One of the first famous Hip Hop Deejays was Dj Kool Herc. He was an 18 year old Jamaican immigrant who introduced huge sound systems of Jamaica to many parties in the city of New York. He used two turn tables to blend percussion based beats with older songs and popular dance songs to create a continuous flow of music. Along with Kool Herc other Deejays such as Grand Wizard Theodore, Afrika Bambaataa, and Grandmaster Flash. These Deejays were also known for being the first to isolate the break beat (the part of the song where there is just drums keeping the beat) to open up the dance floor freestyle dancing. This later gained its title Break Dancing. Often time’s contests were started to see who the best Break Dancer was. This style of dancing
The birthplace of hip-hop in New York City to be exact 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx is where it all began. DJ Kool Herc was from Kingston, Jamaica. His birth given name was Clive Campbell and he later moved to Bronx, New York. When he moved to New York he already had the knowledge of a mobile sound system. The foundation of hip-hop was created when he showed off his DJing skills to the Bronx community. The party that was being held was Herc’s little sister back to school party. He was entertaining the party and ended up trying something new on the turntables by extending an instrumental beat to let the people dance longer then he would begin rapping during the extended breakdancing. He mostly played funk records like James Brown and Jimmy Castor Bunch. Dj Kool Herc later than started to drift away when hip-hop became more popular. At this time hip-hop was not national or international at all. The in the 80’s
DJ Kool Herc is credited as one, if not the originator, of hip-hop. Kool Herc brought his Caribbean style when emigrated from Jamaica in 1967. He began this new musical journey with the desire to bring the powerful Jamaican Dancehall sound system to play music at parties and in the streets. In 1973 he had created his own sound system
Dance Attended: Friday April 28th County Dance in WB112 – Fundraiser for OSU Equestrian team 7:45-11:00pm
DJ Kool Herc, also commonly known as Kool Herc is credited for hosting the very first hip hop house party in 1973. Although, this party consisted of playing mostly funk records by James Brown, he radically transformed the way records were played through incorporating only the instrumental version of a song and then quickly switching to the break in a separate song. This way of DJing completely revolutionized the term for the next generations to come and laid the foundation of what current DJ’s follow today. At these infamous parties, DJ Kool Herc would enforce his crowds to partake in a certain style of dance, which was recognized as rapping. He would shout rhymes to encourage the audience to express themselves through dance. DJ Kool Herc
The Golden Era of Hip Hop was a period in the 80s and early 90s characterized by its diversity, innovation, and cultural influence. Hip Hop is considered to have been born in 1973, in South Bronx, New York by Jamaican-born Kool DJ Herc (Blanchard, B, 1999). He used a turntable technique at a Halloween party, which eventually became extremely popular at every party scene. The term “breakdancing” came to life shortly after. Rhymes over hip hop music, also known as rap, began first as a commentary of the ability of the DJ. MCs introduced DJs and their songs. This rhythmic music produced by DJs at parties combined with an increase of break dancers, graffiti artists, and importance of MCs, created what we know today as the culture of hip hop.
Dubbed the age “Old School Hip Hop”, as rapping became more popular DJs, or disc jockeys and MCs, or master of ceremonies, duos were formed. (Errey) The person with being described as The Father of Hip Hop is none other than Clive Campbell, known to the Hip-Hop world as DJ Kool Herc. (JohnG) As DJ Kool Herc says himself on his website “On August 11, 1973, DJ Kool Herc and his sister, Cindy, began hosting back-to-school parties in the recreation room of their building at 1520 Sedwick Avenue in the Bronx (now recognized by NYC Housing Preservation as the “Birth Place of Hip Hop”). It is this simple act of gathering their peers and innovating the way the existing music was played and listened to that Hip-Hop Culture was born”. (Herc) DJ Kool Herc is best well known for creating the “breakbeat”. The “break” is the part of the record when the drums or percussion take over the song. (Light 15) Herc created the breakbeat by playing two copies of the same record and would extend the “break” by switching back and forth.
B-boying is a form of hip-hop dancing, which is popularly known as breaking. It consists of top or up rock, footwork, spinning moves (power moves), and freeze. B-boying came from Bronx, NY. The term "B-boy" or "B-boying" was created by Kool Herc who was a DJ spinning at block parties in Bronx back in the days. B-Boys means break boys and they were called so because they dance to the break part of music. Later, by repeating this break part done by DJ, "breakbeats" was born.
Hip-Hop emerged in the 1970’s upon the arrival of a one Kool DJ Herc. Kool DJ Herc migrated to the United States from Kingston, Jamaica and settled in the West Bronx of New York. Kool DJ Herc was a disc jockey that attempted to incorporate his Jamaica style of disc jockeying, which involved reciting improvised rhymes over reggae records. Unfortunately for Kool DJ Herc New York seemed
Hip-hop originated in the neighborhoods of West Bronx, New York on August 11, 1973, at a birthday party in the recreation room of an apartment building, located at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue (George 23). Jamaican born Clive Campbell, also known as DJ Kool Herc, introduced the first technique of hip-hop music by stretching a song’s break by playing two identical records consecutively (Tate). This technique is known as the “break beat.” The break beat is the sound produced when all the instruments on the track drop out except for the drums, stimulating improvisational dancing. The popularity of the break technique led to the creation of a dancing style known today as “break
Members of the scene plugged in the amplifiers for their instruments and PA speakers into the lampposts on 163rd Street and Prospect Avenue and used their live music events to break down racial barriers between African-Americans, Puerto Ricans, Whites and other ethnic groups. Jamaican immigrant DJ Kool Herc also played a key role in developing Hip-Hop music. At 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, Herc mixed samples of existing records and deejayed percussion "breaks", mixing this music with his own Jamaican-style "toasting" (a style of chanting and boastful talking over a microphone) to rev up the crowd and dancers. Kool Herc is credited as the "father" of Hip-Hop for developing the key DJ techniques that, along with rapping, founded the hip hop music style by creating rhythmic beats by looping "breaks" (small portions of songs emphasizing a percussive pattern) on two turntables. This was later accompanied by "rapping" or "MCing", a rhythmic style of chanting or speaking poetry/lyrics, and beatboxing, a percussive vocal technique used to create beats to go along with an MC or rappers' rhymes.[citation needed] An original form of dancing called breakdancing, which later became accompanied by popping, locking and other dance moves, which was done to the accompaniment of hip-hop songs played on boom boxes and particular styles of hip-hop dress and hair also
Around 1970, 44 years ago, hip-hop emerged in the West Bronx of New York. The culture of hip-hop incorporates many aspects besides just the music itself, such as DJing, graffiti, breakdancing, and urban fashion. Hip-hop mainly started from DJ’s separating the break in rock, funk and other types of songs, as well as the MC playing a major role in the development of hip-hop. In between the songs that the DJ was playing, the MC would speak in between the songs, make jokes and many other actions in order to get the crowd riled up. This eventually led up to the practice of hip-hop to become more conventional, resulting in the forming of hip-hop. Kool DJ Herc did all of this in 1970, who is believed to be the one who started the emergence of hip-hop. At first, DJ Herc would deliver rhymes over reggae track; however, this did not engage people’s attention enough. Because the people were not engaged, DJ Herc had to find another way to satisfy the audience, which came from him
Although sampling can be found in numerous genres of music, it was ultimately the use of sampling in hip-hop music that “catapulted sampling into mainstream popular culture.” Modern day sampling started in the 1960’s when Jamaican disc jockeys (DJs) began to combine samples of already created sound recordings to produce numerous original rhythms and arrangements using phonograph turntables. Fast-forward to the late 1970’s, Jamaican born Dee- Jay Kool Herc brought his sample techniques to the South Bronx, New York. It was there that Dee-Jay Kool Herc began to create “breaks,” in which he took two copies of the same vinyl record and alternated between the two of them in order to create isolated rhythmic instrumental pieces of a song. Thereafter,
To be completely honest, i know nothing about dancing. I don't dance because i have 2 left feet and when i see any sort of dance i tend to turn around. However what i can relate to this break-dancing form, is the Brazilian art of Capoeira. The art of uniting combat moves along with dancing. This type of dance can include weapons but at the end it's all about outdoing your opponent. According to Andrew Kingsford-Smith capoeira actually started a few centuries before break dancing although its origins are still a mystery. The history of this dance in Brazil includes the the era when it was abolished due to its popularity in lower income cities and those who would get caught practicing this art would get their Achilles tendon severed. People would
The history of choreography is also very important Any choreography that seems new, fresh and different is usually a variation of something that has been done before. As long as men and women have lived upon this earth, they have danced. The art of movement is among the oldest of the arts.
A legitimate argument can be made that pole dancing is a combination of both fitness and fantasy. The strength and control that the individual has to go through is phenomenal. There is, however, a fantasy component to pole dancing in the sense that it’s aesthetic form is beautiful to watch and may play a part in captivating the audiences imagination.