West Coast hip hop

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    Violence In Hip Hop Music

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    Hip hop music and its artists are often criticized by some for glamorizing violence and being questionable influences on today’s youth. However, these artists and the dancing styles tied to their music have not always been the same. In its roots, hip hop was originally designed to do just the opposite. Originating on America’s East coast, it was meant to distract the youth from the gang violence riddling their neighborhoods and promote healthy competition through the popular art of ‘break-dancing’

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    Evolution Of Hip Hop

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    “The thing about hip hop is that it’s from the underground ideas from the underbelly from people who have mostly been locked out, who have not been recognized.” (Russell Simmons, co-founder of Def Jam Recordings). Hip hop was formed in the Bronx and ghettos of New York City during the 1970s. It began with African Americans and Latinos at block parties when technology and drum machines became available and affordable. Hip hop doesn’t stay the same and constantly changes with new elements being added

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    lifestyles? Hip-hop. This cultural phenomenon is the name for four elements of style created in the late seventies. The four elements are turntablism, emceeing, graffiti, and break dancing. Hip-hop gained widespread popularity in the 1980s and 1990s. Today, many view this as just rap, but to fully embrace the variance between the two is to understand the difference. “Rap” is the musical sound produced by the art form of chanting rhythmically over a track of music. Contrarily, Hip-hop is not just

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    Hip Hop Fashion Culture

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    For years, fashion has been a huge subculture of the hip hop industry. Emerging in the 1970s, hip hop was created to promote experimentation and innovative ways of self-expression. The fashion culture of hip hop, also referred to as “big fashion” or “street fashion, has consistently been complex throughout its many different eras and styles. While fashion in hip hop is not constricted to a specific trend or designs, it is well known for its overflow of different styles all influenced by vibrant African

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    Hip Hop Culture Essay

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    Hip Hop culture has come from a inner city expression of life to a multi-billion dollar business. At the beginning of the new millennium it was the top selling genre in the pop charts. It had influences not only on music, but on fashion, film, television, and print. In 2004 Hip Hop celebrated its 30th year anniversary. It wasn’t big for the fact that it was still kicking. It was big because the once Black/Brown inner city culture had grown into a multi-billion dollar global phenomenon (Reeves).

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    Hip-hop is one of the most popular genres of music in the world today. However, the hip-hop of today’s world is very different from the hip-hop that started it all. Hip-hop has simply evolved to a different type of music than the hip-hop that started it all. Hip-hop started in Brooklyn in 1973 at a block party with DJ Kool Herc, known as the father of hip-hop, mixing the beats. However, hip-hop has changed. There are the advances in technology to help make different sounds for songs. There

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    Burns-Davies ENC 1101 7 July 2015 Hip Hops New Age The commercialization of hip hop has led to many changes in not just the genre of music but in the culture of marketing and youths around the states in addition to the rest of the world. But is this commercialization trend truly a bad for hip hop as an art. The music industry has always affected multiple aspects of life and know these hip hop and rap artist are capitalizing on the many endorsement that come with the uptrend of hip hop’s popularity around

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    What is Hip-Hop? According to Encyclopedia Britannica, Hip-Hop can be delineated as a music genre consisting of a stylized rhythmic music that commonly accompanies rapping, a rhythmic and rhyming speech that is chanted.1 Originating from a disparaged subculture in the South Bronx and eagerly spreading through other sectors of New York City during the 1970’s, Hip-Hop evolved from formerly being a relatively fraudulent style to currently being a commercialized and disseminated music genre among diverse

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    Are you a Christian that loves Hip-Hop Music? Well, I do. From about the age of 5 years old till today I have always been fascinated by just how men and women were able to put rhythm and rime together. It has far surpassed the expectations of many that has not only those that have created the art form. From expressing political and social views of modern society to know becoming multi-million and billionaires with endorsements, advertisements, TV and movie spots, who knew that a craft such as this

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    Hip-Hop is a culture involves more than just music, it contains art, dance, dress style, verbal communication and many other elements. Both Rap and Hip-Hop originated in the Bronx in the mid 1970’s; this culture, believed to have been first created by a Jamaican DJ Kool Herc, who repeated rhymes over instrumental music at functions. Hip-Hop spread through the borough of the Bronx, taking ideas, and motivation from the rhyming used by folk poets in West Africa. Hop-Hop is a culture with components

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