Revision as of 02:24, 4 July 2008 edit86.44.16.82 (talk) gott in himmel← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 10:35, 16 December 2024 edit undoOnel5969 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers938,477 editsm Disambiguating links to R&B (link changed to Contemporary R&B) using DisamAssist. | ||
(324 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|Movement in hip hop music}} | |||
The '''new school of hip hop''' was a second wave of recorded ] starting 1983–84 with the early records of ] and ]. Like the hip hop preceding it, it came predominately from ]. The new school was initially characterized in form by ] led minimalism, often tinged with elements of rock. It was notable for taunts and boasts about rapping, and socio-political commentary, both delivered in an aggressive, self-assertive style. In image as in song its artists projected a tough, cool, street ] attitude. These elements contrasted sharply with the ]- and disco-influenced outfits, novelty hits, live bands, synthesizers and party rhymes of artists prevalent in 1984, and rendered them ]. New school artists made shorter songs that could more easily gain radio play, and more cohesive LPs than their old school counterparts. By 1986 their releases began to establish the hip hop album as a fixture of the mainstream. | |||
{{See also|Golden age hip hop}} | |||
{{Infobox music genre | |||
| name = New-school hip hop | |||
| stylistic_origins = {{hlist|]|]}} | |||
| cultural_origins = Early 1980s, ], ], ] | |||
| instruments = {{hlist|]|]|]}} | |||
| subgenres = ] | |||
| local_scenes = ], ], ], ] | |||
}} | |||
The '''new school of hip hop''' was a movement in ], beginning in 1983–84 with the early records of ], ], and ]. Predominantly from ] and ], it was characterized by ]-led minimalism, often tinged with elements of ]; ] taunts, boasts, and socio-political commentary; and aggressive, self-assertive delivery. In song and image, its artists projected a tough, cool, street ] attitude. These elements contrasted sharply with ] and ], ], live bands, synthesizers, and party rhymes of artists prevalent in the early 1980s. Compared to their older hip hop counterparts, new school artists crafted more cohesive ]s and shorter songs more amenable to ]. By 1986, their releases began to establish hip hop in the mainstream. | |||
The somewhat broader era of ] is applied to late 1980s-to-early 1990s mainstream hip hop,<ref>*Caramanica, Jon. , ''New York Times'', June 26, 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008. | |||
The innovations of Run-D.M.C., LL, and new school producer ] of ] were quickly advanced on by producer ] and his ] MCs, and acts like ], ] and ]. The production became denser, the rhymes and beats faster, the music admitting more possibilities as the drum machine was augmented with the ]. ] took rapping about rapping to new heights, while the MCs of the former two groups, ] and ], pushed "message rap" towards black activism and beyond. Developments in the New York new school continuum in the face of factors like the rise of a new, West Coast underground—]—were represented by ] artists whose inclusive, sample-crowded music accompanied their positivity, ] and playful energy. With the eventual commercial dominance of gangsta rap, particularly following the emergence of the relaxed sounds of ] in the early nineties, hip hop moved into a new period. | |||
*Coker, Cheo H. , ''Rolling Stone'', March 9, 1995. | |||
*O'Neal Parker, Lonnae. , ''Washington Post'', August 20, 1997. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> characterized by diversity, quality, innovation and influence,<ref>*Coyle, Jake. , Associated Press, published in ''USA Today'', June 19, 2005. | |||
*Coker, Cheo H., ''Rolling Stone'', March 9, 1995. | |||
*Drever, Andrew. , ''The Age'' , October 24, 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> and associated with ], ] and his ], ], ],<ref name="rstone">{{cite magazine|last1=Wilson|first1=Denis|title=Kool Keith Preps New Album, Ponders Retirement|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/kool-keith-preps-new-album-ponders-retirement-20120507|magazine=Rolling Stone|access-date=24 December 2014}}</ref><ref name="ultramagnetic">{{cite web|last1=Swihart|first1=Stanton|title=Critical Beatdown – Ultramagnetic MC's|url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/critical-beatdown-mw0000653074|website=AllMusic|access-date=24 December 2014}}</ref> ], ], and the ],<ref>Per Coker, Hodgkinson, Drever, Thill, O'Neal, Parker and Sariq. Additionally: | |||
*Coker, Cheo H. , ''Rolling Stone'', November 16, 1995. | |||
*Pettie, Andrew. , ''Daily Telegraph'', August 11, 2005. | |||
*Reeves, Mosi. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061104183504/http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0205%2Creeves%2C31875%2C22.html |date=2006-11-04 }}, ''Village Voice'', January 29th 2002. | |||
*Kot, Greg. {{dead link|date=July 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}, Los Angeles Times, September 19, 2001. | |||
*Coker, Cheo Hodari. {{Dead link|date=August 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, ''Los Angeles Times'', August 11, 1996. | |||
*Mervis, Scott. , ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'', February 15, 2004. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> known for themes of ] and political militancy, experimental music, and eclectic ].<ref>*Sariq, Roni. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081123092309/http://citypages.com/databank/18/854/article3420.asp |date=2008-11-23 }}, ''City Pages'', April 16, 1997. | |||
*Thill, Scott. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426171551/http://www.alternet.org/media/21943?page=1 |date=2012-04-26 }} AlterNet, May 6, 2005. | |||
*Hodgkinson, Will. , ''The Guardian'', September 19, 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> This period is sometimes referred to as "Mid-school" or "middle school"; associated acts included ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>*Scholtes, Peter S. {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20120711170402/http://articles.citypages.com/1998-01-07/music/true-mcs/ |date=2012-07-11 }}, City Pages, January 7, 1998. Retrieved on July 2, 2008. | |||
*DJ Shadow in conversation with William E. Ketchum III, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071118064259/http://www.xxlmag.com/online/?p=4109 |date=2007-11-18 }}, ], August 24, 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008. | |||
*Downes, Maurice. , ''The Free Williamsburg'' issue 53, August 2004.</ref> | |||
The innovations of Run-D.M.C., ], and LL Cool J, and New School Producers such as Larry Smith and ] of ], were quickly surpassed by ], ] and his ] MCs, ], ], and ]. Hip-hop production became denser, rhymes and beats faster, as the drum machine was augmented with ] technology. ] took lyrics about the art of rapping to new heights, while KRS-One and ] pushed "message rap" towards black activism. ] artists' inclusive, sample-crowded music accompanied their positivity, ], and playful energy. The new school/golden age ended with the eventual commercial dominance of ] ], particularly the emergence of the relaxed sounds of ] by the early nineties, while the ] scene became dominated by hardcore rappers such as the ] and gangsta rappers such as ] and ] | |||
The terms "old school" and "new school" have fallen more and more into the common vernacular as synonyms for "old" and "new" (witness the current ] entry for ''new school'' which reads, "Anything contemporary") and are often applied in this conversational way to hip hop, to the confusion and occasional exasperation of writers who use the terms historically.{{Ref_label|A|a|none}}{{Ref_label|B|b|none}} The phrase "leader of the new school", coined in hip hop by Chuck D in 1988, and presumably given further currency by the group ] (named by Chuck D prior to signing with ] in 1989), remains popular, and has been applied to artists ranging from ] to ].<ref>Dinco D, in conversation with Derek Phifer, , ''HHNLive'', October 15 2007. Retrieved on July 4, 2008.</ref><ref>Callahan-Bever, Noah. , ''Vibe'', January 18 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008. </ref> | |||
The terms "old school" and "new school" fell into the vernacular as synonyms for "old" and "new" in hip hop, to the confusion and occasional exasperation of writers who use the terms historically.{{Ref label|A|a|none}}{{Ref label|B|b|none}} The phrase "Leader of The New School", coined in hip hop by Chuck D in 1988, and given further currency by the ] group ] (who were named by Chuck D before signing with ] in 1989), remains popular. It has been applied to artists ranging from ] to ].<ref>*Dinco D, in conversation with Derek Phifer, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080222163223/http://www.hhnlive.com/features/more/340 |date=2008-02-22 }}, ''HHNLive'', October 15, 2007. Retrieved on July 4, 2008. | |||
*Callahan-Bever, Noah. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080115102112/http://www.vibe.com/music/next/2006/01/lupe_fiasco_grindin/ |date=2008-01-15 }}, ''Vibe'', January 18, 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
==Prehistory== | ==Prehistory== | ||
{{Listen | |||
The first ]s rapped over ] swapping back and forth between two copies of the same record playing the same drum break, or playing instrumental portions or versions of a broad range of records.<ref >Toop, p. 14</ref><ref>Toop, p. 17</ref> ] initiated this part of the culture in 1972<ref>Hermes, Will. , ''New York Times'', October 29 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> using breaks from ], ] and ] in his block parties.<ref>Upshall, David (writer, director, producer). ''The Hip Hop Years'', Part 1, ], 1999.</ref> Soon after, ] delighted in springing rock music breaks from records like "]", "]", "]" and ]'s "Inside Looking Out" on unsuspecting b-boys.<ref>Toop, p. 66</ref> | |||
| filename = | |||
| title = "Sucker M.C.'s" | |||
| description = ]'s "]" was released as the ] to the group's 1983 debut single "]". "Sucker M.C.'s" is considered to be an essential record in the development of new-school hip hop. | |||
}} | |||
Elements of new school had existed in some form in the popular culture since hip-hop's birth. The first ] rapped over ] swapping back and forth between two copies of the same record playing the same drum break, or playing instrumental portions or versions of a broad range of records.<ref>Toop, p. 14</ref><ref>Toop, p. 17</ref> This part of the culture was initiated by ] in 1973<ref>Hermes, Will. , ''New York Times'', October 29, 2006. Retrieved on September 9, 2008.</ref> using breaks from ], ] and English rock group ] in his block parties.<ref name="upsh">Upshall, David (writer, director, producer). ''The Hip Hop Years'', Part 1, ], 1999.</ref> Brown's music—"extensive vamps" in which his voice was "a percussive instrument with frequent rhythmic grunts", and "with rhythm-section patterns ... West African polyrhythms"—was a keynote of hip hop's early days.<ref name="upsh" /><ref>Collins, Willie. , ''St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture'', January 29, 2002. Retrieved on July 17, 2008.</ref> By 1975, ] and ] had taken up Kool Herc's breakbeat style of DJing, each with their own accompanying ]. Flash was especially associated with an important break known as "The Bells"—a cut-up of the intro to ]'s ] cover of Paul Simon's "Take Me To The Mardi Gras"—while Bambaataa delighted in springing occasional rock music breaks from records like "]", "]", "]" and ]'s "]" on unsuspecting b-boys.<ref>Toop, p. 66</ref><!--ref for Flash + Bells to be added, fairly sure this is in Toop, connect to "Rock The Bells" and "Peter Piper" below. link to legal youtube emulation of this break?--> | |||
The earliest hip |
The earliest hip-hop records replaced the DJ with a live band playing funk and disco influenced tunes, or "]" the tunes themselves, as in "]" (], 1979) and "]" (Spring, 1979). It was the soft, futuristic funk closely tied to disco that ruled hip hop's early days on record, to the exclusion of the hard James Brown beats so beloved of the first b-boys.<ref>]. "Old master flash.", '']'', March 1, 1995.</ref> Figures such as Flash and Bambaataa were involved in some early instances of moving the sound away from that of a live band, as in Flash's DJ track "]" (Sugar Hill, 1981), and even innovating popular new sounds and subgenres, as in the synthesizer-laden ] of Bambaataa's "]" (], 1982). Often though the rawer elements present in live shows did not make it past the recording studio. | ||
Figures such as ] and Afrika Bambaataa were involved in some early instances of moving the sound away from that of a live band, as in Flash's DJ track "]" (Sugar Hill, 1981), and even innovating popular new sounds and sub-genres, as in the synthesizer-laden ] of Bambaataa's "]" (], 1982). Often though the rawer elements present in live shows did not make it past the recording studio. | |||
Bambaataa's first records, for instance, two versions of "Zulu Nation Throwdown" (Winley, 1980), were recorded with just drums and rhymes. When Bambaataa heard the released records, a complete live band had been added.<ref>]. "Afrika Bambaataa's Hip-Hop", ''Village Voice'', September 21 1982. Reprinted in Cepeda, p. 23</ref> Something closer to his intentions can be heard on a portion of ''Death Mix'', a low-quality bootleg of a ] night at James Monroe High School in the Bronx, released without his permission on Winley Records in 1983.<ref>Shapiro, p. 4</ref> Likewise on the bootleg ''Live Convention '82'' (Disco Wax, 1982), ] cuts the first six bars of ]'s "Do the Funky Penguin" together for five and a half minutes while an MC raps over the top.<ref>Toop, p. 67–69</ref> Grandmaster Flash's "Superrappin'" (], 1979) had a pumping syncopated rhythm and The Furious Five emulating his spinbacks and needle drops and chanting that "that Flash is on the beatbox going..." |
Bambaataa's first records, for instance, two versions of "Zulu Nation Throwdown" (], 1980), were recorded with just drums and rhymes. When Bambaataa heard the released records, a complete live band had been added.<ref>]. "Afrika Bambaataa's Hip-Hop", ''Village Voice'', September 21, 1982. Reprinted in Cepeda, p. 23</ref> Something closer to his intentions can be heard on a portion of ''Death Mix'', a low-quality bootleg of a ] night at James Monroe High School in the Bronx,<!--This night was in 1980, need cite --> released without his permission on Winley Records in 1983.<ref>Shapiro, p. 4</ref> Likewise on the bootleg ''Live Convention '82'' (Disco Wax, 1982), ] cuts the first six bars of ]'s "Do the Funky Penguin" together for five and a half minutes while an MC raps over the top.<ref>Toop, p. 67–69</ref> Grandmaster Flash's "Superrappin'" (], 1979) had a pumping syncopated rhythm and The Furious Five emulating his spinbacks and needle drops and chanting that "that Flash is on the beatbox going ..."<ref>Toop, p. 90</ref> The beatbox itself however, a drum machine which Flash had added to his turntable set-up some time earlier, was absent on the record, the drums being produced by a live drummer.<ref>Toop, p. 126</ref> | ||
]'s verbal personal attacks on ] live at Harlem World in 1982 caused a popular sensation in hip hop circles. In the same way, groups like the ] and ] were known for their routines, attitude and battle rhymes. Tapes of battles like these circulated widely, without |
]'s verbal personal attacks on ] live at Harlem World in 1982 caused a popular sensation in hip hop circles. In the same way, groups like the ] and ] were known for their routines, competitive attitude, and battle rhymes. Tapes of battles like these circulated widely, even without them becoming viable recordings.<ref>Wilder, Chris. "Mutual Respect", '']'', November 1993.</ref><ref>Woodson, AJ. "Whatever Happened to Battles???", ''On The Go'', 1997.</ref> Apart from some social commentary like ]'s one verse on "Superrappin'", ]'s ruefully comedic "]" (], 1980) and a spurt of records following the success of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five's "The Message" (Sugar Hill, 1982), the old school specialized lyrically in party rhymes.<ref name="Shapiro, p.327">Shapiro, p.327</ref><!--mention obscure but notable exceptions predating "The Message"? Tanya Winley, Brother D. and musically "Punk Rock Rap"?--> | ||
==Advent== | ==Advent== | ||
{{Listen | |||
{{quote|One time, in probably 1983, I was in the park in Brooklyn. I was getting beat up by about eight kids, I don't even remember why. But as it was happening, this dude was walkin' by with one of those ''big'' ]es. And as he's walking by, we hear . They all stopped beating me, and we all just stood there, listening to this phenomenon. I could have run, but I didn't, I was just so entranced by what I heard. Then the dude with the box passed by and the kids continued to beat me up. But it didn't matter. I felt good. I knew right then that I ''had'' to get into this hip hop shit.|] of the ], 2003, as told to Brian Coleman|''Check the Technique'' 2nd. ed., New York: ], 2007}} | |||
| filename = I Can't Live Without My Radio sample.ogg | |||
| title = "I Can't Live Without My Radio" | |||
| description = LL Cool J's second single for the Def Jam label, features heavy beats and boasting raps, reflective of new school and ] culture. | |||
}} | |||
{{quote|One time, in probably 1983, I was in the park in Brooklyn. I was getting beat up by about eight kids, I don't even remember why. But as it was happening, this dude was walkin' by with one of those ''big'' ]es. And as he's walking by, we hear . They all stopped beating me, and we all just stood there, listening to this phenomenon. I could have run, but I didn't, I was just so entranced by what I heard. Then the dude with the box passed by and the kids continued to beat me up. But it didn't matter. I felt good. I knew right then that I ''had'' to get into this hip hop shit.|] of the ], 2003, as told to Brian Coleman|'']'' 2nd. ed., New York: ], 2007}} | |||
] writes of 1984 that "pundits were writing obituaries for hip hop, a passing fad" which "Hollywood had mutated into an all-singing, all-dancing romance" in movies like '']'' and '']''. Against this, Run-D.M.C., ] and the label Def Jam were "consciously hardcore", "a reaction against the populist trend in hip hop at the time" , and "an explosive emergence of an underground alternative".<ref>Toop, p. xi</ref> For ], Run-D.M.C.'s 1983 two-song release "]"/"Sucker MCs" "completely changed hip-hop" "rendering everything that preceded it distinctly old school with one fell swoop."<ref>Shapiro, p.327</ref><ref name=Shapiro401>Shapiro, p. 401</ref> In a 47 point timeline of hip hop and its antecedents spanning 64 years, Shapiro lists this release as his 43th point.<ref name=Shapiro401/> Reviewing Toop's book in the LA Weekly, Oliver Wang of ] concurs, hailing Run-D.M.C. as inaugurating the new school of rap.<ref>Wang, Oliver. , ''LA Weekly'', March 8, 2000. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
] writes of 1984 that "pundits were writing obituaries for hip hop, a passing fad" which "Hollywood had mutated into an all-singing, all-dancing romance" in movies like '']'' and '']''. Against this, Run-D.M.C., The ] and the label Def Jam were "consciously hardcore", "a reaction against the populist trend in hip hop at the time", and "an explosive emergence of an underground alternative".<ref>Toop, p. xi</ref> For ], Run-D.M.C.'s 1983 two-song release "]"/"Sucker MCs" "completely changed hip-hop" "rendering everything that preceded it distinctly old school with one fell swoop."<ref name="Shapiro, p.327">Shapiro, p.327</ref><ref name="Shapiro401">Shapiro, p. 401</ref> In a 47-point timeline of hip hop and its antecedents spanning 64 years, Shapiro lists this release as his 43rd point.<ref name="Shapiro401" /> Reviewing Toop's book in the LA Weekly, Oliver Wang of ] concurs, hailing Run-D.M.C. as inaugurating the new school of rap.<ref>Wang, Oliver. , ''LA Weekly'', March 8, 2000. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
===Run-D.M.C.=== | ===Run-D.M.C.=== | ||
Run-D.M.C. rapped over the most sparse of musical backing tracks. In the case of "Sucker MCs", there was a loud, ] ], a few scratches and nothing else, while the rhymes harangued weak rappers and contrasted them to the group's success. "It's like That" was an aggressively delivered message rap whose social commentary has been defined variously as "objective fatalism",<ref name="christgau">Christgau, Robert. , ''Village Voice'', 1984. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> "frustrated and renunciatory",<ref>Rose, Tricia. "'Fear of a Black Planet': Rap Music and Black Cultural Politics in the 1990s", ''The Journal of Negro Education'', Summer 1991.</ref> and just plain "reportage".<ref>Breihan, Tom. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080228053354/http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/21440-run-dmc-king-of-rock-raising-hell-tougher-than-leather |date=2008-02-28 }}, ''Pitchfork'', September 23, 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Run-D.M.C. wore street clothes, tracksuits, sneakers, one even wore glasses. Their only possible concession to an image extraneous to that of kids on the street was the stylistic flourish of black fedoras atop their heads. This stood in sharp contrast to the popular artists of the time, who had variously bedecked themselves with feathers, suede boots, jerri curls, and red or even pink leather suits.<ref>Dennis, Reginald C. "Born Again", ''The Source'', February 1993.</ref> | |||
] | |||
Run-D.M.C. rapped over the most sparse of musical backing tracks. In the case of "Sucker MCs", there was a loud, brutal drum machine, a few scratches and nothing else, while the rhymes harangued weak rappers and contrasted them to the group's success. "It's like That" was an aggressively delivered message rap whose social commentary has been defined variously as "objective fatalism",<ref name=christgau>Christgau, Robert. , ''Village Voice'', 1984. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> "frustrated and renunciatory",<ref>Rose, Tricia. "'Fear of a Black Planet': Rap Music and Black Cultural Politics in the 1990s", ''The Journal of Negro Education'', Summer 1991.</ref> and just plain "reportage".<ref>Breihan,Tom. , ''Pitchfork'', September 23 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Run-D.M.C. wore street clothes, tracksuits, sneakers, one even wore glasses. Their only possible concession to an image extraneous to that of kids on the street was the stylistic flourish of black fedoras atop their heads. This stood in sharp contrast to the popular artists of the time, who had variously bedecked themselves with feathers, suede boots, jerri curls, and red or even pink leather suits.<ref>Dennis, Reginald C. "Born Again", ''The Source'', February 1993.</ref> | |||
The group's early singles are collected on their eponymous debut (], 1984), introducing rock references in "Rock Box", and recognized then and now as the best album of hip hop's early years.<ref name=christgau/><ref>Shapiro, p. 327</ref> The next year, they appeared at ] and released ''King of Rock'' (Profile, 1985), on which they asserted that they were "never ever old school". ''Raising Hell'' (Profile, 1986) was a landmark, containing quintessentially hip hop tracks like "Peter Piper", "Perfection" and "]", and going platinum in the year of its release on the back of the huge crossover hit "]".<ref>Shapiro, p. 327. Shapiro has ''Raising Hell'' as the first platinum hip hop album, while Dennis and Coleman ascribe that distinction to ''King of Rock''. RIAA's certification dates (retrieved on July 4, 2008) bear out Shapiro's statement. Though ''King of Rock'' may be the earliest release to receive platinum status, it did so after ''Raising Hell'' did.</ref> The group had rapped over the beat from the 1975 original in their early days, without so much as knowing the name of the band. When ''Raising Hell''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s producer ] heard them playing around with it in the studio, he suggested using the ] lyrics, and the collaboration between the two groups came about.<ref>Coleman, p. 401</ref> The album's last track was "Proud To Be Black", written under the influence of Chuck D of the as-yet unrecorded Public Enemy.<ref>Coleman, p. 404</ref> On "My Adidas" the band rapped that they "took the beat from the street and put it on TV". |
The group's early singles are collected on their ] (], 1984), introducing rock references in "Rock Box", and recognized then and now as the best album of hip hop's early years.<ref name="christgau" /><ref>Shapiro, p. 327</ref> The next year, they appeared at ] and released '']'' (Profile, 1985), on which they asserted that they were "never ever old school". '']'' (Profile, 1986) was a landmark, containing quintessentially hip hop tracks like "Peter Piper", "Perfection" and "]", and going platinum in the year of its release on the back of the huge crossover hit "]".<ref>Shapiro, p. 327. Shapiro has ''Raising Hell'' as the first platinum hip hop album, while Dennis and Coleman ascribe that distinction to ''King of Rock''. RIAA's certification dates (retrieved on July 4, 2008) bear out Shapiro's statement. Though ''King of Rock'' may be the earliest release to receive platinum status, it did so after ''Raising Hell'' did.</ref> The group had rapped over the beat from the 1975 original in their early days, without so much as knowing the name of the band. When ''Raising Hell''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s producer ] heard them playing around with it in the studio, he suggested using the ] lyrics, and the collaboration between the two groups came about.<ref>Coleman, p. 401</ref> The album's last track was "Proud To Be Black", written under the influence of Chuck D of the as-yet unrecorded Public Enemy.<ref>Coleman, p. 404</ref> On "My Adidas" the band rapped that they "took the beat from the street and put it on TV". | ||
] | |||
Comments from ], AKA DMC of Run-D.M.C., make this connection to the underground explicit: "hat's exactly what we did. We didn't really think it was pioneering, we just did what rappers did before us was doing on tapes. When a lot of the old guys, like Kool Moe Dee, ] |
Comments from ], AKA DMC of Run-D.M.C., make this connection to the underground explicit: "hat's exactly what we did. We didn't really think it was pioneering, we just did what rappers did before us was doing on tapes. When a lot of the old guys, like Kool Moe Dee, ], and Grandmaster Flash, got in the studio, they never put their greatness on records. Me and ] and ] would listen ... and we'd say, 'They didn't do that shit last night in the ]!' ... So we said that we weren't going to be fake. We ain't gonna wear no costumes. We're gonna keep it real."<ref>Coleman, p. 395.</ref> | ||
=== Whodini === | |||
Coming out of the fertile New York rap scene of the early 1980s, Whodini was one of the first rap groups to add a ] twist to their music, thus laying the foundation for a new genre, ]. The group made its name with good-humored songs such as "Magic's Wand" (the first rap song accompanied by a video), "The Haunted House of Rock", "]", "Five Minutes of Funk", and "Freaks Come Out at Night". Live performances of the group were the first rap concerts with the participation of ] dancers from the group ]. ] was the manager of the group in the 1980s.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Def Jam at 30: The Declarations of an Independent – 1984–1985 |url=https://rmc.library.cornell.edu/defjam/exhibition/simmonsrush/index.html |access-date=2023-03-26 |website=rmc.library.cornell.edu}}</ref> | |||
The group released six studio albums. Fourteen of the group's singles hit the '']'' charts. Four of the group's albums were ] by the ]. | |||
In 1984, the group released the second album '']''. The entire album was fully produced by ]. From the laid back groove titled "Five Minutes of Funk" to "Friends", a cynical story of betrayal sampled everywhere from ]' "If I Ruled the World (Imagine That)" to ]'s "Troublesome '96", to harder edged singles "Freaks Come Out at Nite" and "Big Mouth".<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Best Rap Albums of the '80s |url=https://www.complex.com/music/50-greatest-rap-albums-1980s |access-date=2023-03-26 |website=Complex |language=en |archive-date=2023-03-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230326210733/https://www.complex.com/music/50-greatest-rap-albums-1980s |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
In 1986, the group released a third album '']'', fully produced by Smith. A number of songs from the album received heavy local New York airplay, such as "Funky Beat" and the controversial "I'm a Ho". "Fugitive" was guitar-driven ] and "Last Night (I Had a Long Talk With...)" was introspective. Paul Kodish, the drummer of Pendulum, was featured on the album. | |||
===Def Jam=== | ===Def Jam=== | ||
The other production credit on ''Raising Hell'' went to Run's brother, ] |
The other production credit on ''Raising Hell'' went to Run's brother, ]; he ran Rush Artist Management, now ], which as well as handling Run-D.M.C., managed the Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, ] and Public Enemy. Simmons also co-owned Def Jam Recordings, an important new-school label, with Rubin.<ref>"Def Jam Music Group 10th Anniversary Box Set", ''Spin'' magazine, December 1995. Quoted by .</ref> Simmons rose with Def Jam to become one of the biggest moguls in rap, while Rubin claimed credit for introducing radio-friendly brevity and song structure to hip hop.<ref>Hirschberg, Lynn. ", ''New York Times Magazine'', September 2, 2007. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Def Jam's first 12-inch release was the minimalist drum machine breakdown "I Need A Beat" by LL Cool J (1984). This was followed by "I Can't Live Without My Radio" (Def Jam, 1985), a loud, defiant declaration of public loyalty to his boom box which the ''New York Times'' in 1987 called "quintessential rap in its directness, immediacy and assertion of self".<ref>Holden, Stephen. , ''New York Times'', April 26, 1987. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Both were on his debut album for Def Jam, 1985's '']'' (described as "Reduced by Rick Rubin" in its liner notes), which also contained the minimalist and rock-influenced track "]".<ref>Shapiro, p. 228</ref><ref>Bull, Debby. ", ''Rolling Stone'', April 10, 1986. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Rubin also produced music for Beastie Boys, who sampled ] on their ''Rock Hard'' EP on Def Jam in 1984 and recorded a Run-D.M.C. outtake and a heavy metal parody on their hugely commercially successful debut album '']'' (Def Jam, 1986). In 1987, ''Raising Hell'' surpassed three million units sold, and ''Licensed to Ill'' five million.<ref>Holden, Stephen. , Pop Life, ''New York Times'', December 30, 1987. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Faced with figures like these, major labels finally began buying into independent New York hip hop imprints.<ref>Holden, Stephen. , The Pop Life, ''New York Times'', April 20, 1988. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | ||
==Further development== | ==Further development== | ||
{{See also|Golden age hip hop}} | |||
===The Juice Crew=== | ===The Juice Crew=== | ||
One of hip hop's most important producers and innovators, ] found ] and assembled various hip hop acts, including ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref name="allmusicMarley">{{cite web|last=Huey|first=Steve|url=http://www.allmusic.com/artist/p101803/biography|title=Marley Marl|publisher=]. ]|access-date=2012-05-01}}</ref> His ] collective was an important force in ushering the ] of hip hop, with advances in lyrical technique, distinctive personalities of emerging stars like Biz Markie and Big Daddy Kane, and attaining ] commercial success for hip hop music.<ref name="allmusicMarley" /> | |||
Marley Marl's first production was an "answer record" to "Sucker MCs" in 1983 entitled "Sucker DJs" by Dimples D. Soon after came 14-year-old ]'s answer to ]'s "Roxanne Roxanne", "Roxanne's Revenge" (1985), sparking off the wave of records known as the ]. More disses (insults intended to show disrespect) from Shanté followed: "Bite This" (1985), "Queen of Lox" (1985), introducing ] on "Def Fresh Crew" (1986), "Payback" (1987), and perhaps her greatest record, "Have a Nice Day" (1987). MCs from Marley's Juice Crew like ], ] and ] came to define the "fast rap" style characteristic of the late eighties, and the producer introduced to recorded hip hop a breakbeat that became ubiquitous in this period, James Brown's "Funky Drummer" break, on ]'s "It's a Demo" (], 1986).<ref> Use of the "Funky Drummer" breakbeat documented at the-breaks.com</ref><ref>Shapiro, p. 213</ref> | |||
Marley Marl's first production was an "answer record" to "Sucker MCs" in 1983 entitled "Sucker DJs" by Dimples D. Soon after came 14-year-old Roxanne Shanté's answer to ]'s "Roxanne Roxanne", "Roxanne's Revenge" (1985), sparking off the huge wave of answer records known as the ].<ref name="allmusicMarley" /> More disses (insults intended to show disrespect) from Shanté followed: "Bite This" (1985), "Queen of Rox" (1985), introducing ] on "Def Fresh Crew" (1986), "Payback" (1987), and perhaps her greatest record, "Have a Nice Day" (1987).<ref>Shapiro, p. 196</ref> | |||
===Boogie Down Productions=== | ===Boogie Down Productions=== | ||
]' ] exemplified new school's ] and ] aesthetics.]] | |||
]Shante's "Have a Nice Day" had aimed some barbs at the principal two members of a new group from the Bronx called Boogie Down Productions (BDP): "Now KRS-ONE you should go on vacation with that name soundin' like a wack radio station, and as for Scott La Rock, you should be ashamed, when ] said "It's Yours", he didn't mean his name". Boogie Down Productions had manufactured a disagreement with the Juice Crew's ], releasing "South Bronx" and "The Bridge is Over" in reply to his "The Bridge" and "Kill That Noise" respectively.<ref>Coleman, p. 84–85.</ref> | |||
Shante's "Have a Nice Day" had aimed some barbs at the principal two members of a new group from the Bronx called Boogie Down Productions (BDP): "Now KRS-ONE you should go on vacation with that name soundin' like a wack radio station, and as for Scott La Rock, you should be ashamed, when ] said "It's Yours", he didn't mean his name". Boogie Down Productions had manufactured a disagreement with the Juice Crew's ], releasing "South Bronx" and "The Bridge is Over" in reply to his "The Bridge" and "Kill That Noise" respectively.<ref>Coleman, p. 84–85.</ref> | |||
KRS-One considered Run-D.M.C. the epitome of rap music in 1984 and had begun to rap following their lead.<ref>Coleman, p. 76</ref> But he has also said that BDP's approach reflected a feeling that the early innovators like Run-D.M.C. and LL Cool J were by 1986 tainted by commercial success and out of touch with the streets.<ref>Coleman , p. 86.</ref> Boogie Down's first album ''Criminal Minded'' (], 1987) admitted a reggae influence and had KRS-One singing to the tune of the Beatles on the title track. It also contained two tales of grim street life played for callous laughs, "The P Is Free", in which KRS throws out of his car a girl who wants ] in exchange for sex, and "9mm Goes Bang", in which he shoots a drug dealer then cheerfully sings "la la la la la la". Songs like these presaged the rise of an underground that matched violent lyrics to the hardcore drum machine tracks of the new school, such as was being pioneered by Philadelphia's ]. The cover of ''Criminal Minded'' was a further reflection of a move towards this sort of radical image, depicting the group in half-light holding artillery.<ref>Coleman, p. 88</ref> The next album ''By All Means Necessary'' (B-Boy, 1988) left that element behind for political radicalism, with the title and cover alluding to ]. | |||
KRS-One considered Run-D.M.C. the epitome of rap music in 1984 and had begun to rap following their lead.<ref>Coleman, p. 76</ref> But he has also said that BDP's approach reflected a feeling that the early innovators like Run-D.M.C. and LL Cool J were by 1986 tainted by commercial success and out of touch with the streets.<ref>Coleman, p. 86.</ref> | |||
]'' in response to death threats]] | |||
KRS-One launched his ] at this time. Boogie Down Productions, along with Run-D.M.C. and Public Enemy, associated the new school with rap music with a strong message.<ref name=globe>Jackson, Derrick Z. "Welcome To The School Of Rap Music It's in Session Now, And There Are Some Positive Lessons", ''Boston Globe'', August 13 1989.</ref> | |||
Boogie Down's first album '']'' (], 1987) admitted a ] influence and had KRS-One imititating the Beatles' "Hey Jude" on the title track. It also contained two tales of grim street life, yet played for callous laughs: "The P Is Free", in which KRS speals of throwing out his girl who wants ] in exchange for sex, and "9mm Goes Bang", in which he shoots a drug dealer then cheerfully sings "la la la la la la". Songs like these presaged the rise of an underground that matched violent lyrics to the hardcore drum machine tracks of the new school. The cover of ''Criminal Minded'' was a further reflection of a move towards this sort of radical image, depicting the group in a half-light, holding firearms.<ref>Coleman, p. 88</ref> The next album '']'' (B-Boy, 1988) left that element behind for political radicalism following the murder of ], with the title and cover alluding to ]. KRS-One became involved with the ] at this time. Boogie Down Productions, along with Run-D.M.C. and Public Enemy, associated the new school as rap music with a strong message.<ref name=globe>Jackson, Derrick Z. "Welcome To The School Of Rap Music It's in Session Now, And There Are Some Positive Lessons", ''Boston Globe'', August 13, 1989.</ref> | |||
===Eric B. & Rakim=== | ===Eric B. & Rakim=== | ||
{{Refimprove section|date=May 2012}} | |||
Eric B. & Rakim appeared with the Marley Marl produced "Eric B. Is President" and "My Melody" on Zakia Records in 1986. Both tracks appeared on ''Paid in Full'' (], 1987). Just as B.D.P. had, the pair reflected changes in street life on their debut's cover, which depicted the two wearing huge gold chains and surrounded by money. The album cemented James Brown's status as a hip hop source, while Rakim's allusions showed the growing influence of mystic Islam-offshoot ] among hip hoppers. The music was minimalist, austerely so, with many writers noting that coupled with Rakim's precise, logical style, the effect was almost one of scientific rigour. They followed ''Paid in Full'' with ''Follow The Leader'' (], 1988) (on which they were open-eared enough to sample ]), ''Let The Rhythm Hit 'Em'' (], 1990) and ''Don't Sweat The Technique'' (MCA, 1992). Rakim is generally regarded as the most cutting-edge of the MCs of this new school.<ref>Neal, Mark Anthony. , ''PopMatters'', 19 November 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
Jess Harvell in ''Pitchfork'' in 2005 wrote that "Rakim's innovation was applying a patina of intellectual detachment to rap's most sacred cause: talking shit about how you're a better rapper than everyone else."<ref>Harvell, Jess. , ''Pitchfork'', June 02 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Christgau in the ''Village Voice'' in 1990 wrote of Rakim's style as "calm, confident, clear. On their third album, as on their phase-shifting 1986 debut," he continues, "Eric B.'s samples truly are beats, designed to accentuate the natural music of an idealized black man's voice."<ref>Christgau, Robert. , ''Village Voice'', 1990. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Looking back at the late eighties in ''Rolling Stone'' in 1997, Ed Moralez describes Rakim as "the new-school MC of the moment, using a smooth baritone to become the jazz soloist of mystic Afrocentric rap."<ref>Morales, Ed. , ''Rolling Stone'', November 10 1997. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
Eric B. & Rakim appeared with the Marley Marl-produced "Eric B. Is President" and "My Melody" on Zakia Records in 1986. Both tracks appeared on '']'' (], 1987). Just as B.D.P. had, the pair reflected changes in street life on their debut's cover, which depicted the two wearing huge gold chains and surrounded by money. Like ], the sampling prevalent in the album cemented James Brown's status as a hip hop source, while Rakim's allusions showed the growing influence of mystic Nation of Islam-offshoot ] in hip-hop. The music was minimalist, austerely so, with many writers noting that coupled with Rakim's precise, logical style, the effect was almost one of scientific rigour. The group followed ''Paid in Full'' with '']'' (], 1988), '']'' (], 1990) and '']'' (MCA, 1992). | |||
Rakim is generally regarded as the most cutting-edge of the MCs of the new school era.<ref>Neal, Mark Anthony. , ''PopMatters'', November 19, 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
Jess Harvell in ''Pitchfork'' in 2005 wrote that "Rakim's innovation was applying a patina of intellectual detachment to rap's most sacred cause: talking shit about how you're a better rapper than everyone else."<ref>Harvell, Jess. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081210025535/http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/17495-paid-in-full-follow-the-leader |date=2008-12-10 }}, ''Pitchfork'', June 2, 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Christgau in the ''Village Voice'' in 1990 wrote of Rakim's style as "calm, confident, clear. On their third album, as on their phase-shifting 1986 debut," he continues, "Eric B.'s samples truly are beats, designed to accentuate the natural music of an idealized black man's voice."<ref>Christgau, Robert. , ''Village Voice'', 1990. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> Looking back at the late eighties in ''Rolling Stone'' in 1997, Moralez describes Rakim as "the new-school MC of the moment, using a smooth baritone to become the jazz soloist of mystic Afrocentric rap."<ref>Morales, Ed. , ''Rolling Stone'', November 10, 1997. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
===Public Enemy=== | ===Public Enemy=== | ||
] | |||
Public Enemy, having been reluctantly convinced to sign to a record label, released ''Yo! Bumrush the Show'' on Def Jam in 1987.<ref name="Coleman351">Coleman, p. 351</ref> It debuted the Public Enemy logo, a hatted b-boy in a sniper's gunsights, and contained both battle rhymes ("Miuzi Weighs a Ton", "Public Enemy #1") and social-political fare ("Rightstarter (Message to a Black Man)" and the anti-] "Megablast").<ref name="Coleman351" /> It was influenced by the energy of early Run-D.M.C. and LL Cool J, and the booming ] drums of Schoolly D, and was a critical and commercial success, particularly in Europe, unusually so for a hip hop album at that time.<ref name="Coleman354">Coleman, p. 354</ref> ''Bumrush the Show'' had been recorded on the heels of Run-D.M.C.'s ''Raising Hell'', but was held back by Def Jam in order for them to concentrate on releasing and promoting the Beastie Boys' ''License to Ill''.<ref name="Coleman351" />] at the city jail on Thirty-second Street, New York<ref name="Coleman354" />]] Chuck D of Public Enemy felt that by the time their first record was released, BDP and Rakim had already changed the landscape for how an MC could rap.<ref name="Coleman351" /> Public Enemy were already recording their second album ''It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back'' (Def Jam, 1988) when ''Bumrush'' hit stores.<ref name="Coleman351" /> ''It Takes a Nation of Millions...'' contained criticism of the media on "She Watches Channel Zero?!" (looping ]'s "Angel of Death") and "Don't Believe the Hype" (in which Chuck D declared himself "leader of the new school" rapping from "the book of the new school rap game"), dealt again with crack on "Night of the Living Baseheads", rapped from the perspective of a black conscientious objector breaking out of prison on "Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos". Chuck D accused the ] of tapping his phone in "Louder Than a Bomb", declared himself a "Rebel Without a Pause" and flipped the title of a Beastie Boys hit to rhyme about the ] in "Party For Your Right to Fight". All this was to the dense, fast-paced squalls of noise created by Public Enemy's production team, ]. The landmark album was followed by 1990's ''Fear of a Black Planet'' (Def Jam), whose "Fight the Power" described ] and ] as racist and declared "most of my heroes don't appear on no stamps". | |||
Public Enemy, having been reluctantly convinced to sign to a record label, released '']'' on Def Jam in 1987.<ref name="Coleman351">Coleman, p. 351</ref> It debuted the Public Enemy logo, which depicted a hatted b-boy in a sniper's crosshairs, and was replete with battle rhymes ("Miuzi Weighs a Ton", "Public Enemy #1"), social-political fare ("Rightstarter, Message to a Black Man)" and anti-] messages ("Megablast").<ref name="Coleman351" /> | |||
The album was a critical and commercial success, particularly in Europe, unusually so for a hip hop album at that time.<ref name="Coleman354">Coleman, p. 354</ref> ''Yo! Bum Rush the Show'' had been recorded on the heels of Run-D.M.C.'s ''Raising Hell'', but was held back by Def Jam in order for them to concentrate on releasing and promoting the Beastie Boys' ''License to Ill''.<ref name="Coleman351" /> Chuck D of Public Enemy felt that by the time their first record was released, BDP and Rakim had already changed the landscape for how an MC could rap.<ref name="Coleman351" /> Public Enemy were already recording their second album '']'' (Def Jam, 1988) when ''Yo! Bum Rush the Show'' hit stores.<ref name="Coleman351" /> | |||
===Gangsta rap=== | |||
{{main|Gangsta rap}} | |||
The underground sound centered on urban violence that was to become ] existed on the East Coast from soon after Run–D.M.C. had inaugurated the new school of hip hop. Philadelphia's ] self-released "Gangsta Boogie" in 1984, and "P.S.K. What Does It Mean?"/"Gucci Time" in 1985, leading to '']'' (Schoolly D, 1986, ], 1987).<ref>Coleman, p. 406–407</ref> The West Coast, which became the home of gangsta rap, had ]'s influential ''Batteram'' mixtape in 1985,<ref>Cross, p. 26–28</ref> and ]'s "Six in the Morning" in 1986<ref>Cross, p. 24–5</ref> before ]'s first records, leading to the hugely successful ''Straight Outta Compton'' in 1988.<ref>Cross, p. 33–36</ref> | |||
===Native Tongues ''et al''=== | |||
An underground that was to become ] had existed almost as soon as Run-D.M.C. had inaugurated the new school of hip hop. Philadelphia's Schoolly D self-released "Gangsta Boogie" in 1984, and "P.S.K. What Does It Mean?"/"Gucci Time" in 1985, leading to ''Saturday Night'' (Schoolly D, 1986, ], 1987).<ref>Coleman, p. 406–407</ref> The West Coast, which became the home of gangsta rap, had Toddy Tee's influential ''Batteram'' mixtape in 1985,<ref>Cross, p. 26–28</ref> and ]'s "Six in the Morning" in 1986<ref>Cross, p. 24–5</ref> before ]'s first records, leading to the hugely successful ''Straight Outta Compton'' in 1988.<ref>Cross, p. 33–36</ref> Pop-rap crossovers from the West Coast would also see great success in this time, with ]'s "Wild Thing" on the Californian independent ], and ]'s smash hits "U Can't Touch This" and "Pray". Developments in the New York new school continuum in this climate were represented by the ] groups—], ], ], ] and ]—along with fellow travellers like ], ] and ].<ref>Wang, Oliver. , ''LA Weekly'', June 28, 2000. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref><ref>Gloden, Gabe. , ''Stylus'', September 9, 2004. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref><ref name="Shapiro210">Shapiro, p. 210</ref> They moved away from aggressive, macho posturing, towards ambiguity, fun and Afrocentricity. Their music was sample-crowded, more open and accessible than their new school predecessors. De La Soul's debut sampled everyone from ] to ], while A Tribe Called Quest matched tough beats to mellow jazz samples and playful, thoughtful raps.<ref name="Shapiro210" /> In the nineties, West Coast gangsta rap evolved into the slow, P-funk influenced keyboard sounds of ]; the East Coast responded with a new breed of hardcore by the likes of ], ] and the ], and tales of New York street life in the debut records of ] and the ] | |||
===Native Tongues=== | |||
The "golden age" of ] is a phrase usually framing the late 1980s in mainstream hip hop,<ref>Caramanica, Jon. , ''New York Times'', June 26 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.<br>Coker, Cheo H. , ''Rolling Stone'', March 9 1995. <br>O'Neal Parker, Lonnae. , ''Washington Post'', August 20 1997. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> said to be characterized by its diversity, quality, innovation and influence,<ref>Coyle, Jake. , Associated Press, published in ''USA Today'', June 19 2005. <br>Coker, Cheo H., ''Rolling Stone'', March 9 1995. <br>Drever, Andrew. , ''The Age'' , October 24 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> and associated with ], ] and his ], ], ], ], and the ]<ref>Per Coker, Hodgkinson, Drever, Thill, O'Neal Parker and Sariq. Additionally: <br>Coker, Cheo H. , ''Rolling Stone'', November 16, 1995. <br>Pettie, Andrew. , ''Daily Telegraph'', August 11 2005. <br>Reeves, Mosi. , ''Village Voice'', January 29th 2002. <br>Kot, Greg. , Los Angeles Times, September 19 2001. <br>Coker, Cheo Hodari. , ''Los Angeles Times'', August 11 1996. <br>Mervis, Scott. , ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'', February 15 2004. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> due to their themes of ] and political militancy, their experimental music, and their eclectic ].<ref>Sariq, Roni. , ''City Pages'', April 16 1997. <br>Thill, Scott. AlterNet, May 6 2005. <br>Hodgkinson, Will. , ''The Guardian'', September 19 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> This same period is sometimes referred to as "mid-school" or a "middle school" in hip hop, the phrase covering acts like ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>Scholtes, Peter S. , City Pages, January 7 1998. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref><ref>DJ Shadow in conversation with William E. Ketchum III, , ], August 24 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref><ref>Downes, Maurice. , ''The Free Williamsburg'' issue 53, August 2004.</ref><ref>King, Rick. , ''Format'' magazine, October 14 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref> | |||
Developments in the New York new school continuum in this climate were represented by the ] groups—], ], ], ] and ]—along with fellow travellers like ], ] and ].<ref>Wang, Oliver. , ''LA Weekly'', June 28, 2000. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref><ref>Gloden, Gabe. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100128053128/http://www.stylusmagazine.com/reviews/brand-nubian/fire-in-the-hole.htm |date=2010-01-28 }}, ''Stylus'', September 9, 2004. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.</ref><ref name="Shapiro210">Shapiro, p. 210</ref> They moved away from aggressive, macho posturing, towards ambiguity, fun and Afrocentricity. Their music was sample-crowded, more open and accessible than their new school predecessors. De La Soul's debut sampled everyone from ] to ], while A Tribe Called Quest matched tough beats to mellow jazz samples and playful, thoughtful raps.<ref name="Shapiro210" /> | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{refbegin}} | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
'''a.''' {{ |
'''a.''' {{Note label|A|a|none}} "A few weeks ago I was DJing a party and a young twentysomething came up to me to request 'some old-school.' I asked for clarification – after all, Run DMC and LL Cool J are considered old-school, but technically, they invented the new school. The response: 'I don't know, some ] or something.' After gently picking my jaw from off the floor, I turned back to my crates and wondered to myself, 'If Tribe is old-school, what does that make ]? In utero?'"—Oliver Wang, "Book report", ''San Francisco Bay Guardian'', April 6, 2003. | ||
'''b.''' {{ |
'''b.''' {{Note label|B|b|none}} "I always get frustrated when I see a link to this site on some hipster's blog with a tagline like 'taking it back to the old school', when I very rarely post anything recorded before 1989. I mean, I guess a lot of what I post here is old, but that don't make it old school, yaoming? Like how you gonna call Leaders of the New School old school?"—Noz, "Lady Don't Tek No Beat", ''Cocaine Blunts and Hip Hop Tapes'', January 10, 2005. | ||
{{refend}} | |||
</div> | |||
==Endnotes== | ==Endnotes== | ||
{{reflist| |
{{reflist|30em}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
*Cepeda, Raquel (ed.) ''And It Don't Stop!'', New York: ], 2004. ISBN |
*Cepeda, Raquel (ed.) ''And It Don't Stop!'', New York: ], 2004. {{ISBN|978-0-571-21159-3}} | ||
*Coleman, Brian. ''Check |
*Coleman, Brian. '']'', 2nd. ed., New York: ], 2007. {{ISBN|978-0-8129-7775-2}} | ||
*Cross, Brian. ''It's Not About a Salary...'', New York: ], 1993. ISBN |
*Cross, Brian. ''It's Not About a Salary ... '', New York: ], 1993. {{ISBN|978-0-86091-620-8}} | ||
*]. ''Rough Guide to Hip Hop'', 2nd. ed., London: Rough Guides, 2005. ISBN |
*]. ''Rough Guide to Hip Hop'', 2nd. ed., London: Rough Guides, 2005. {{ISBN|978-1-84353-263-7}} | ||
*]. ''Rap Attack'', 3rd. ed., London: ], 2000. ISBN |
*]. ''Rap Attack'', 3rd. ed., London: ], 2000. {{ISBN|978-1-85242-627-9}} | ||
{{ |
{{Hiphop}} | ||
{{good article}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 10:35, 16 December 2024
Movement in hip hop music See also: Golden age hip hopNew-school hip hop | |
---|---|
Stylistic origins | |
Cultural origins | Early 1980s, Queens, Brooklyn, New York City |
Typical instruments | |
Subgenres | |
Golden age hip hop | |
Local scenes | |
South Bronx, Brooklyn, Hollis, Queens, Jamaica, Queens |
The new school of hip hop was a movement in hip hop music, beginning in 1983–84 with the early records of Run–D.M.C., Whodini, and LL Cool J. Predominantly from Queens and Brooklyn, it was characterized by Drum Machine-led minimalism, often tinged with elements of Rock; rapped taunts, boasts, and socio-political commentary; and aggressive, self-assertive delivery. In song and image, its artists projected a tough, cool, street B-boy attitude. These elements contrasted sharply with Funk and Disco, Novelty hits, live bands, synthesizers, and party rhymes of artists prevalent in the early 1980s. Compared to their older hip hop counterparts, new school artists crafted more cohesive LPs and shorter songs more amenable to airplay. By 1986, their releases began to establish hip hop in the mainstream.
The somewhat broader era of Golden age hip hop is applied to late 1980s-to-early 1990s mainstream hip hop, characterized by diversity, quality, innovation and influence, and associated with Public Enemy, KRS-One and his Boogie Down Productions, Eric B. & Rakim, Ultramagnetic MCs, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, and the Jungle Brothers, known for themes of Afrocentricity and political militancy, experimental music, and eclectic sampling. This period is sometimes referred to as "Mid-school" or "middle school"; associated acts included Gang Starr, The UMC's, Main Source, Lord Finesse, EPMD, Just Ice, Stetsasonic, True Mathematics, and Mantronix.
The innovations of Run-D.M.C., MC Shan, and LL Cool J, and New School Producers such as Larry Smith and Rick Rubin of Def Jam, were quickly surpassed by Beastie Boys, Marley Marl and his Juice Crew MCs, Boogie Down Productions, Public Enemy, and Eric B. & Rakim. Hip-hop production became denser, rhymes and beats faster, as the drum machine was augmented with Sampler technology. Rakim took lyrics about the art of rapping to new heights, while KRS-One and Chuck D pushed "message rap" towards black activism. Native Tongues artists' inclusive, sample-crowded music accompanied their positivity, Afrocentricity, and playful energy. The new school/golden age ended with the eventual commercial dominance of West Coast gangsta rap, particularly the emergence of the relaxed sounds of G-funk by the early nineties, while the East Coast scene became dominated by hardcore rappers such as the Wu-Tang Clan and gangsta rappers such as Nas and The Notorious B.I.G.
The terms "old school" and "new school" fell into the vernacular as synonyms for "old" and "new" in hip hop, to the confusion and occasional exasperation of writers who use the terms historically. The phrase "Leader of The New School", coined in hip hop by Chuck D in 1988, and given further currency by the eponymous group Leaders of the New School (who were named by Chuck D before signing with Elektra in 1989), remains popular. It has been applied to artists ranging from Jay-Z to Lupe Fiasco.
Prehistory
Elements of new school had existed in some form in the popular culture since hip-hop's birth. The first MC's rapped over DJs swapping back and forth between two copies of the same record playing the same drum break, or playing instrumental portions or versions of a broad range of records. This part of the culture was initiated by DJ Kool Herc in 1973 using breaks from James Brown, The Incredible Bongo Band and English rock group Babe Ruth in his block parties. Brown's music—"extensive vamps" in which his voice was "a percussive instrument with frequent rhythmic grunts", and "with rhythm-section patterns ... West African polyrhythms"—was a keynote of hip hop's early days. By 1975, Grandmaster Flash and Afrika Bambaataa had taken up Kool Herc's breakbeat style of DJing, each with their own accompanying rappers. Flash was especially associated with an important break known as "The Bells"—a cut-up of the intro to Bob James's jazz cover of Paul Simon's "Take Me To The Mardi Gras"—while Bambaataa delighted in springing occasional rock music breaks from records like "Mary, Mary", "Honky Tonk Women", "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" and Grand Funk Railroad's "Inside Looking Out" on unsuspecting b-boys.
The earliest hip-hop records replaced the DJ with a live band playing funk and disco influenced tunes, or "interpolating" the tunes themselves, as in "Rapper's Delight" (Sugar Hill, 1979) and "King Tim III (Personality Jock)" (Spring, 1979). It was the soft, futuristic funk closely tied to disco that ruled hip hop's early days on record, to the exclusion of the hard James Brown beats so beloved of the first b-boys. Figures such as Flash and Bambaataa were involved in some early instances of moving the sound away from that of a live band, as in Flash's DJ track "The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel" (Sugar Hill, 1981), and even innovating popular new sounds and subgenres, as in the synthesizer-laden electro of Bambaataa's "Planet Rock" (Tommy Boy, 1982). Often though the rawer elements present in live shows did not make it past the recording studio.
Bambaataa's first records, for instance, two versions of "Zulu Nation Throwdown" (Winley, 1980), were recorded with just drums and rhymes. When Bambaataa heard the released records, a complete live band had been added. Something closer to his intentions can be heard on a portion of Death Mix, a low-quality bootleg of a Zulu Nation night at James Monroe High School in the Bronx, released without his permission on Winley Records in 1983. Likewise on the bootleg Live Convention '82 (Disco Wax, 1982), Grand Wizard Theodore cuts the first six bars of Rufus Thomas's "Do the Funky Penguin" together for five and a half minutes while an MC raps over the top. Grandmaster Flash's "Superrappin'" (Enjoy, 1979) had a pumping syncopated rhythm and The Furious Five emulating his spinbacks and needle drops and chanting that "that Flash is on the beatbox going ..." The beatbox itself however, a drum machine which Flash had added to his turntable set-up some time earlier, was absent on the record, the drums being produced by a live drummer.
Kool Moe Dee's verbal personal attacks on Busy Bee Starski live at Harlem World in 1982 caused a popular sensation in hip hop circles. In the same way, groups like the Cold Crush Brothers and The Force MCs were known for their routines, competitive attitude, and battle rhymes. Tapes of battles like these circulated widely, even without them becoming viable recordings. Apart from some social commentary like Melle Mel's one verse on "Superrappin'", Kurtis Blow's ruefully comedic "The Breaks" (Mercury, 1980) and a spurt of records following the success of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five's "The Message" (Sugar Hill, 1982), the old school specialized lyrically in party rhymes.
Advent
"I Can't Live Without My Radio" LL Cool J's second single for the Def Jam label, features heavy beats and boasting raps, reflective of new school and ghetto-blaster culture.Problems playing this file? See media help.
One time, in probably 1983, I was in the park in Brooklyn. I was getting beat up by about eight kids, I don't even remember why. But as it was happening, this dude was walkin' by with one of those big boom boxes. And as he's walking by, we hear . They all stopped beating me, and we all just stood there, listening to this phenomenon. I could have run, but I didn't, I was just so entranced by what I heard. Then the dude with the box passed by and the kids continued to beat me up. But it didn't matter. I felt good. I knew right then that I had to get into this hip hop shit.
— Pras of the Fugees, 2003, as told to Brian Coleman, Check The Technique 2nd. ed., New York: Villard, 2007
David Toop writes of 1984 that "pundits were writing obituaries for hip hop, a passing fad" which "Hollywood had mutated into an all-singing, all-dancing romance" in movies like Flashdance and Breakin'. Against this, Run-D.M.C., The Beastie Boys and the label Def Jam were "consciously hardcore", "a reaction against the populist trend in hip hop at the time", and "an explosive emergence of an underground alternative". For Peter Shapiro, Run-D.M.C.'s 1983 two-song release "It's like That"/"Sucker MCs" "completely changed hip-hop" "rendering everything that preceded it distinctly old school with one fell swoop." In a 47-point timeline of hip hop and its antecedents spanning 64 years, Shapiro lists this release as his 43rd point. Reviewing Toop's book in the LA Weekly, Oliver Wang of Soul Sides concurs, hailing Run-D.M.C. as inaugurating the new school of rap.
Run-D.M.C.
Run-D.M.C. rapped over the most sparse of musical backing tracks. In the case of "Sucker MCs", there was a loud, Oberheim DMX drum machine, a few scratches and nothing else, while the rhymes harangued weak rappers and contrasted them to the group's success. "It's like That" was an aggressively delivered message rap whose social commentary has been defined variously as "objective fatalism", "frustrated and renunciatory", and just plain "reportage". Run-D.M.C. wore street clothes, tracksuits, sneakers, one even wore glasses. Their only possible concession to an image extraneous to that of kids on the street was the stylistic flourish of black fedoras atop their heads. This stood in sharp contrast to the popular artists of the time, who had variously bedecked themselves with feathers, suede boots, jerri curls, and red or even pink leather suits.
The group's early singles are collected on their eponymous debut (Profile, 1984), introducing rock references in "Rock Box", and recognized then and now as the best album of hip hop's early years. The next year, they appeared at Live Aid and released King of Rock (Profile, 1985), on which they asserted that they were "never ever old school". Raising Hell (Profile, 1986) was a landmark, containing quintessentially hip hop tracks like "Peter Piper", "Perfection" and "It's Tricky", and going platinum in the year of its release on the back of the huge crossover hit "Walk This Way". The group had rapped over the beat from the 1975 original in their early days, without so much as knowing the name of the band. When Raising Hell's producer Rick Rubin heard them playing around with it in the studio, he suggested using the Aerosmith lyrics, and the collaboration between the two groups came about. The album's last track was "Proud To Be Black", written under the influence of Chuck D of the as-yet unrecorded Public Enemy. On "My Adidas" the band rapped that they "took the beat from the street and put it on TV".
Comments from Darryl McDaniels, AKA DMC of Run-D.M.C., make this connection to the underground explicit: "hat's exactly what we did. We didn't really think it was pioneering, we just did what rappers did before us was doing on tapes. When a lot of the old guys, like Kool Moe Dee, The Treacherous Three, and Grandmaster Flash, got in the studio, they never put their greatness on records. Me and Run and Jay would listen ... and we'd say, 'They didn't do that shit last night in the Bronx!' ... So we said that we weren't going to be fake. We ain't gonna wear no costumes. We're gonna keep it real."
Whodini
Coming out of the fertile New York rap scene of the early 1980s, Whodini was one of the first rap groups to add a R&B twist to their music, thus laying the foundation for a new genre, new jack swing. The group made its name with good-humored songs such as "Magic's Wand" (the first rap song accompanied by a video), "The Haunted House of Rock", "Friends", "Five Minutes of Funk", and "Freaks Come Out at Night". Live performances of the group were the first rap concerts with the participation of breakdance dancers from the group UTFO. Russell Simmons was the manager of the group in the 1980s.
The group released six studio albums. Fourteen of the group's singles hit the Billboard charts. Four of the group's albums were certified Platinum by the RIAA.
In 1984, the group released the second album Escape. The entire album was fully produced by Larry Smith. From the laid back groove titled "Five Minutes of Funk" to "Friends", a cynical story of betrayal sampled everywhere from Nas' "If I Ruled the World (Imagine That)" to 2Pac's "Troublesome '96", to harder edged singles "Freaks Come Out at Nite" and "Big Mouth".
In 1986, the group released a third album Back in Black, fully produced by Smith. A number of songs from the album received heavy local New York airplay, such as "Funky Beat" and the controversial "I'm a Ho". "Fugitive" was guitar-driven funk and "Last Night (I Had a Long Talk With...)" was introspective. Paul Kodish, the drummer of Pendulum, was featured on the album.
Def Jam
The other production credit on Raising Hell went to Run's brother, Russell Simmons; he ran Rush Artist Management, now Rush Communications, which as well as handling Run-D.M.C., managed the Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, Whodini and Public Enemy. Simmons also co-owned Def Jam Recordings, an important new-school label, with Rubin. Simmons rose with Def Jam to become one of the biggest moguls in rap, while Rubin claimed credit for introducing radio-friendly brevity and song structure to hip hop. Def Jam's first 12-inch release was the minimalist drum machine breakdown "I Need A Beat" by LL Cool J (1984). This was followed by "I Can't Live Without My Radio" (Def Jam, 1985), a loud, defiant declaration of public loyalty to his boom box which the New York Times in 1987 called "quintessential rap in its directness, immediacy and assertion of self". Both were on his debut album for Def Jam, 1985's Radio (described as "Reduced by Rick Rubin" in its liner notes), which also contained the minimalist and rock-influenced track "Rock the Bells". Rubin also produced music for Beastie Boys, who sampled AC/DC on their Rock Hard EP on Def Jam in 1984 and recorded a Run-D.M.C. outtake and a heavy metal parody on their hugely commercially successful debut album Licensed To Ill (Def Jam, 1986). In 1987, Raising Hell surpassed three million units sold, and Licensed to Ill five million. Faced with figures like these, major labels finally began buying into independent New York hip hop imprints.
Further development
See also: Golden age hip hopThe Juice Crew
One of hip hop's most important producers and innovators, Marley Marl found Cold Chillin' Records and assembled various hip hop acts, including MC Shan, Big Daddy Kane, Biz Markie, Roxanne Shanté, Kool G Rap & DJ Polo, and Masta Ace. His Juice Crew collective was an important force in ushering the "golden age" era of hip hop, with advances in lyrical technique, distinctive personalities of emerging stars like Biz Markie and Big Daddy Kane, and attaining crossover commercial success for hip hop music.
Marley Marl's first production was an "answer record" to "Sucker MCs" in 1983 entitled "Sucker DJs" by Dimples D. Soon after came 14-year-old Roxanne Shanté's answer to UTFO's "Roxanne Roxanne", "Roxanne's Revenge" (1985), sparking off the huge wave of answer records known as the Roxanne Wars. More disses (insults intended to show disrespect) from Shanté followed: "Bite This" (1985), "Queen of Rox" (1985), introducing Biz Markie on "Def Fresh Crew" (1986), "Payback" (1987), and perhaps her greatest record, "Have a Nice Day" (1987).
Boogie Down Productions
Shante's "Have a Nice Day" had aimed some barbs at the principal two members of a new group from the Bronx called Boogie Down Productions (BDP): "Now KRS-ONE you should go on vacation with that name soundin' like a wack radio station, and as for Scott La Rock, you should be ashamed, when T La Rock said "It's Yours", he didn't mean his name". Boogie Down Productions had manufactured a disagreement with the Juice Crew's MC Shan, releasing "South Bronx" and "The Bridge is Over" in reply to his "The Bridge" and "Kill That Noise" respectively. KRS-One considered Run-D.M.C. the epitome of rap music in 1984 and had begun to rap following their lead. But he has also said that BDP's approach reflected a feeling that the early innovators like Run-D.M.C. and LL Cool J were by 1986 tainted by commercial success and out of touch with the streets.
Boogie Down's first album Criminal Minded (B-Boy, 1987) admitted a reggae influence and had KRS-One imititating the Beatles' "Hey Jude" on the title track. It also contained two tales of grim street life, yet played for callous laughs: "The P Is Free", in which KRS speals of throwing out his girl who wants crack cocaine in exchange for sex, and "9mm Goes Bang", in which he shoots a drug dealer then cheerfully sings "la la la la la la". Songs like these presaged the rise of an underground that matched violent lyrics to the hardcore drum machine tracks of the new school. The cover of Criminal Minded was a further reflection of a move towards this sort of radical image, depicting the group in a half-light, holding firearms. The next album By All Means Necessary (B-Boy, 1988) left that element behind for political radicalism following the murder of Scott La Rock, with the title and cover alluding to Malcolm X. KRS-One became involved with the Stop the Violence Movement at this time. Boogie Down Productions, along with Run-D.M.C. and Public Enemy, associated the new school as rap music with a strong message.
Eric B. & Rakim
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Eric B. & Rakim appeared with the Marley Marl-produced "Eric B. Is President" and "My Melody" on Zakia Records in 1986. Both tracks appeared on Paid in Full (4th & Broadway, 1987). Just as B.D.P. had, the pair reflected changes in street life on their debut's cover, which depicted the two wearing huge gold chains and surrounded by money. Like Criminal Minded, the sampling prevalent in the album cemented James Brown's status as a hip hop source, while Rakim's allusions showed the growing influence of mystic Nation of Islam-offshoot The Nation of Gods and Earths in hip-hop. The music was minimalist, austerely so, with many writers noting that coupled with Rakim's precise, logical style, the effect was almost one of scientific rigour. The group followed Paid in Full with Follow The Leader (Uni, 1988), Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em (MCA, 1990) and Don't Sweat The Technique (MCA, 1992).
Rakim is generally regarded as the most cutting-edge of the MCs of the new school era. Jess Harvell in Pitchfork in 2005 wrote that "Rakim's innovation was applying a patina of intellectual detachment to rap's most sacred cause: talking shit about how you're a better rapper than everyone else." Christgau in the Village Voice in 1990 wrote of Rakim's style as "calm, confident, clear. On their third album, as on their phase-shifting 1986 debut," he continues, "Eric B.'s samples truly are beats, designed to accentuate the natural music of an idealized black man's voice." Looking back at the late eighties in Rolling Stone in 1997, Moralez describes Rakim as "the new-school MC of the moment, using a smooth baritone to become the jazz soloist of mystic Afrocentric rap."
Public Enemy
Public Enemy, having been reluctantly convinced to sign to a record label, released Yo! Bum Rush the Show on Def Jam in 1987. It debuted the Public Enemy logo, which depicted a hatted b-boy in a sniper's crosshairs, and was replete with battle rhymes ("Miuzi Weighs a Ton", "Public Enemy #1"), social-political fare ("Rightstarter, Message to a Black Man)" and anti-crack messages ("Megablast").
The album was a critical and commercial success, particularly in Europe, unusually so for a hip hop album at that time. Yo! Bum Rush the Show had been recorded on the heels of Run-D.M.C.'s Raising Hell, but was held back by Def Jam in order for them to concentrate on releasing and promoting the Beastie Boys' License to Ill. Chuck D of Public Enemy felt that by the time their first record was released, BDP and Rakim had already changed the landscape for how an MC could rap. Public Enemy were already recording their second album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back (Def Jam, 1988) when Yo! Bum Rush the Show hit stores.
Gangsta rap
Main article: Gangsta rapThe underground sound centered on urban violence that was to become gangsta rap existed on the East Coast from soon after Run–D.M.C. had inaugurated the new school of hip hop. Philadelphia's Schoolly D self-released "Gangsta Boogie" in 1984, and "P.S.K. What Does It Mean?"/"Gucci Time" in 1985, leading to Saturday Night (Schoolly D, 1986, Jive, 1987). The West Coast, which became the home of gangsta rap, had Toddy Tee's influential Batteram mixtape in 1985, and Ice-T's "Six in the Morning" in 1986 before N.W.A's first records, leading to the hugely successful Straight Outta Compton in 1988.
Native Tongues
Developments in the New York new school continuum in this climate were represented by the Native Tongues groups—The Jungle Brothers, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Queen Latifah and Monie Love—along with fellow travellers like Leaders of the New School, KMD and Brand Nubian. They moved away from aggressive, macho posturing, towards ambiguity, fun and Afrocentricity. Their music was sample-crowded, more open and accessible than their new school predecessors. De La Soul's debut sampled everyone from The Turtles to Steely Dan, while A Tribe Called Quest matched tough beats to mellow jazz samples and playful, thoughtful raps.
Notes
a. "A few weeks ago I was DJing a party and a young twentysomething came up to me to request 'some old-school.' I asked for clarification – after all, Run DMC and LL Cool J are considered old-school, but technically, they invented the new school. The response: 'I don't know, some Tribe Called Quest or something.' After gently picking my jaw from off the floor, I turned back to my crates and wondered to myself, 'If Tribe is old-school, what does that make Kurtis Blow? In utero?'"—Oliver Wang, "Book report", San Francisco Bay Guardian, April 6, 2003.
b. "I always get frustrated when I see a link to this site on some hipster's blog with a tagline like 'taking it back to the old school', when I very rarely post anything recorded before 1989. I mean, I guess a lot of what I post here is old, but that don't make it old school, yaoming? Like how you gonna call Leaders of the New School old school?"—Noz, "Lady Don't Tek No Beat", Cocaine Blunts and Hip Hop Tapes, January 10, 2005.
Endnotes
- *Caramanica, Jon. "Hip-Hop's Raiders of the Lost Archives", New York Times, June 26, 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Coker, Cheo H. "Slick Rick: Behind Bars", Rolling Stone, March 9, 1995.
- O'Neal Parker, Lonnae. "U-Md. Senior Aaron McGruder's Edgy Hip-Hop Comic Gets Raves, but No Takers", Washington Post, August 20, 1997. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- *Coyle, Jake. "Spin magazine picks Radiohead CD as best", Associated Press, published in USA Today, June 19, 2005.
- Coker, Cheo H."Slick Rick: Behind Bars", Rolling Stone, March 9, 1995.
- Drever, Andrew. "Jungle Brothers still untamed", The Age , October 24, 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Wilson, Denis. "Kool Keith Preps New Album, Ponders Retirement". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- Swihart, Stanton. "Critical Beatdown – Ultramagnetic MC's". AllMusic. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- Per Coker, Hodgkinson, Drever, Thill, O'Neal, Parker and Sariq. Additionally:
- Coker, Cheo H. "KRS-One: Krs-One", Rolling Stone, November 16, 1995.
- Pettie, Andrew. "'Where rap went wrong'", Daily Telegraph, August 11, 2005.
- Reeves, Mosi. "Easy-Chair Rap" Archived 2006-11-04 at the Wayback Machine, Village Voice, January 29th 2002.
- Kot, Greg. "Hip-Hop Below the Mainstream", Los Angeles Times, September 19, 2001.
- Coker, Cheo Hodari. "'It's a Beautiful Feeling'", Los Angeles Times, August 11, 1996.
- Mervis, Scott. "From Kool Herc to 50 Cent, the story of rap – so far", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 15, 2004. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- *Sariq, Roni. "Crazy Wisdom Masters" Archived 2008-11-23 at the Wayback Machine, City Pages, April 16, 1997.
- Thill, Scott. "Whiteness Visible" Archived 2012-04-26 at the Wayback Machine AlterNet, May 6, 2005.
- Hodgkinson, Will. "Adventures on the wheels of steel", The Guardian, September 19, 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- *Scholtes, Peter S. "True MCs" Archived 2012-07-11 at archive.today, City Pages, January 7, 1998. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- DJ Shadow in conversation with William E. Ketchum III, "DJ Shadow Knockin' Doorz Down" Archived 2007-11-18 at the Wayback Machine, XXL, August 24, 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Downes, Maurice. "Talking Philosophy with DJ Nu-Mark", The Free Williamsburg issue 53, August 2004.
- *Dinco D, in conversation with Derek Phifer, "Leader of The New School: Dinco D." Archived 2008-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, HHNLive, October 15, 2007. Retrieved on July 4, 2008.
- Callahan-Bever, Noah. "Lupe Fiasco – Grindin'" Archived 2008-01-15 at the Wayback Machine, Vibe, January 18, 2006. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Toop, p. 14
- Toop, p. 17
- Hermes, Will. "All Rise for the National Anthem of Hip-Hop", New York Times, October 29, 2006. Retrieved on September 9, 2008.
- ^ Upshall, David (writer, director, producer). The Hip Hop Years, Part 1, Channel 4, 1999.
- Collins, Willie. "James Brown", St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, January 29, 2002. Retrieved on July 17, 2008.
- Toop, p. 66
- Ross, Andrew. "Old master flash.", Artforum, March 1, 1995.
- Hager, Steven. "Afrika Bambaataa's Hip-Hop", Village Voice, September 21, 1982. Reprinted in Cepeda, p. 23
- Shapiro, p. 4
- Toop, p. 67–69
- Toop, p. 90
- Toop, p. 126
- Wilder, Chris. "Mutual Respect", The Source, November 1993.
- Woodson, AJ. "Whatever Happened to Battles???", On The Go, 1997.
- ^ Shapiro, p.327
- Toop, p. xi
- ^ Shapiro, p. 401
- Wang, Oliver. "Between the Lines", LA Weekly, March 8, 2000. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- ^ Christgau, Robert. Consumer Guide, Village Voice, 1984. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Rose, Tricia. "'Fear of a Black Planet': Rap Music and Black Cultural Politics in the 1990s", The Journal of Negro Education, Summer 1991.
- Breihan, Tom. "Run-DMC / King of Rock / Raising Hell / Tougher Than Leather" Archived 2008-02-28 at the Wayback Machine, Pitchfork, September 23, 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Dennis, Reginald C. "Born Again", The Source, February 1993.
- Shapiro, p. 327
- Shapiro, p. 327. Shapiro has Raising Hell as the first platinum hip hop album, while Dennis and Coleman ascribe that distinction to King of Rock. RIAA's certification dates (retrieved on July 4, 2008) bear out Shapiro's statement. Though King of Rock may be the earliest release to receive platinum status, it did so after Raising Hell did.
- Coleman, p. 401
- Coleman, p. 404
- Coleman, p. 395.
- "Def Jam at 30: The Declarations of an Independent – 1984–1985". rmc.library.cornell.edu. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
- "The Best Rap Albums of the '80s". Complex. Archived from the original on 2023-03-26. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
- "Def Jam Music Group 10th Anniversary Box Set", Spin magazine, December 1995. Quoted by tower.com.
- Hirschberg, Lynn. "The Music Man", New York Times Magazine, September 2, 2007. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Holden, Stephen. "From Rock To Rap", New York Times, April 26, 1987. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Shapiro, p. 228
- Bull, Debby. "Radio", Rolling Stone, April 10, 1986. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Holden, Stephen. "Bon Jovi and Bonbons", Pop Life, New York Times, December 30, 1987. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Holden, Stephen. "Rap is on a Roll", The Pop Life, New York Times, April 20, 1988. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- ^ Huey, Steve. "Marley Marl". AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 2012-05-01.
- Shapiro, p. 196
- Coleman, p. 84–85.
- Coleman, p. 76
- Coleman, p. 86.
- Coleman, p. 88
- Jackson, Derrick Z. "Welcome To The School Of Rap Music It's in Session Now, And There Are Some Positive Lessons", Boston Globe, August 13, 1989.
- Neal, Mark Anthony. "...And Bless the Mic for the Gods: Rakim Allah", PopMatters, November 19, 2003. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Harvell, Jess. "Paid in Full/Follow the Leader" Archived 2008-12-10 at the Wayback Machine, Pitchfork, June 2, 2005. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Christgau, Robert. Consumer Guide, Village Voice, 1990. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Morales, Ed. "Rakim: The 18th Letter/The Book of Life", Rolling Stone, November 10, 1997. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- ^ Coleman, p. 351
- Coleman, p. 354
- Coleman, p. 406–407
- Cross, p. 26–28
- Cross, p. 24–5
- Cross, p. 33–36
- Wang, Oliver. "Howl", LA Weekly, June 28, 2000. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- Gloden, Gabe. "Brand Nubian Fire in the Hole" Archived 2010-01-28 at the Wayback Machine, Stylus, September 9, 2004. Retrieved on July 2, 2008.
- ^ Shapiro, p. 210
References
- Cepeda, Raquel (ed.) And It Don't Stop!, New York: Faber and Faber, Inc., 2004. ISBN 978-0-571-21159-3
- Coleman, Brian. Check The Technique, 2nd. ed., New York: Villard, 2007. ISBN 978-0-8129-7775-2
- Cross, Brian. It's Not About a Salary ... , New York: Verso, 1993. ISBN 978-0-86091-620-8
- Shapiro, Peter. Rough Guide to Hip Hop, 2nd. ed., London: Rough Guides, 2005. ISBN 978-1-84353-263-7
- Toop, David. Rap Attack, 3rd. ed., London: Serpent's Tail, 2000. ISBN 978-1-85242-627-9
Hip-hop | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Culture | |||||||||||||||
History | |||||||||||||||
Subgenres |
| ||||||||||||||
Fusion genres |
| ||||||||||||||
Derivatives |
| ||||||||||||||
Regional scenes |
| ||||||||||||||
Other topics | |||||||||||||||
Categories: