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The Origins Of Rap And Hip Hop Are The Island Of Jamaica

November 17. 2021

The rapper the Notorious B.I.G., who is of Jamaican parentage, was inducted into the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame

25-year-old Canadian rapper, Pressa, real name Quinton Gardner, was born to a Jamaican father and Filipino mother. Pressa has found success with the songs "Novacane" "Canada Goose" "Up & Down" and "420 In London." Pressa has also toured with rapper, Drake. Pressa's videos have received millions of views on You Tube and his songs the same on streaming outlets.

Pressa is dating American recording artist, Cori Lecray, who is the daughter of rapper and reality star, Benzino. Last week Pressa sparked controversy on social networking among African-Americans when he stated on Twitter, "Americans got no culture their biggest culture is Hip Hop mtfs don't even know what island they from they just BLACK like the color. N***s be like I'm BLACK no n***a u built like a mtf Nigerian."

Pressa was referring to the fact that for many decades African-Americans have not been able to properly trace their ancestry due to slavery and slavemasters not keeping proper records. In this African-Americans true ancestry and culture from Africa has been stripped. Who they truly were was taken from them due to slavery. DNA tests are now being used in recent years to trace the ancestry of black people in America back to specific tribes in Africa.

In reading about the story regarding Pressa, I noticed many xenophobic slurs and degrading comments being written on Twitter about Jamaica and the Caribbean as a whole, posted by some African-Americans. It devolved into xenophobic attacks on Jamaicans and Caribbean people, whilst some African-Americans stated Pressa was copying America in doing rap music. I among others respectfully pointed out rap and hip hop came from Jamaica. It is a well-established, historic fact.

 Toronto rapper Pressa (left) is of Jamaican and Filipino parentage. Pressa is pictured here with his girlfriend, American rapper Cori Lecray.

Many music historians, books, newspaper articles, magazines and awards committees have stated rap music began in Jamaica in the 1950s. However, the xenophobic slurs on Twitter grew to the point some African-Americans stated America started rap, reggae, black music and sound systems, labeled block parties, which is wholly incorrect and historically false.

First of all, every bit of the black music you hear in the Caribbean and America all came from Africa. Black music began in Africa in 3,000 B.C., well before black slaves were brought to America in the 1600s, and the Caribbean in the 1500s. The drums/percussive sounds, African tribal chants now echoed by today's rap, and soulful singing ("signifying") began in the motherland (Africa) thousands of years ago. We, the African Diaspora, can't take credit for starting that, as our forbearers created this music thousands of years ago.

West Africans taken by force from their homeland and shipped to the Caribbean and America as slaves, brought black music from Africa with them to the Americas (the Caribbean and America). African-Americans turned this black music from Africa into jazz, blues, bebop and R&B, while Jamaicans turned it into rap, hip hop, reggae, ska, rocksteady, dub and its associated musical genres.

University classes and museums such as the highly respected Smithsonian, all state black music came from Africa. There are courses in universities around the world that are taught on this subject. This is a given and unchangeable fact. Every musician worth their salt knows this fact. Therefore, for some on social networking to challenge this, and with absolutely no proof, in conduct psychology brands "circular reasoning" is inappropriate and erroneous.

Months ago in Anthropology class at university, we were given an interesting assignment to watch a documentary by E.E. Evans-Pritchard on the Azande tribe and do a paper on the subject. It was about the beliefs of the Azande people. The documentary featured a funeral for an African lady that was in the tribe. In listening to the ceremonial funeral music I was reminded of the Gospel, blues, funk, jazz and R&B singing one hears on the radio today in America. Once again, black music comes from Africa (though some on Twitter with no musical training or professional experience publicly tried in vain to dispute this well-established fact, which in psychology is known as "false authority").

Months ago in Humanities class at university, I did a paper on products from different countries for a cultural assignment. One of the items I covered was the djembe or jembe drums from Africa. The beautiful wood drums have carvings and painted landscapes that often depict scenes of an African tribe's village and wildlife, with some even containing emblematic items associated with each group.

The African drums are the basis for all forms of black music in Africa and then later in the Caribbean, America and South America, in nations such as Brazil (the percussive basis for samba music created by the Brazilians). Even musical styles that were created in Cuba, such as salsa and mambo, are a mixture of African drumming/percussive sounds and rhythms (from African slaves brought to Cuba) and European music from the Cuban people's other ancestors from Spain.

African-American slaves were not allowed to own instruments, as American slavemasters opposed black people owning anything at all. However, African-American slaves sang soulful music acapella (via "signifying"). In the Caribbean slaves did own instruments. For example, slaves in Jamaica owned the Abeng, which is a horn musical instrument from Ghana in Africa. Many Jamaicans are of Ghanaian descent. Jamaicans are also of Nigerian, Sierra Leone, Cameroon and Ivory Coast descent.

Clement "Coxsone" Dodd is the music producer who is the founder of rap, hip hop, reggae, rocksteady, dub and all its associated genres

The Abeng is made from cattle horn and each musical tone it produced was a secret message to other slaves and runaway slaves regarding pending invasions by slavemasters or soldiers from Britain or Europe. The music produced by the Abeng could only be understood by the Jamaican slaves who worked out each musical meaning among themselves, and used it to their advantage to initiate maneuvers on invaders.

The Maroons, who were a group of tall, muscular, ferocious Africans brought to Jamaica as slaves from Ghana, began killing slavetrading soldiers and slavemasters, in order to gain their freedom, and used the Abeng to aid in the process (and still have the Abeng as an instrument to this day). For generations they've also been making and playing djembe drums. This is the foundation for Jamaican music, the knowledge of music and instruments our ancestors brought with them from Africa. To this day the rastas still go up into the hills and mountains in Jamaica and play African drums and related instruments, as our African ancestors deposited in Jamaica by slavery did hundreds of years ago.

You also have to bear in mind, the original Jamaicans were not Africans. They were free indigenous people from South America called the Arawak Indians. The original Jamaicans (Arawak) and original Cubans (Taino) also occupied Florida before America was established as a nation.

They lived in places in Florida near the settlements of the Tequesta Indians and the current tribe of Miccosukee Indians of Florida, having arrived by boat, going from island to island, then reaching Florida (much in the way Cubans and Haitians have done in modern times). There are PBS documentaries that presents evidence of them traveling from the Caribbean by boat to places such as Miami, among other cities in Florida, in events that occurred hundreds of years ago. 

Some, not all, have insulted Caribbean people in America in stating xenophobic things like "go home." However, the fact of the matter is the original Cubans, Jamaicans and Bahamians, among others from the Caribbean, have been in Florida well before the Mayflower landed, Europeans came to America through Ellis Island, and African slaves were brought to the United States by force. Therefore, there's no need to be xenophobic. We're all human.

Christopher Columbus sailed from Italy, then enslaved and slaughtered many of the Arawak Indians in Jamaica. Columbus and his men also slaughtered other indigenous people, such as huge numbers of Taino Indians on other Caribbean islands like Cuba and the Bahamas, which left behind a small remnant. In America, Columbus is celebrated by some (though this is now changing), but in the Caribbean for generations he has been written about with derision (the Caribbean views Columbus like the Jews view Hitler). But I digress...

The Birth of Rap Music In The 1950s In Jamaica

Jamaican dj Count Machuki is credited as the first rapper

Rap began in Jamaica in the 1950s. AllMusic.com, and Washington Post, among many other outlets, hail Jamaican dj Count Machuki as the first man to rap on a record and the first rapper (Winston Cooper, who was born in 1929). Machuki started out rapping over R&B records (which decades later became known as the trend "sampling" in America regarding rap in the 1980s.

Then, Machuki would rap over records produced by his friend and collaborator, Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, my late godmother's late husband, who founded rap, reggae, ska, rock steady, dub and dancehall, among its associated genres. Mento was Jamaica's first genre of music, which Dodd also contributed to as well. Mento is Jamaican folk music, discussing politics and the ills of society.

Jamaican songwriter and music producer, Clement "Coxsone" Dodd started rap, hip hop, reggae, ska, rocksteady, dub and its associated musical genres

Dodd founded the record label Studio One in Jamaica in 1954, after first working for Federal Records on the island, owned by Ken Khouri. The late Dodd was a musical genius and a longtime friend of my family. So was the late Count Machuki. Dodd also discovered Bob Marley and many other recording artists, who went on to global fame.

Machuki's songs from the 1950s and 1960s include "Peeping Tom" "More Scorcha" "Moon Walk" (yes, before Michael Jackson) "Movements" "Warfare" "On The Move" "Walking Trouble" and "Pepper Pot" (which is an African soup), among many others.

Machuki would perform and record with Dodd's house band, the Sound Dimension, at Studio One Records and in its famous recording studio in Kingston, Jamaica. Machuki's songs were released in the late 1950s and early 1960s as "dub plates" (one copy that is an acetate disc) and then later pressed up in multiple copies as 78s, 45s and 33s (records). These records are physically fragile, which is why many original pressings only have a limited number in existence today, and some are collector's items. They have been repeatedly re-pressed under copyright licenses and issued to other labels all over the world. Machucki also recorded music for other record producers.

Jamaican sound systems began in the 1950s, where Clement "Coxsone" Dodd's sound system would battle others such as Duke Reid's sound system. This is where rap music was born.

The "dub plate" songs were mostly reproduced/pressed for DJs to play at weekly dances in various venues on the island (sound systems and clubs in Jamaica) in the 1950s and 1960s. Then, small quantities (thousands) were pressed up and sold in Jamaica, Britain and Europe. Some records were also sold in the United States, particularly in Florida and New York by various vendors. Dodd had even opened record stores in Kingston, Jamaica and Brooklyn, New York, where he sold Jamaican music.

In this Dodd also created "dub" music, which is now a globally recognized genre of music that is still big in Jamaica, Britain and Europe. Dub music went on to be the foundation of other genres of music such as electronic dance music, house, techno, drum and bass, big beat, trip hop, jungle and ambient.

In fact, bass music that became popular in Miami and other parts of the South such as Atlanta in the 1980s, came from Dodd and the Jamaican sound systems, where amplifiers were constructed to produce a loud, deep bass sound. The top star of bass music in America became the 2 Live Crew, whose founding member is Luther Campbell (Uncle Luke) and he is of Jamaican parentage. Bass music came from Jamaican culture. Dodd was a visionary and musical genius, as is recognized as such all over the world.

The Birth of Reggae

 

Bob Marley

Dodd founded reggae music when the Mento genre that was Jamaica's first form of music, which merged African sounds with lyrics about social problems (racism, injustice, poverty), became a challenge to play for tourists visiting the island in the 1950s.

The tourists loved the music and would dance to it all night at the resorts, which had clubs with live bands. However, the Jamaican musicians would be tired and dripping in sweat from playing music at such a fast pace for hours. Dodd decided to change that by slowing down the music. To do so, rather than emphasize the 1st and 3rd beat in the bar, as is done in American music, Dodd emphasized the 2nd and 4th beat, which produced an usual, distinct sound, which became known as reggae.

Dodd is credited as the father of reggae music. It was born out of necessity, as the musicians were getting tired and sweating buckets of perspiration playing fast music for hours on end at the tourist resorts. Reggae gave them a reprieve, where they could play music slower and longer for the tourists without becoming so tired. Reggae music, in unconventionally emphasizing the 2nd and 4th beat in the bar, emphasized the backbeat or "downbeat." In fact, throughout his adult life, Dodd's nickname in the music industry was "Downbeat."

Jamaica is the home and originator of the sound systems in the 1950s, which some African-Americans on Twitter tried to take credit for as "block parties." However, African-American block parties were not permitted until the 1970s. White-American police officers would not allow "block parties" in America until the 1970s (remember, the first rap song in America was also released in 1979).

However, Jamaica is predominantly black and so is the police force (established in 1716). Therefore, black people (as well as Chinese, Indian, Spanish, Lebanese and other minorities on the island) have been free to have sound system parties/dances for many decades.

The main sound systems were Dodd's and Duke Reid's (Reid's Sound System), and they would musically battle each other beginning in the 1950s, in a set up that included huge amplifiers, turntables, a rapper and selector (person who chose the records). Dodd's rapper was Count Machuki. Later, Reid's rapper was U-Roy. There were other popular sound systems as well, such as Tom The Great Sebastian, founded by Jamaican-Chinese businessman Tom Wong.

Fun fact: at many block parties in New York many residents do the "Electric Slide" dance, which is created to the song "Electric Boogie" by Jamaican singers Marcia Griffiths and Bunny Wailer (Neville O'Riley Livingston). It was first written and released in 1976 by Bunny Wailer. Remakes were done in 1983 and 1990 by Marcia Griffiths, which became a huge hit worldwide. The song is also played at weddings, reunions and parties all over the world.

At Jamaican sound system parties/dances/dancehalls, djs would have amplifiers built with which to play music, as one could not simply use a radio (it would not be loud enough in said venues). The Jamaican built amplifiers were paired with one turn table, then later two. The Jamaican amplifiers were constructed to produce a heavy bass sound, which became a big part of rap music (and still is to this day). It is all derived from Jamaican culture.

Many of the amplifiers were constructed by Jamaican engineer and guitar maker, Hedley H.G. Jones. He also made traffic lights. Jones lived in Britain for a time, and went to school at the Royal Technical College in Glasgow, Scotland. Jones was also a member of the British Royal Air Force.

To keep audiences attention between songs, Dodd had Machuki "toasting" and jive-talking between records. Then, Machuki began talking over the records using Jamaican and American slang. And thus rap music was born. Then, they began making original rap records. Machuki is globally credited as the world's first rapper. Years later came U-Roy who began "toasting" over records as well.

This Jamaican culture went out into the world and began a global phenomenon, touching people of all races. Later, Jamaican musician, Vin Gordon, took these Jamaican musical styles with him to Britain. Gordon, like many other Jamaicans, sailed to Britain in what was then a 3-week boat trip. He brought with him to Britain the Jamaican sound system and rap music of Dodd, Machuki and later U-Roy, to Britain.

To this day, many of the rappers in Britain are of Jamaican descent or Jamaican. One of the biggest rap groups in British history is the So-Solid crew, who are made up of people with Jamaican parentage. Others include Giggs, Ghetts, Wiley, Ms Dynamite, Kano, Wretch 32, Akala, Chipmunk, Dave and J-Hus, among others.

1520 Sedgwick Avenue in New York City where Jamaican immigrant Kool Herc brought rap and hip hop to America

Two decades after Count Machuki first rapped on a record, in 1967 a then 12-year-old Clive Campbell immigrated to the Bronx in New York City (America) with his family. He later chose the stage name DJ Kool Herc. Music publications and outlets all over the world refer to Kool Herc as "the Father of Hip Hop" and "Founder of Hip-Hop."

Herc started a Jamaican sound system in the Bronx at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, holding the "Back to School Jam" beginning in 1973. Herc's shows were attended by the men who would become the first rappers in America, who were also of Jamaican parentage or Jamaican, such as Afrika Bambaataa and Zulu Nation.

Dj Kool Herc is globally known as "the Father of Hip Hop" and "Founder of Hip Hop" having brought it to America from Jamaica in the 1970s.

The next development occurred several years later when singer, Sylvia Robinson, who is of Caribbean parentage (Virgin Islands) decided to put together a music group called The Sugarhill Gang, and used the styles of Machuki, Kool Herc, Afrika Bambaataa and Zulu nation as the template, which she was familiar with due to her West Indian (Caribbean) ancestry.

Robinson's work resulted in the 1979 rap record "Rapper's Delight" being released, which became a big hit, selling over 14,000,000 copies worldwide. It is often referred to as America's first rap record.

Rapper, singer, talk show host and actress, Queen Latifah, is of Jamaican parentage (her late mother)

Rap music was birthed in Jamaica and is Jamaican culture. More proof that rap began in Jamaica in the 1950s with Dodd, Machuki and the Jamaican sound systems, is evident in the fact most of the first rappers in America in its golden era are either Jamaicans or of Jamaican parentage.

These first rappers in America, who are either Jamaican or of Jamaican parentage, are KRS-One, Miss Melodie, Run-DMC (Joseph "Run" Simmons), Slick Rick, D-Nice, Heavy D, Queen Latifah, McLyte, Young MC, Special Ed, Pepa of Salt-N-Pepa, Kid of Kid N' Play, Naughty By Nature (Treach), Pete Rock & CL Smooth, Chubb Rock, Afrika Bambaataa/Zulu Nation, Luther Campbell/Uncle Luke (2 Live Crew), DJ Marley Marl, Geto Boys (Bushwick Bill), Grand Puba, Shinehead, Busta Rhymes, Canibus, Tongue Twista, McBrains, Craig Mack and Black Robb, among others.

Rapper D-Nice, who is of Jamaican parentage, scored an influential #1 rap hit with the 1990s track "Call Me D-Nice" which is about the TR-808 drum machine used in rap. Then he went on to become a successful dj. He also discovered white-American singer/rapper Kid Rock in 1988 and landed him a record deal.

One of the top rappers of all time, the Notorious B.I.G., who sold tens of millions of albums, is of Jamaican parentage. The Notorious B.I.G., real name Christopher Wallace, was first known as Biggy Smalls. He adopted the nickname that became his moniker, from the legendary Jamaican entertainer "Biggy Smalls" and had to change it for trademark purposes. The Notorious B.I.G. is now in the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame.

Fun fact: R&B singers born in America, such as Alicia Keys, Mya and Chrisette Michelle are of Jamaican parentage. They all worked with hip hop artists as well, which is a part of their Jamaican culture.

The successful 1980s rap group Heavy D and the Boyz are Jamaican and or of Jamaican parentage. Eddie F, pictured on the top step, went on to a lucrative career as a music executive, producer and remixer to artists such as Luther Vandross, Mariah Carey, Donnell Jones, Jamie Foxx, Diddy, TLC, Will Smith and Mary J. Blige, among others.

Some on social networking argued that Dodd, Count Machuki and Bob Marley were inspired by American blues music (which again, came from Africa, much like Jamaican music). However, that does not mean hip hop, rap and reggae came from American blues music. Hip hop, rap and reggae sound nothing like American blues music. Therefore, it did not emanate from it.

I'll give you an example of what musicians being inspired by others means. Jodeci was one of my favorite groups when I was a kid. Jodeci singer/rapper Mr. Dalvin did an interview with Vlad TV on You Tube. Dalvin named Jodeci's inspirations and among the artists he stated is Def Lepard, which is a white rock band from England. I know why he is said it. Def Lepard inspired me too as a musician (among others).

However, Def Lepard and Jodeci sound nothing alike. Jodeci's music did not come from Def Lepard's songs. They are two totally different bands in sound, but both are very talented in their own right (so that's not an insult). That's what a recording artist means when they state they are inspired by another musician. It means the musician likes the other artists' music. It does not mean they have co-opted it to be their own style or sound.

This generation on social networking are troublingly following the examples of entertainers like Beyonce and Jay Z, who constantly claim credit for other people's accomplishments and work (Beyonce And Jay Z Copyright Infringement).

The people on social networking who were making xenophobic slurs about Jamaica, and the origins of rap and hip hop, are Beyonce and Jay Z fans. Beyonce and Jay Z are constantly stealing from Jamaica and Jamaicans (Beyonce And Jay Z Steal From Another Jamaican Artist Resulting In A Lawsuit and Hypocritical Tidal Wishes Jamaica A Happy Independence Day After Behaving Like Slavetraders In Robbing The Island Of Billions In Intellectual Property And Associated Tax Revenues).

Jay Z and Beyonce have stolen a fortune in intellectual property from Jamaica in a matter that is going to mushroom into a global scandal, as their conduct resulted in innocent people dying (The FBI Is Stonewalling Congress On Releasing FBI File In Madonna Human Rights Abuse Case [Congressional Documents]).

Jay Z and Beyonce have stolen other people's cultural music. Jay Z was sued for stealing an Egyptian classic and rapping pure crap over it on the track "Big Pimpin." He desecrated an Egyptian national treasure with this ignorant, thieving behavior, and caused much offense in Egypt. It would be the American equivalent of a foreign artist stealing "America the Beautiful" and desecrating it with profane, explicit lyrics about pimping women and selling drugs. Jay Z is a culturally insensitive ignoramus.

Beyonce has also stolen music from entertainers and writers in Europe and profaned it with trashy, ignorant, explicit lyrics (Serial Copyright Thieves Beyonce And Jay Z Sued For Stealing 'Drunk In Love' And Even Including A Clip Of The Original Artist's Voice On The Track). There are other such incidents of Beyonce stealing from British and European artists, taking full credit and payment for their PREEXISTING work she turned into profanity and vulgarity.

Beyonce and Jay Z are behaving like her Hollywood Kabbalah cult mentor and slavemaster, washed up pop singer, Madonna, who is the biggest thief and fraud in music history. Jay Z, Beyonce and Madonna are business partners in the failed streaming company Tidal. Madonna has stolen so much from Jamaica (The FBI Is Stonewalling Congress On Releasing FBI File In Madonna Human Rights Abuse Case (Congressional Documents)).

Innovation and economic growth will cease if people continue to claim the accomplishments and works of others. It is counterproductive and very unkind, as not only does this conduct attempt to degrade and belittle others hard wrought accomplishments, it rapes people of their cultural achievements. Less money is also generated as the thieves never get the infringements correct. This devalues copyrights. Regardless, God does not like ugly. You steal money in one way and God will take it back from you in another, and more than what you stole, for your sins against others.

Many nations have contributed to the music you hear today. The piano and synths you hear on R&B, rap, pop and rock songs today all came from white European classical music, created in places such as Germany and Vienna (Austria). Germany also invented the Glockenspiel, which is a percussion instrument that resembles the piano. The upright bass, which became the bass guitar, was invented in Europe.

In reference to R&B, rap and pop songs today, when you mute the drums, vocals and bass on these modern sound recordings in the studio, what you have is the piano, violins and synths, which all originated from white people in Europe during the early 1700s.

The foundation for pop music came directly from Europe. The first piano was also made in Europe. My point is no one nation or race can claim they created all or most of the styles of modern music. Music was also present in the Bible and in ancient Greece (Pythagoras).

My ancestors, the English (Britain), created and formalized the copyright, which has been invaluable in music and film (the British Statute of Anne of 1710). Britain also started the film industry when they created celluloid in 1856 via English scientist Alexander Parkes. The first ever sound recording was made in Paris, France in the 1850s via the folk song "Au clair de la lune." 

Jamaican music legend Bob Marley is the son of a black Jamaican woman of African descent and a white English naval officer

Reggae artist Bob Marley became so influential in music that in 1980 legendary singer Stevie Wonder released a reggae song called "Jammin", which was reminiscent of Marley's 1977 tune "Jamming." In 1974 pop singer Barbara Streisand remade Marley's 1971 song "Guava Jelly."

When Marley died in 1981 at age 36 due to cancer, there were planes full of people flying to Jamaica from Germany, Britain and African nations, coming to pay their respects at his massive funeral attended by thousands. Marley's music and associated products have grossed over $3 billion worldwide.

Bob went through massive struggle for many years to get his music heard all over the world, doing small shows in tiny, farflung venues in Britain and Europe, among other places. He worked very hard and sacrificed much. It is the same with Dodd. In the 1950s Dodd was a laborer who harvested sugarcane, and picked fruits and vegetables in fields in Florida. Dodd saved his earnings as a farm laborer, then went back to Jamaica and started his music company. Working in the fields is very hard work. For anyone to degrade hardworking Marley or Dodd on social networking in trying to diminish and degrade Jamaican music and culture, is very unkind and xenophobic.

Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, Count Machuki and Bob Marley, who have all passed away, were good friends of my family. My dad is a disc jockey and one of the top music historians in the world. He is also a former football player who played for the Jamaican national team and was one of the youngest to ever do so (he played in regions like South America). My dad is a highly intelligent man, who knows of what he speaks.

My dad has appeared in award winning projects, such as a documentary at the Toronto Film Festival, among other items. In fact, when Machuki became old and unwell, my dad was the one who drove him to the hospital. My dad is the one who got a street in Jamaica renamed for Dodd, for all the musician has done for Jamaica. Bob Marley used to come to my dad's shows in Jamaica and they would talk about the latest music and politics (my dad/family have always been heavily involved in Jamaican politics, even behind the scenes, and Bob wrote music about political matters and social injustice, so the two had much to discuss regarding current events and music).

My point is my dad was good friends with these musicians and saw their rise to fame. He and millions of others around the world celebrate Dodd, Marley and Machuki. So for some on Twitter to make horrible xenophobic statements, defame them as "frauds" and "liars", and try to destroy their accomplishments and Jamaica's in music, is offensive and evil. You couldn't walk a mile in their shoes, but are on Twitter defaming and degrading them.

Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin

Sadly, there is a movement online to rewrite history, which is dangerous. For instance, some, not all, are trying to erase Russia from their achievements. There is a movement online stating America won the space race with Neil Armstrong landing on the moon in 1969. However, the world has recorded Russia as having won the space race in 1961 when Russian cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin, became the first man in space. In 1951, Russia also launched the first satellite into space, which is Sputnik. Therefore, Russia won the space race. We should always give credit where credit is due.

STORY SOURCE

Happy Birthday To Hip Hop Founding Father DJ Kool Herc!

April 16, 2021 - On this day in 1955, DJ Kool Herc was born Clive Campbell in Kingston, Jamaica. He moved to the Bronx when he was 12 years old and took on the name “Kool Herc” when he became a member of the graffiti crew the “Ex-Vandals”. The name is short for ‘Hercules’ because of his 6′ 4″ stature. He began DJing parties that he and his sister Cindy threw in their building, which was on 1520 Sedgewick Avenue(Sedgewick & Cedar) in the South Bronx.

Herc pioneered extending the breakbeat on records by playing the same record on two turntables and cueing the “break” in the record, which he noticed had the greatest effect on the dancers at the parties. This was emulated all over the NYC area during the 1970s, thus spawning the culture of Hip Hop. He coined the terms “B-Boys” and “B-Girls” for the dancers who were “breaking”, which Herc says was street slang for “acting energetically” or “causing a disturbance.” Kool Herc has influenced other founding pioneers of Hip Hop culture including Afrika Bambaataa, Grandmaster Flash, and the Sugarhill Gang...

https://thesource.com

Count Machuki (born Winston Cooper) has been hailed as the first man to speak over a record, the first DJ. One of the original men of the dancehall scene in Jamaica, Machuki worked as a disc selector (eventually to become known as toasters, and then DJs) for Tom the Great Sebastian. On one fateful evening, while Sebastian left the hall to get more liquor for the bar, Machuki began turning new records on the turntable to keep the crowd moving. From a success then, he moved on to other larger halls and worked with bigger names, eventually working with Clement Dodd (Sir Coxsone). It was with Sir Coxsone on an Easter concert that Machuki first picked up a microphone at the same time as working the turntable, telling jokes over the beats. Liking the reaction, he began working on bits of lyrics that he could use in future concerts, his first...

https://www.allmusic.com

HIP HOP SIGNIFYING SOMETHING

February 02, 2003 - Roger Conway freely describes himself as an "old white guy," so it's a little odd to hear him drop terms like "playa hata" in casual conversation. Yet 17 students who signed up for a class at Southern Connecticut State University called Hip-Hop, Rap and Signifying will hear Conway use that and plenty of other hip-hop phrases three times a week until May...

Conway, 64, associate professor of media studies and chairman of Southern's media studies department, is offering the course this semester for the first time, out of a desire to explore the concept of "signifying" and its development from West African folk tales to a modern form of expression in rap music...

The term is slang for the art of delivering insults and verbal taunts in a humorous manner that invites a response in kind. Br'er Rabbit, a character in the now-controversial Disney film "Song of the South," is a signifier. More recent examples in pop culture include the climactic freestyle rap battle in the movie "8 Mile," starring rapper Eminem, and the sometimes pointed banter between characters in the movie "Barbershop."...

https://www.courant.com

Sylvia Robinson, producer of Sugarhill Gang’s ‘Rapper’s Delight,’ dies at 75

October 1, 2011 - Sylvia Robinson, 75, a singer who performed rhythm-and-blues hits in the 1950s and later found resounding success as a producer who nurtured the birth of a new musical genre — hip-hop — with Sugarhill Gang’s 1979 song “Rapper’s Delight,” died Sept. 29 at a hospital in Secaucus, N.J. The Associated Press reported that she had congestive heart failure...

At the time, rap was in its infancy. Born in the Bronx and raised on the streets of Harlem, rapping traced its musical roots to the Jamaican tradition of “toasting,” where DJs would embellish their sets with rhymes...

https://www.washingtonpost.com

Jamaican Music - When Did Reggae Become Rap

18 years ago - When did Jamaican dance hall reggae become rap? Are we not putting the carriage before the horse? Contrary to what many may say Rap can trace its origins directly from Jamaican Dub Reggae & Jamaican style toasting. It is a fact that isn’t talked about by many in the main stream media but many of the early pioneers (DJ Herc) and newer rappers (Busta Rhymes, Notorious B.I.G and Redman) in the American rap era are Jamaican immigrants or children of Jamaican immigrants in NY. One does not have to look very far to see the relationship between the two as we now see rap and dancehall reggae merging. This would not be possible if there were not the similarities as the child is now beginning to return to the parent. Jamaican dejaying came out of a form a rhyming and talking over music called “Toasting”. Rapping began as a variation on the toasting

Jamaican sound systems (Mobile Discotheques) have been toasting since the early 50’s, 60’s and 70’s. Jamaican toasting was developed at blues dances which were free dances mainly in Jamaican ghettos where sound systems battled each other playing American R& B, Jamaican Ska and Rock Steady. Popular dance venues included Foresters Hall, Twary Crescent (Duke, Sir Cox Sound, King Edwards, Mighty Bell), & Central Road. Surprisingly some of the earliest signs of toasting can be found in songs by folk historian and entertainer the Honorable Dr. Louise Bennett-Coverley fondly known to many as “Miss Lou”...

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