered to be “the single most influential artist to emerge from the New York City subway art movement.” Lee’s first subway piece was created in 1974 and in late 1975, he was asked to join the graffiti crew The Fabulous Five. The crew painted the only running 10-car subway train that was painted on from top to bottom, and from end to end. Quiñones’ work appeared in the iconic 1983 graffiti documentary, Style Wars, and since then, he was collaborated with several brands, including Adidas and Nike.Next on our list of Latinxs who were pioneers in the musical genere of hip-hop is the artist Tracy 168. Also known as Michael Tracy, the New York native is one of the pioneers of graffiti. He is credited with inventing the Wildstyle graffiti style (you’ve seen it before - it features overlapping and interlocked letters, arrows, and curves; all the detail often makes the words hard to read). Wild Style was also the name of the graffiti crew he founded, which also includes fellow Puerto Rican artist and graffiti pioneer Cope2. In addition to being one of the OG’s of graffiti, Tracy 168 also mentored some other major artists, such as SAMO, and Keith Haring.Tracy 168Latinos have virtually been erased, or at least consistently left out, of stories regarding the origins of hip-hop. But we were there! Hip-hop is made up of four elements: MCs/rappers, B-boys/B-girls, graffiti, and DJing. Did you know that a lot of the b-boys, or breakers (calling these talented dancers “breakdancers” or referring to the style as “breakdancing” is considered to be both inaccurate and passe), were Latinx (more often than not Puerto Rican)? Pioneering breaking crews such as the Rock Steady Crew and the New York City Breakers had Latinx members and founders.If you look up the history of Hip-hop music, there is always credit given to the African-American youth of the Boogie Down Bronx, who created the most popular genre in the world, out of nothing. They used their stories, life experiences, and their natural talent to create music which has since resonated with people all around the world. But it wouldn’t really be hip-hop without also giving credit to the other two POC groups who helped create the genre and seasoned it with their influence - Caribbeans and Latinos. is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.South Bronx is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.Often, when people here Hip-Hop they associate it with only African-Americans. However, Hip-Hop is actually the combination of West Indian, Puerto Rican, Blacks of New York. Hip-Hop has always been open to a diverse audience, and thus is not limited to one specific group. DJing started in Jamaica, where the artist would mix and scratch music with repetitive phrases mixed it. In Jamaica, and in many area of the West Indies, music is used as important as politics. Music was used to express the voice of the citizens. Political parties themselves used the musics of DJs to represent their positions. As people from the West Indies moved into New York and specifically the Bronx, they began to incorporate their values of music as a form as expression. When the West Indians began to live with the Puerto Ricans and African Americans of the South Bronx, their art of music mixed in with the rapping and rhyming of the people living there. Hip-Hop began to include in general, Rapping, DJing, Graffiti and Break Dancing. DJ Kool Herc and other DJ from the West Indies, gaining popularity from their style of music, began to encourage the youth to get involved in the art of Hip-Hop. Soon some gangs began to focus their concentration on Hip-Hop rather than using violence to express their anger with the environment they were in. Afrika Bambaataa would find the Universal Zulu Movement, which was a gang that focused on Hip-Hop. What all the people involved in Hip-Hop do have in common is how the merge the struggles of every day life, and their environment into their various forms of art in a way that people facing similar difficulties can also relate. Hip-Hop then turns into a voice of all those New Yorkers, and even beyond, who are constantly trying to improve their lives in a difficult environment.😂🤣😂🤣😂🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷☝️✌️👍🎤🎧🎶🎵🎛🎚🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫
@wwc823 жыл бұрын
Now that's what's up!!!
@mbp3332 жыл бұрын
I think I found a solution,grab up all of the elderstatesmen from the prominent areas & have them answer & 50 to 100 Questionare.compare the Notes & come to conclusion on who was who & started what....
@Whirldwind.Thru.Cities3 жыл бұрын
Big L was definitely snappin to the beat on the MIC in the 90's.
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
The Light...Word Big L
@kwekuoboasi93523 жыл бұрын
28:16-29:04 Timmy Tim aka Dixie(Herculords) Imperial j.c’s members from Kool Hercs Herculoids had a breaking crew that was called the Red Devils. So it was Ronnie Dee,Donnie Dee those were the main cats. Imperial J.C’s members from Kool Hercs Herculoids who were known as the Rockers B-Boy Crew “The Red Devils” The amazing Bobo dancing peers from the Kool Herc era,Trixie,Sasa,Dancin Doug,Cholly Rock
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
kweku Oboasi ok... so which ones were puerto rican?
@kwekuoboasi93523 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 Actually I don’t think none of them were Puerto Rican,truthfully I can say that.
@Number1DriversSeat3 жыл бұрын
Awesome video!!
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
Razor Reader .. thank you
@Number1DriversSeat3 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 I got a question for you breh. What percentage of NYC’s black population is FBA/black American versus West Indian today in 2021?
@animal93703 жыл бұрын
My uncle is 68 now and he got some pics of what it looks like people "Break Dancing" around 72 give or take a year. But I don't think the had Hip Hop on their mind because the look more like Puerto Ricans dress like Saturday Night Fever type shit.
@cynthiamclaughlin16693 жыл бұрын
You were wearing the clothing from the Italian gangsters so you style in those days was coping the Italians.
@deejay51023 жыл бұрын
we were our clothes a different way...get outta here with your nonsense....
@sonofjudah5352 жыл бұрын
First of all “RAP’n” started wayyyy before 1970 FOOLS!! Afrikan Amerikkkans we’re RAP’n in the 60s what the hell are y’all talking about.. It’s not complicated! It’s very clear that Afrikan Amerikkkans created every form of music in this country! FACTS!!! Da’ Blues, Jazz, Rock n Roll, Disco, Soul music, Funk, R&B , Rap and Gangsta Rap… no Caribbean or Latino anywhere around during the “BIRTH “ of any of these types of styles of music or dance.. FACTS!!! The word “RAP or “RAP’n” is a Afrikan Amerikkkan word., let me rap to you foe a minute.. FACTS!! So stop it. We’re not going to let no damm Latinos or Caribbeans try to take what we started. Not going to happen.
@blackice18022 жыл бұрын
I love my black American people and culture we are mad different word dun
@kwekuoboasi93523 жыл бұрын
17:13-17:25 Cool Clyde-Shaka Zulu The Shaka Zulu’s were rivals with the Original 11 generation Zulu Kings Cool Clyde is also a DJ and currently DJs as his profession
@lemonfish87912 жыл бұрын
Yip other groups CONTRIBUTED to HIPHOP👈🏿👉🏿 FBAs🏹✊🏿 HIPHOP🎤🎧🎶.. NO DISPUTING☝🏿🏹✊🏿💯
@hollywood88973 жыл бұрын
Excluding the raps and the dances of the past is unwise. That history is the evidence of it being innate in black Americans. Not being influenced by anyone.
@kwekuoboasi93523 жыл бұрын
16:29-16:53 B-Girl Dee Dee & Sterl-Chuck City Crew Reeta & Dee Dee... they were sisters... Sterl was Dee Dee & Reeta’s brother,Kusa said they were nasty and never saw any B-Girls as nasty as them. “Kusa(Zulu Kings). Sir Normin Rad;”Do you recall whether Mario had any B-Boys back then? Kusa; “Yes,they had B-Boys they had Sterl,Cleanont
@ConquerWealth.network3 жыл бұрын
who's this dude asking these questions trying to solidify herc as the creator of hip hop culture or music. we aint letting kool herc have shit. he didnt originate hip hop, hes not the father of it and he didnt create hip hop. he learned from it copied and added his own contributions. take away ADOS music, ADOS culture, ADOS fashion, ADOS Art, ADOS slang, ADOS dances and ADOS vinacular. is there hip hop? thats all you have to ask. stop all the rest of this nonsense. its ludicrous. gtfoh. where in 71 or before was hip hop in jamaica. dont be stupid. in fact we inspired jamaican musical culture and the rest of popular world music culure those are facts ADOS is lit. stop trying to appropriate our cultue and start paying homage. and to say pigmeat markum and other ADOS before him aint a part of hip hop is incorrect because that is apart of who we are in all of our artistic culture. that is hip hop. its apart of its inspiration. hip hop is who we are and we are what hip hop is dont get it twisted. yall sound like whyte tik tok stealing all our creative dances and when we go on strike and stop creating they have a full blown panic attack and have to beg us to be lit again. give us our props and credit. we dont mind people borrowing our culture but you gotta give it back.
@notsogood94492 жыл бұрын
Facts!!!
@mrworkowt54192 жыл бұрын
Yeah he said come on man let's give her something LOL
@soulfulricansouldjkurtist23582 жыл бұрын
I was born in 58 so I say hip hop is Graffiti, B Boys , Gangs , Djs Now that's Bronx history yes the Black Spades was the biggest in numbers But there where Gangs before the spades. The spades was big they had allies Like the Puerto Rican and Black Royal Javelins ghetto Brothers tomahawks in Brooklyn so you see Hip-Hop was in every Borough yes take the movie Beat Street same characters African Bambaataa cool herk. Bronx Brooklyn the Lower East Side Harlem Queensbridge Liquor hip hop King from New York City
@aferrer742 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/horCg4yChdFnhKuIo close out our roundup of the Latinx originators of hip-hop, we’ll be talking about CRASH. Born John Matos, CRASH was part of the OG graffiti artists who painted on subway trains in New York. Like other iconic graffiti originators, he has collaborated with major brands, including Levi’s, Fender, and Absolut Vodka.What many do not know is that the majority of the people who were influenced and later contributed to hip hop were Latinos. Puerto Ricans are MCs', break dancers like the Rock Steady Crew, and Graffiti artists (Sal Rojas, Brown Pride).Another b-boy crew with Latinx members, which was there during the birth of Hip-hop, is the New York City Breakers. Hailing from the Boogie Down Bronx, the original five members were: Chino “Action” Lopez, Tony “Powerful Pexster” Lopez, Noel “Kid Nice” Mangual, and Matthew “Glide Master” Caban. The group shared hip-hop all over the world, with many people, including the King and Queen of Norway, Prince Andrew, and President Reagan (making them the first hip-hop group to perform for a sittingPuerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.New York City Breakers🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷
We need to get the true pioneers and the originals to speak up. Not artists like KRS-One or Busta. We need to get this information to artists that actually care about the true history like Nas.
@3rdeyesolace3 жыл бұрын
Wayne tv has been documenting this for years now. Hes the only one. People say koop herc originated hiphop. Wayne discovered the real originators
@Maxthafirst3 жыл бұрын
@@3rdeyesolace I already know this fam. I watched the original videos he used to create this one.
@brooklynred67622 жыл бұрын
Why do ppl talk like Puerto Ricans are aliens to the hood they lived in hood along with blacks so when hip hop started I’m sure pr’s were there do to the fact they lived in the p’s
@TheCulture..Starts19712 жыл бұрын
Brooklyn Red .... at that time... yes there was many Puerto Ricans in the hood.. but most Puerto Ricans DID NOT hang out with African Americans playing James brown at that time 1970 -1976...MOST Puerto Ricans In the hood at that time was into salsa not hip hop
@brooklynred67622 жыл бұрын
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 yea your right but I’m more like let’s represent the ones that did
@ShyTheRula2 жыл бұрын
This, tired of the segregation they used to call PR’s Germans back then & even if they didn’t create it. Tired of ppl making it seem like we lived in the P’s together grew up together with African Americans & we just discriminated the whole time. We not about to deny the fact that they participated & played a part in pushing it forward as well. With bboying djaying etc.
@Davo323102 жыл бұрын
@@ShyTheRula didnt create.it
@DjAmpfibian2 жыл бұрын
It’s called segregation by bigots!
@ssteel32 жыл бұрын
Topcat from Philly started graffiti
@chilldaddy36633 жыл бұрын
Puerto Rican’s been there from the start,blacks and ricans grew up together in nyc
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
Chill Daddy... we are talking about IN EARLY HIP HOP ...puerto ricans was there but in VERY SMALL AMOUNTS!!
@rocsteadyh.o.g42473 жыл бұрын
Stop acting like they were always together. They have always been into salsa and Latin music small groups of teens came into the culture
@chilldaddy36633 жыл бұрын
@@rocsteadyh.o.g4247 yeah blacks and Puerto Rican’s was always together in castle hill
@rocsteadyh.o.g42473 жыл бұрын
@@chilldaddy3663 that’s the only time they claim we together when they tryna take credit for something we invented.
@bxdale833 жыл бұрын
@@chilldaddy3663 It depends on the neighborhood. Soundview/Castle Hill area might be an exception but collectively as a whole most Puerto Rican's weren't there in the beginning of hip hop and didn't fuck with it. Disco Wiz (Grandmaster Caz first partner) and DJ Charlie Chase both were early PR DJ's and they said in interviews that other PR's would bash them for playing hip hop
@detourautotransportllc32752 жыл бұрын
Yeah the Africans did it… the ones in Puerto Rico 🇵🇷. Lmao.
@SonDialer4 ай бұрын
They are telling the real, but they are messing it up with all that ADOS and FBA rhetoric.
@josequiles62783 жыл бұрын
the puertorican charlie chasse stare whip the cold crush brother end 1975 and He was Dj before 1973 o 1974 puertorican was end hip hop from all the time
@robluv45922 жыл бұрын
Hilarious best break dancer was my brother he Dominican hundreds head spins wind mills the movie the warriors & so g rappers delight .was Jordan era. Now it's greed & killing if rappers by those who are anti success Ronald Reagan gave upper liberal euro with older rappers want sign folks by force ask 50 cent in 80 rveyy man on his own .listen jz talk about Reagan compare jz today. Today he don't care about black plight at all listen him back 86
@paulmartin48262 жыл бұрын
So we’re nitpicking between 71/73??
@ms.battle90553 жыл бұрын
Yikes take this down bc it contradicts your other video. It was documented bc you can look back on OUR culture to see the formation. Other nationalities dont need to be involved in the documentation process is not a good including Kool Herc bc he has changed his mind on what he previously said.
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
Ms Battle ...why would you say that? exactly how does this video contradict??
@samball20312 жыл бұрын
You forgot about DJ flower who played in the park back in 1960
@zekesaadiq1082 жыл бұрын
I think the original point was meant to be that SOME Puerto Ricans were there from the beginning. I guess somehow the story grew. Within a short amount of time though more Latinos got into different aspects of Hip Hop and evolved it in a different way. So ya much respect to the black community that created the foundations for Hip Hop.
@DjAmpfibian2 жыл бұрын
As you said, “some PuertoRicans” were there in the beginning. This is what counts. All this other shit about Ricans listening to Spanish music makes no since.
@aferrer742 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/horCg4yChdFnhKuIo close out our roundup of the Latinx originators of hip-hop, we’ll be talking about CRASH. Born John Matos, CRASH was part of the OG graffiti artists who painted on subway trains in New York. Like other iconic graffiti originators, he has collaborated with major brands, including Levi’s, Fender, and Absolut Vodka.What many do not know is that the majority of the people who were influenced and later contributed to hip hop were Latinos. Puerto Ricans are MCs', break dancers like the Rock Steady Crew, and Graffiti artists (Sal Rojas, Brown Pride).Another b-boy crew with Latinx members, which was there during the birth of Hip-hop, is the New York City Breakers. Hailing from the Boogie Down Bronx, the original five members were: Chino “Action” Lopez, Tony “Powerful Pexster” Lopez, Noel “Kid Nice” Mangual, and Matthew “Glide Master” Caban. The group shared hip-hop all over the world, with many people, including the King and Queen of Norway, Prince Andrew, and President Reagan (making them the first hip-hop group to perform for a sittingNew York City BreakersDJ Disco Wiz 🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷
@LOU19822 жыл бұрын
@@DjAmpfibian But nothing from your culture was added to our music. You participated in something our people were doing.
@hanifahwalidah229Ай бұрын
i was with you in part 1 when you were interviewing people who were in the spades but part two is disregarding what it took to create a foundation ie the 2 1/2 decades of NYkers contributing to the culture before it launched nationwide. When brother put iprocking or dancing on beat cause they aged out or went to jail PRa innovated on it. Ehat wrong with saying that or including them in the history. Saying ish like “mixing genetics?” is a distraction from how culture is formed and ahistorical overall. And most of those brothers love them some PR women so stop the madness. PRs been in NyC since the early 1900s. Afrolatinos even more so made an impact on BA lives like the schomberg library in harlem. your doc is too black and white and lacks nuance and intellectual honesty. get off the race ish and just tell the story of new yorkers im BA bre what i love honest history
@donellbra30002 жыл бұрын
The the hell is a foundational african american theres no such thing!
@trayquanwilliams99912 жыл бұрын
FBA clown... We built america... No immigrant
@Leggobeest71075 ай бұрын
How do you put Graffiti, dressing and gang in hip hop but not talk about sound systems that was a pivotal part of hip hop.🤨 Sounds biased to me
@donaldmccall39683 жыл бұрын
Hip Hop been round for centuries when the African were playing drums and dancing round in the middle of the circle, obviously we were kidnap against our own well force into Christianity bye our slave masters. We came over hear with our musical instruments but they took that away from us cause our master know the slave were sending signal to other slave to escape. All of us came hear from Sahara Africa we brought Nigro Spirituals work songs folks songs to America that turn into Ragtime Blues and Jazz Boogie Woogie what become Gospel Spirituals.
@JC-bo4yv2 жыл бұрын
Brother, you and all the people you are interviewing might know a little bit but more the creators. Puerto Ricans and African American created.
@cynthiamclaughlin16693 жыл бұрын
Every body copied the Italians remember the knit shirts.
@seanwright87863 жыл бұрын
Blye knits with monochromatic colors...they later started incorporating suede into to patterns. Blye knits been around since the gangs in Brooklyn called themselves "jitterbugs" as early as '63. Yep...Italian knits became integrated into black street cultural dress when the brothers wanted to look fly!
@Sneakycat19713 жыл бұрын
What the Jamaicans did first was similar but different than hip-hop. In the late 60s the Jamaicans built sound systems to play music. They would often take a popular Jamaican song and remix the instrumental of it. But instead of rappers they had people that would toast or sing to the instrumentals making up their own words.
@deejay51023 жыл бұрын
you need to watch the other videos on this channel because he covers the whole toasting myth.....
@Sneakycat19713 жыл бұрын
@@deejay5102 kzbin.info/www/bejne/aZ2QiZyve96asKs
@jerseydevils96863 жыл бұрын
@@Sneakycat1971 Yea that video is bs. The narrator only recently found out about Dancehall. And Hip Hop turntablism =/= Reggae Dub in any way shape or form
@James-lu4hb3 жыл бұрын
Toasting is Jamaicans Copying Black American Jive Talk how y'all going to bring black Americans something y'all copied from us?? Make it make sense.
@Sneakycat19713 жыл бұрын
@@James-lu4hb well they did the toasting over music starting in the late 60's. Dancehall and rap have similar stories but dancehall came a little before rap. Also hip hop started out mainly as a break dance thing and the rappers came later.
@jamespeters44482 жыл бұрын
Out of respect West Indians are not claiming hip hop. Busta , Fat Joe an other rappers are saying that. Stop generalizing pinpoint exactly who you’re talking about.
@kayadavid10372 жыл бұрын
Look. As a Jamaican I am saying that hiphop generally is African American. It was birthed here (much like how my daughter has 2 Jamaican parents but was BIRTHED HERE). But hip hop is the culture. Rap music is just 1 element of hip hop. The elements the science the ingredients that made RAP MUSIC comes from Jamaican dancehall culture. Dancehall started in dancehalls by selectors who had huge sound systems with DJ's (equivalent to rappers) toasting over early reggae rhythms before dancehall developed more of its own sound. Transpose that to Jamaicans moving to NYC & growing up in, assimilating & eventually having children in the Black American culture, the ingredients of dancehall transfered over. Rapping over disco, funk & soul rhythms untill naturally rap music started building its own sound. It happened in NYC. Nobody is taking that away.
@dryinkdryink6752 жыл бұрын
All that you are writing has been proved false. It's on record.
@deadpoo47072 жыл бұрын
Wrong, Hip hop is purely Black American.
@kidgrebo13 жыл бұрын
I was vibing with this video until the Tariq Nasheed FBA propaganda came on.
@TheCulture..Starts19713 жыл бұрын
kidgrebo1 ... aint no FBA "propaganda" in this video...Hopefully our ppl will start taking our nationality more serious the same way other groups of ppl do!! other groups of ppl raise their flag high and look out for each other... so its nothing wrong with us raising our flag high also
@Davo323102 жыл бұрын
Please get off the video, no one cares if you hate FBA
@JC-bo4yv2 жыл бұрын
Remember USA doesn’t have a culture like Puerto Ricans and Jamaican do
@pntntim3 жыл бұрын
Ricans made it better. Can't deny lol... peace fam 😃
@deejay51023 жыл бұрын
stop it....
@jerseydevils96863 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile yall couldn’t make your own music better by yourselves…
@@James-lu4hb how can we copy something we created together
@James-lu4hb3 жыл бұрын
@@pntntim What Puerto Ricans created Hip-hop? Give me names 1970-73 Who? Hip-hop is derived from Black American Soul, and Funk music especially the music of James Brown. Hip-hop is not derived from Puerto Rican Music or Culture its facts.
@IAMHIPHOP9742 жыл бұрын
False. Puerto Rican’s was there day one
@aferrer742 жыл бұрын
All these people saying this and that , there is no video or anything to say that started here and there . kzbin.info/www/bejne/horCg4yChdFnhKuIo close out our roundup of the Latinx originators of hip-hop, we’ll be talking about CRASH. Born John Matos, CRASH was part of the OG graffiti artists who painted on subway trains in New York. Like other iconic graffiti originators, he has collaborated with major brands, including Levi’s, Fender, and Absolut Vodka.What many do not know is that the majority of the people who were influenced and later contributed to hip hop were Latinos. Puerto Ricans are MCs', break dancers like the Rock Steady Crew, and Graffiti artists (Sal Rojas, Brown Pride).Another b-boy crew with Latinx members, which was there during the birth of Hip-hop, is the New York City Breakers. Hailing from the Boogie Down Bronx, the original five members were: Chino “Action” Lopez, Tony “Powerful Pexster” Lopez, Noel “Kid Nice” Mangual, and Matthew “Glide Master” Caban. The group shared hip-hop all over the world, with many people, including the King and Queen of Norway, Prince Andrew, and President Reagan (making them the first hip-hop group to perform for a sittingDJ Disco Wiz 🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷😂🤣😂🤣🤣🤣
@deadpoo47072 жыл бұрын
The interviewer wants to give culture away. Im glad Booby stuck to his guns.
@deadpoo47072 жыл бұрын
But the Jubalairs and pig meat Markem inspired Rapp, and so did James Brown, and these were all grown men, so the children had to get it from the adults, like everything else.