FEATURE: The Digital Mixtape: Songs from Classic Hip-Hop Albums

FEATURE:


 

The Digital Mixtape

IN THIS PHOTO: Ms. Lauryn Hill

 

Songs from Classic Hip-Hop Albums

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AS 11th August…

sees Hip-Hop turn fifty, I have been putting together features about the wonderful gene. For this one, I have compiled tracks from the classic Hip-Hop albums. Before I get there, this article talks about the rather modest birth of a style of music that would soon grow and take over the world. Whether you consider 11th August to be the day the seeds of Hip-Hop were planted or not, you cannot deny that it gave us a pivotal moment:

Like any style of music, hip hop has roots in other forms, and its evolution was shaped by many different artists, but there’s a case to be made that it came to life precisely on August 11, 1973, at a birthday party in the recreation room of an apartment building in the west Bronx, New York City. The location of that birthplace was 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, and the man who presided over that historic party was the birthday girl’s brother, Clive Campbell—better known to history as DJ Kool Herc, founding father of hip hop.

Born and raised to the age of 10 in Kingston, Jamaica, DJ Kool Herc began spinning records at parties and between sets his father’s band played while he was a teenager in the Bronx in the early 1970s. Herc often emulated the style of Jamaican “selectors” (DJs) by “toasting” (i.e., talking) over the records he spun, but his historical significance has nothing to do with rapping. Kool Herc’s contribution to hip hop was even more fundamental.

DJ Kool Herc’s signature innovation came from observing how the crowds would react to different parts of whatever record he happened to be playing: “I was noticing people used to wait for particular parts of the record to dance, maybe [to] do their specialty move.” Those moments tended to occur at the drum breaks—the moments in a record when the vocals and other instruments would drop out completely for a measure or two of pure rhythm. What Kool Herc decided to do was to use the two turntables in a typical DJ setup not as a way to make a smooth transition between two records, but as a way to switch back and forth repeatedly between two copies of the same record, extending the short drum break that the crowd most wanted to hear. He called his trick the Merry Go-Round. Today, it is known as the “break beat.”

By the summer of 1973, DJ Kool Herc had been using and refining his break-beat style for the better part of a year. His sister’s party on August 11, however, put him before his biggest crowd ever and with the most powerful sound system he’d ever worked. It was the success of that party that would begin a grassroots musical revolution, fully six years before the term “hip hop” even entered the popular vocabulary”.

I don’t know if we have seen many films where DJ Kool Herc’s game-changing breakthrough has been documented and been front and centre. Maybe a film based in 1973 where we see that moment play out in a larger. I know that, on 11th August, the world will celebrate fifty years since the world was gifted…

THIS incredible music force.