Where Does Hip Hop Come from?



Where Does Hip Hop Come from?Where Does Hip Hop Come from is a question that gets asked about 100 times a day on this website. Well ask no more. Here is a timeline that explains the entire orgin of hip hop. If you want the short version that everybody should know then click here.

1925: Earl Tucker (aka Snake Hips), a performer at the Cotton Club invents a dance style similar to today’s hip-hop moves. He incorporated floats and slides into his dance as well. Similar moves would later inspire an element of hip-hop culture known as breakdancing.

1940: Tom the Great (Thomas Wong) uses a booming sound system to please the crowd. Wong also used American records to steal music-lovers from local bands.

1950: The Soundclash contest between Coxsone Dodd’s “Downbeat” and Duke Reid’s “Trojan” gives birth to DJ Battling.

1956: Clive Campbell is born in Kingston, Jamaica. Campbell would later become the father of hip-hop.

1959: Parks Commissioner Robert Moses starts building an expressway in the Bronx. Consequently, middle class Germans, Irish, Italians, and Jewish neighborhoods disappear in no time. Businesses relocate away from the borough only to be replaced by impoverished black and Hispanic families. Along with these poor people came addiction, crime, and unemployment.

1962:James Brown records Live At The Apollo. Brown’s drummer Clayton Fillyau influences a sound that is now known as the break beat. The break beat would later inspire the b-boy movement, as breakers danced to these beats at block parties.

1965: In a historic boxing bout, Muhammad Ali (born Cassius Clay) defeats Sonny Liston in the 6th round. Before the bout, however, Ali recited one of the earliest known rhymes:

Clay comes out to meet Liston
And Liston starts to retreat
If Liston goes back any further
He'll end up in a ringside seat.
Clay swings with a left,
Clay swings with a right,
Look at young Cassius
Carry the fight.
Liston keeps backing
But there's not enough room
It's a matter of time...

Where Does Hip Hop Come from?

1967: Clive Campbell migrates to the United States at the age of 11. Because of his size, kids at Alfred E. Smith High School nicknamed him Hercules. He would later become a writer and change his name to Kool Herc.

1968: A gang named Savage Seven would hit the streets of the East Bronx. Savage Seven later transforms into Black Spades, before eventually becoming an organization known as Zulu Nation.

1969: James Brown records two songs that would further influence the drum programming in today’s rap – “Sex Machines” with John Starks playing the drums and “Funky Drummer” with Clyde Stubblefield on the drums.

1970: DJ U-Roy invades Jamaican pop chart with three top ten songs using a style referred to as toasting. The Last Poets release their self-titled debut album on Douglas Records combining jazz instrumentations with heartfelt spoken word. The Last Poets are featured on Common’s 2005 rap anthem, “The Corner”.

1971: Aretha Franklin records a well-known b-boy song “Rock Steady”. The Rock Steady crew would go on to rule in the world of break-dancing, with members all across the globe.

1972: The Black Messengers (a group that staged performances for The Black Panthers and rallies relating to the black power movement) feature on The Gong Show.
However, they are only allowed to perform under the alias “Mechanical Devices”, because of their controversial name.

1973: DJ Kool Herc deejays his first block party (his sister's birthday) at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, Bronx, NY. Herc would often buy two copies of a record and stretch the break parts by using two turntables and mixing in both records before the break ends. The Zulu Nation is officially formed by a student of Stevenson High school named Kahyan Asim (aka Afrika Bambaataa). [ Where Does Hip Hop Come from? ]

1974: After seeing Kool Herc perform at block parties, Grandmaster Caz, Grandmaster Flash, and Afrika Bambaataa start playing at parties all over the Bronx neighborhoods. Around this time, DJ/MC/Crowd Pleaser Lovebug Starski starts referring to this culture as “hip-hop."

1975: [Herc is hired as a DJ at the Hevalo Club. He later gets Coke La Rock to utter crowd pleaser rhymes at parties (e.g.“DJ Henry is in the house and he'll turn it out without a doubt”). Coke La Rock and Clark Kent form the first emcee team known as Kool Herc & The Herculoids. DJ Grand Wizard Theodore invents ‘the scratch’ by accident. While trying to hold a spinning record in place in order to listen to his mom, who was yelling at him, Grand Wizard accidentally caused the record to produce the “shigi-shigi” sound that is now known as the scratch. Scratch is the crux of modern deejaying.

1976: DJ Afrika Bambaataa performs at the Bronx River Center. Bambaataa’s first battle against Disco King Mario sparks off the DJ battling that is now embedded in the culture.

1977: The Rock Steady Crew (the most respected b-boy crew in history) is created by the original four members: JoJo, Jimmy Dee, Easy Mike, and P-Body. DJ Kool Herc is nearly stabbed to death at one of his parties. Although the assault placed a permanent dent on Herc's career, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa, Disco Wiz (the first Latino DJ), and Disco King Mario all kept performing around town.

1978:

  • Kurtis Blow, who was being managed by Russell Simmons, decides to hire Simmons’ brother, Run, as his DJ.
  • Run was so-called because he could cut so fast between two turntables.
  • Kurtis would later become the first rapper to be signed to a major record deal.
  • Music industry coins the term "rap music", and shifts its focus toward emcees.
  • Grandmaster Caz (aka Cassanova Fly) and Bambaataa engage in a battle at the Police Athletic League.

 Where Does Hip Hop Come from?

1979:

  • Grandmaster Flash forms one of the most outstanding rap groups ever, The Furious 5 - Grandmaster Flash (Joseph Saddler), Melle Mel (Melvin Glover), Kidd Creole (Nathaniel Glover), Cowboy (Keith Wiggins), Raheim (Guy Williams), and Mr. Ness (Eddie Morris).
  • Around the same time, another great rap crew – The Cold Crush Four – was formed comprising of Charlie Chase, Tony Tone, Grand Master Caz, Easy Ad, JDL, and Almighty KG. The first rap record by a non-rap group “King Tim III” is recorded by the Fatback Band.
  • Sugarhill Gang’s “Rapper's Delight” would go on to become the first known rap hit, reaching #36 on Billboard.
  • Various obscure rap singles were also released: Grandmaster Flash & The Furious 5’s “Super-rappin” and Spoonie Gee’s “Spoonin’ Rap” both on Enjoy Records, Kurtis Blow’s “Christmas Rappin” on Mercury Records, and Jimmy Spicer’s 13-minute long storytelling track “Adventures of Super Rhymes” on Dazz Records.
  • Mr. Magic’s ‘Rap Attack’ becomes the first hip-hop radio show on WHBI.

1980:

1981:

  • Grandmaster Flash releases “The Adventures of Grand Master Flash on the Wheels of Steel", the first record to ultimately capture the sounds of live DJ scratching on wax.
  • On February 14th, The Funky 4 plus One More perform their classic hit, “That's The Joint” on NBC's Saturday Night Live becoming the first hip hop group to appear on national television.
  • The Beastie Boys are formed. The group consists of Adam Horovitz (King Ad-Rock), Adam Yauch (MCA), Michael Diamon (Mike D).

1982:

  • Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force release the techno-heavy “Planet Rock” on Tommy Boy Records. The record sells over 600,000 units in the U.S. alone.
  • Grandmaster Flash & the Furious 5 release “The Message” on Sugarhill Records.
  • Kool Moe Dee humiliates Busy Bee in a spontaneous rap battle. Since then, emcee battling has become an inseparable part of hip-hop.
  • Fab 5 Freddy and Charlie Ahearn co-produce Wild Style, a hip-hop film featuring Cold Crush Brothers, Grandmaster Flash, Grandwizard Theodore, DJ AJ, Grandmixer D.S.T, graf writers Lee, Zephyr, Fab 5 Freddy, Lady Pink, Crash, Daze, Dondi, and members of the Rock Steady Crew. Wild Style has since inspired several other hip-hop-themed movies.

Where Does Hip Hop Come from?

1983:

  • Ice T helps pioneer West Coast hardcore rap with his singles “Cold Winter Madness” and “Body Rock/Killers."
  • Grand Master Flash and Melle Mel (Furious 5) record the anti-cocaine single “White Lines (Don't Do It)”, which becomes a rap hit.
  • Grandmaster Flash later sues Sugarhill Records for $5 million in royalties. The dispute causes the group to break up, signaling the looming danger of corporate control in hip-hop.
  • Run DMC releases “It's Like That" b/w "Sucker MC's."

1984

  • Russell Simmons and Rick Rubin team up to form one of the most influential record labels ever, Def Jam Records. Def Jam releases their first record, “It’s Yours” by T La Rock, followed by LL Cool J’s “I Need A Beat."
  • Hip-hop discovers that touring is a great way to generate income, as the Fresh Fest concert featuring Whodini, Kurtis Blow, Fat Boys, and Run DMC, reels in $3.5 million for 27 dates.
  • Hip-hop returns to battle raps, as the rap group UTFO’s “Roxanne Roxanne” diss song attracts over 100 responses.
  • The most popular response came from a 14-year old female named Roxanne Shante. Shante’s “Roxanne’s Revenge” allegedly recorded in Marley Marl’s living room sold more than 250,000 copies.
  • Dougie Fresh (aka The Entertainer) releases The Original Human Beat Box (Vindertainment Records).
  • Michael Jackson does the moonwalk at the Grammys, borrowing b-boy dance elements from LA breakers.

1985

  • Sugarhill Records goes into bankruptcy and is forced out of business.
  • Salt ‘n’ Pepa make their first appearance on Super Nature’s “The Show Stopper."

1986

  • The Beastie Boys release Licensed To Ill on Def Jam (executive-produced by Rick Rubin).
  • James Smith, a native of Houston, Texas, assembles The Geto Boys. The original lineup consisted of MCs Raheim, Jukebox, DJ Ready Red, and Sir Rap-A-Lot.
  • The group also featured Little Billy, a dancing dwarf who later picked up the microphone as Bushwick Bill.
  • Following a short break-up in 1988, Smith invited local emcee Willie D and multi-instrumentalist Akshun (later known as Scarface) to complete the lineup.
  • The Geto Boys (now made up of Scarface, Willie D, and Bushwick Bill) helped put Houston on the hip-hop map.

Where Does Hip Hop Come from?

1987

  • Following the release of Boogie Down Productions’ Criminal Minded LP, Scott LaRock is shot and killed in the South Bronx while attempting to settle a dispute.
  • Public Enemy stuns the world with their introductory album, Yo! Bum Rush The Show, signaling the genesis of politically-charged hip-hop.
  • The original members of the group include Chuck D (Carlton Ridenhour), Flavor Flav (William Drayton), Professor Griff (Richard Griffin), and DJ Terminator X (Norman Rogers).

1988

1989

  • After a life-long battle with crack addiction, Cowboy, a member of Grandmaster Flash’s Furious 5 dies at the age of 28.
  • A group of high school friends join the Native Tongues as promoters of the Afrocentricity Movement to make African-Americans aware of their heritage.
  • These Manhattan-based friends would later form A Tribe Called Quest (Q-Tip, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, Phife Dawg, and Jarobi).
  • A Dallas-based protégé of Dr. Dre known as D.O.C releases No One Can Do It Better. While the album was making rounds on the charts, D.O.C. found himself in a severe car crash.
  • D.O.C. didn’t die in the accident, but his rap career did.

1990

1991

  • N.W.A’s sophomore album N****z For Life sells over 954,000 copies in its first week of release, reaching #1 on the pop charts. The album paved the way for many more hardcore rap albums that would follow.
  • Busta Rhymes appears on A Tribe Called Quest’s “Scenario.”
  • Cypress Hill (B-Real, DJ Muggs, and Sen Dog) release their self-titled debut, and initiate a campaign to legalize hemp.

1993

  • A Tribe Called Quest release their third album, Midnight Marauders, featuring a who-is-who-in-hip-hop album cover.
  • Dr. Dre’s The Chronic attains multi-platinum status.
  • Wu-Tang Clan release 36 Chambers. The line-up consists of Prince Rakeem (The RZA), Raekwon, Ol' Dirty Bastard, Method Man, Ghostface Killah, Genius (GZA), U-God, Master Killa and Inspectah Deck.
  • Mobb Deep (Prodigy and Havoc) release their debut LP, Juvenile Hell.

1994

  • Nas’ first entry, Illmatic goes gold and is widely received as one of the greatest hip-hop albums ever.
  • Common releases Resurrection and is lauded as an intelligent lyricist.
  • Warren G’s Regulate: The G-Funk Era is certified 4x platinum.
  • 2 Pac is robbed and shot 5 times in a New York recording studio. He recovers from the shooting. Pac is later sentenced to 8 months in prison.

1995

  • Queen Latifah wins a Grammy award in the "Best Rap Solo Performance" category for her hit “Unity.”
  • 2 Pac signs a deal with Death Row Records after Suge Knight posts a $1.4 million bail.
  • Eric Wright (Eazy-E of N.W.A) dies of AIDS on March 20th at the age of 31.
  • The Notorious B.I.G. is featured in the “Unsigned Hype” column of The Source magazine.

1996-2006 Coming Soon!

Where Does Hip Hop Come from?