|
Hip hop music
is a genre of music
typically consisting of a rhythmic style of speaking called
rap over
backing beats performed on a turntable by a
DJ.
Hip hop music is part of hip hop culture, which began in
New
York City in the 1970s, predominantly among
African Americans and
Latinos (the
other two elements are breakdancing and
graffiti art).
[1]
The term rap is sometimes used synonymously with hip hop music,
though it originally referred only to rapping itself.
Rapping, also referred to as
MCing or emceeing, is a vocal style in
which the performer speaks rhythmically and in rhyme, generally to a
beat. Beats are
traditionally sampled from portions of other songs by a DJ,
though synthesizers, drum machines, and live bands are also used, especially in
newer music. Rappers may perform poetry which they have written ahead of time,
or
improvise rhymes on the spot. Though rap is usually an integral component of
hip hop music, DJs sometimes perform and record alone, and many instrumental
acts are also defined as hip hop.
Hip hop arose in New York City when DJs began isolating the
percussion break from
funk or
disco songs for
audiences to dance to. The role of the MC was originally to introduce the DJ and
the music, and to keep the audience excited. The MC would
speak between
songs, giving exhortations to dance, greetings to audience members, jokes and
anecdotes. Eventually, this practice became more stylized, and came to be
known as rapping. By 1979, hip hop had become a commercially recorded
music genre, and began to enter the American mainstream. It also began its
spread across the world. In the 1990s, a form called
gangsta
rap became a major part of
American music, causing significant
controversy over lyrics which were perceived by some as promoting violence,
promiscuity, drug use and misogyny. Nevertheless, by the beginning of the 2000s,
hip hop became a staple of popular music charts and is now performed in widely
varying styles around the world.
Gangsta rap
is a subgenre of hip-hop music which developed during the late
1980s. 'Gangsta'
is a corruption of the spelling of 'gangster'. After the national attention that
Ice-T & N.W.A created in the late 80's, gangsta rap became the most commercially
lucrative subgenre of hip-hop.
The subject matter inherent in gangsta rap has caused a great deal of
controversy. Criticism has come from both
right wing
and left wing
commentators, and religious leaders, who have accused the genre of
homophobia,
violence,
profanity,
promiscuity, misogyny,
gang rapes,
drive-by shootings,
vandalism,
thievery,
drug use,
racism, and
materialism.
Some commentators (for example, Spike Lee in his satirical film
Bamboozled)
have criticized it as analogous to black
minstrel shows and blackface performance, in which performers – both
black and white – were made up to look African American, and acted in a
stereotypically uncultured and ignorant manner for the entertainment of white
audiences. Gangsta rappers often defend themselves by claiming that they are
describing the reality of inner-city life, and that they are only adopting a
character, like an actor playing a role, which behaves in ways that they may not
necessarily endorse.
Old School
Some people use the term hip hop to refer to most hip hop from 1979 (when the
first hip hop record by the Fatback Band, King Tim III, came out) to ca.84, when
new rappers like
LL Cool J and
Run DMC
as well as the Beastie Boys were developing their new styles. Some
see Run DMCs Sucker MCs as the first new school record, because it no longer
relied on music recorded in the studio by live musicians. Others see old school
rap as spawning a period from 1979 to ca. 1990. Stilistically, both rap from
1979-1985 and rap from 1979-1990 is very heterogeneous, covering different
styles like the electronic rap à la
electro funk that started in 1982, the earliest rap recorded by live
musicians in the studio that did not contain synthetic beats and scratching
Sugarhill Gang
Treacherous Three.
New School
Some people use new school rap as referring to rap records that no longer had
the typical characteristsics of Old School rap à la
Sugarhill Gang or
electro funk. New school rap typically mixed computer beats with James Brown
samples, especially the famous Funky Drummer break.
Bass
Hip hop related musical style that continues rapping and sometimes choruses.
Musically, its roots can be found in
electro funk. The music came into existence as part of
Miami's
stereo wars, when people tried to out-stereo each other, claiming that they had
the most bass-heavy stereo system in their car. At the end of the 1980s,
The 2 Live Crew got very
popular because officials tried to ban their records which they deemed to be
pornographic and hence dangerous. Apart from that, only few bass tracks
succeeded in becoming part of the mainstream, most notably
Tag Team's Whoomp There It Is. Bass
music started out as an underground pheneomenon, and it basically still is. In
Detroit,
a new form of Bass called
Ghetto Tech developed in the
1990s, and on the West Coast,
Jonny Z
provides his own brand of Chicano Bass.
DJ Laz is a Cuban from Miami who mixed
Latin music with bass. Other important artists include
Luke,
DJ Magic Mike,
MC Shy D and
MC ADE.
(*From Wikipedia.org)
|