How Hip Hop Followed in the Footsteps of Malcolm X
Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five and the Origins of Hip Hop
Abstract
This paper examines the manner in which the hip hop grew out of the Civil Rights Movement and became a way for disenfranchised black youths, marginalized by society, to express their thoughts and feelings on a world that did want them to rise up. The history of hip hop and its culture is thus a rich one and a complex one that both celebrates youthful joys and energy while also taking different roads towards instigating a dialogue as well. Some hip hop artists have been thoughtful and have challenged the status quo with lyrics and albums that have provoked discussion in a sober-minded way (such as was the case with Tupac Shakur), while others have been more provocative and have set out to disrupt the status quo through a kind of shock and awe approach (such as with NWA, 2 Live Crew, Beastie Boys, and Snoop Dogg). In the end, hip hop’s history and culture is eclectic, fresh, vital, and representative of a movement rooted in black empowerment but also indicative of the oppression that is universally felt by all people of all races and genders at times in their lives no matter where they live. Its use of sampling tracks from other songs and artists that are not in any way associated with hip hop has enabled the genre of music to reinvent songs and sounds in a way that brings new life and new blood to art form. By sampling other artists hip hop culture has transcended the status quo and incorporated everything that has come before into something that is unique in much the same way African American musicians did in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when they developed the musical genres of jazz and blues by incorporating other musical traditions into their own musical experiences and creating something wholly their own. Hip hop history and culture is thus a blend of the black experience in America that is linked to black identity but not limited to blackness, as white artists and audiences have also gravitated to the genre, inspired by its freshness and meaning.
Hip Hop History and Culture
Hip hop began in the 1970s in New York, where emceeing took place at block parties and people like DJ Kool Herc got a name for themselves running a turntable and creating new sounds by manipulating the beats of records (BBC). One of the most common characteristics of emceeing was that the rhymes and lyrics tended to be confrontational and antagonistic to the authorities, boastful, and sexually provocative. These were lyrics and rhymes designed to effect a reaction from the audience. Hip hop artists that emerged from this scene tended to take a serious stance on social issues, however, and Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five was no exception. As Jon Pareles points out, Grandmaster Flash and the...
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