The Prague Post - Born in New York's Bronx before dominating the globe, hip hop turns 50

EUR -
AED 4.299618
AFN 80.772999
ALL 98.102368
AMD 448.468011
ANG 2.09515
AOA 1073.456153
ARS 1518.918349
AUD 1.799594
AWG 2.107988
AZN 1.994696
BAM 1.958505
BBD 2.362764
BDT 142.176383
BGN 1.95664
BHD 0.441076
BIF 3465.026106
BMD 1.170617
BND 1.500372
BOB 8.086065
BRL 6.32239
BSD 1.170216
BTN 102.343363
BWP 15.660631
BYN 3.903892
BYR 22944.091786
BZD 2.350517
CAD 1.617735
CDF 3388.93643
CHF 0.944212
CLF 0.028741
CLP 1127.50357
CNY 8.407493
CNH 8.415453
COP 4701.197582
CRC 591.316763
CUC 1.170617
CUP 31.021349
CVE 111.096105
CZK 24.471049
DJF 208.042501
DKK 7.464732
DOP 72.256377
DZD 151.673585
EGP 56.499883
ERN 17.559254
ETB 165.233038
FJD 2.6408
FKP 0.865138
GBP 0.863319
GEL 3.149417
GGP 0.865138
GHS 12.467527
GIP 0.865138
GMD 84.874235
GNF 10158.032896
GTQ 8.975397
GYD 244.724893
HKD 9.159434
HNL 30.90878
HRK 7.535308
HTG 153.121501
HUF 395.438883
IDR 18967.506082
ILS 3.956077
IMP 0.865138
INR 102.445195
IQD 1533.508175
IRR 49297.609841
ISK 143.260551
JEP 0.865138
JMD 187.248639
JOD 0.830014
JPY 172.227062
KES 151.599342
KGS 102.287107
KHR 4688.321206
KMF 492.248859
KPW 1053.504596
KRW 1625.952243
KWD 0.357565
KYD 0.975147
KZT 633.885562
LAK 25288.256608
LBP 104414.323965
LKR 352.226517
LRD 235.883727
LSL 20.591598
LTL 3.456528
LVL 0.708095
LYD 6.338936
MAD 10.546678
MDL 19.512952
MGA 5197.539565
MKD 61.615107
MMK 2457.143761
MNT 4201.783954
MOP 9.430426
MRU 46.76659
MUR 53.357163
MVR 18.03965
MWK 2031.020774
MXN 21.941463
MYR 4.931855
MZN 74.806787
NAD 20.591593
NGN 1794.228419
NIO 43.032319
NOK 11.935166
NPR 163.74918
NZD 1.975725
OMR 0.449849
PAB 1.170201
PEN 4.167835
PGK 4.846793
PHP 66.201944
PKR 330.172943
PLN 4.259967
PYG 8569.837184
QAR 4.261753
RON 5.063859
RSD 117.322785
RUB 93.766881
RWF 1691.541461
SAR 4.392451
SBD 9.626888
SCR 16.558907
SDG 702.959768
SEK 11.189698
SGD 1.499214
SHP 0.919921
SLE 27.279667
SLL 24547.249292
SOS 669.011861
SRD 43.968805
STD 24229.40694
STN 24.934141
SVC 10.239143
SYP 15219.49433
SZL 20.591584
THB 37.975245
TJS 10.912033
TMT 4.108865
TND 3.376352
TOP 2.741706
TRY 47.765426
TTD 7.939865
TWD 35.156557
TZS 3058.240971
UAH 48.298012
UGX 4165.753995
USD 1.170617
UYU 46.814663
UZS 14691.242835
VES 158.583885
VND 30752.106694
VUV 139.711062
WST 3.103398
XAF 656.855873
XAG 0.030814
XAU 0.000351
XCD 3.163651
XCG 2.109013
XDR 0.822168
XOF 656.716485
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.270026
ZAR 20.597292
ZMK 10536.961287
ZMW 27.119111
ZWL 376.938173
  • RBGPF

    2.8400

    75.92

    +3.74%

  • CMSD

    0.0505

    23.34

    +0.22%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    16.15

    -0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.6300

    85.99

    -0.73%

  • GSK

    0.5581

    39.36

    +1.42%

  • NGG

    -0.1300

    71.43

    -0.18%

  • RELX

    0.2700

    47.96

    +0.56%

  • RIO

    0.2000

    61.24

    +0.33%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.12

    +0.13%

  • AZN

    0.7000

    79.17

    +0.88%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2100

    14.71

    -1.43%

  • JRI

    0.0835

    13.36

    +0.62%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    11.67

    +0.26%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    25.61

    +0.94%

  • BTI

    -0.2700

    57.15

    -0.47%

  • BP

    0.1892

    34.33

    +0.55%

Born in New York's Bronx before dominating the globe, hip hop turns 50
Born in New York's Bronx before dominating the globe, hip hop turns 50 / Photo: KENA BETANCUR - AFP

Born in New York's Bronx before dominating the globe, hip hop turns 50

A genre, a culture and a lifestyle all at once: hip hop has traveled from the block party to the billionaire's club, soundtracked protest and celebration, and asserted seismic influence over the course of pop.

Text size:

The reigning music style evolved in rapid, anarchic ways, rocking the industry establishment that long resisted its power, and fully embodying the culture of youth even as the genre grew up.

This year hip hop turns 50, an anniversary that's offered its elders, its fans and the city that birthed it a milepost to reflect on its cultural weight.

The exact birthday is difficult to isolate, but the general consensus of musicologists and insiders is that on August 11, 1973 hip hop's rumblings came to a head in New York.

It's the stuff of myth: DJ Kool Herc's younger sister Cindy threw a back-to-school party in the rec room of 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, a high-rise apartment building in the Bronx near a major expressway.

The artist, born Clive Campbell in Jamaica, spun the same record on two turntables, legend has it, mixing the rhythms into the first documented breakbeat -- an essential building block of the genre.

"It was just a birthday party, it was just a moment, you know," Ralph McDaniels, a hip hop historian and pioneering TV host, told AFP. "But that party is the beginning and the spark that set off all of this for all the other DJs."

The DJ offered fodder for the b-boys and b-girls -- the partiers who developed breakdancing.

And then of course there's the emcee: the master of ceremonies who rapped spoken word to the beat.

- 'Mental vacation' -

These types of house parties took place in a Bronx suffering some of the worst effects of nationwide economic turmoil that was particularly acute in New York.

Discriminatory housing and highway development caused mass displacement, economic decline and entrenched poverty in the borough.

Landlords burned buildings for insurance money rather than maintain them, as the city justified limiting public resources as it grappled with fiscal crisis.

The block parties and jam sessions were a lifeline for teens and families living in this bleak reality.

"I was a kid when it first started, and I saw how it brought the community together," Jerry Gibbs, who grew up in the Bronx, told AFP.

"It was a special treat for us, having jams in the park. You'd see the DJs come out and how they hooked up the equipment and how they were creative with their music... They made people dance," the 55-year-old, who now goes by the moniker DJ Cool Gee, continued.

"They made people forget about all their problems, all their issues, all their worries -- for one night they was able to be on like a mental vacation."

What's now referred to as old-school hip hop began developing in the late 1970s into the early 1980s, as the music went from the block to the nightclub.

The classic DJ-MC live performance eventually saw the rap -- the easiest element to isolate and package -- go commercial and find resounding success.

But even as it flourished, hip hop's stories remained rooted in experiences of injustice and inequality.

"Hip hop's greatest artists came out of tough times," McDaniels said. "The greatest artists like Jay, Biggie, Nas, I've been to where they grew up at."

"These are not great places, but they found love in that place," he continued. "And they knew and understood the people, and the families and the people and the smells and everything that goes along, and the pissy elevators."

"And they took all of that color and stuff and put it in their records."

- 'The heart' -

Into the 2000s, rappers including Kanye West, Jay-Z, Cardi B, Drake and Nicki Minaj were responsible for massive pop hits.

Yet no matter how big, how rich, how dominant hip hop grew, it maintained the aura of the underdog, the counterculture.

Year after year the Recording Academy faced backlash for failing to pay rappers their due, oft confining their Grammy wins to racialized categories.

But as the streaming age has taken hold and hip hop's unmistakable global influence -- from music to fashion, language to dance -- has become clear, what's also evident is that hip hop is more movement than genre.

"People weren't really that accepting of hip hop -- they thought it would fail," said Paula Farley, 59, a Bronx native who started attending underground hip hop parties in her youth and returned to a recent celebration in the Bronx with Grandmaster Flash.

"As you can see, 50 years later, we proved them wrong."

Even as the culture went global, for Farley, hip hop remains a New Yorker.

"This is the heart, right here, the Bronx," she told AFP, as performers warmed up the stage ahead of a throwback jam featuring Flash himself, complete with a troupe of breakdancers and appearances from the likes of Melle Mel and KRS-One.

"This is the home of hip hop, the birth," Farley said, as kids played in the deep summer heat, their parents and grandparents vibing to the beat.

"This is what it's all about."

R.Krejci--TPP