I get mad when I think about how ungrateful these rappers are millions of dollars with diamond chain and have no respect for the ones who created that opportunity for them
A true legend. Someone who deserves to be in a hall of fame. You can hear when he speaks he’s still performing his art. It’s in rhythm. So much respect to the pioneer of hip hop. I don’t know where we would be without this man 💯
its weird that nobody ever had the idea to do a "coke la rock intro" "coke la rock skit" "coke la rock interlude" on his album. coke la rocks thing, where he is talking over the beat is mad dope.
@@mikevargas7792 yo I’m actually a producer/artist if you serious about this, I would like to be apart in a way possible. That’s history and my whole aim is to be apart of that
About time we get blessed with another Coke La Rock interview..A TRUE man of his own and never a stepping stone..Coke La Rock the first God of Hip Hop!
37:15 "...I don't need nobody to cosign me" The fact that even his grandson at six years old understands how important this guy is to the culture(and to the world I'd argue) is amazing. I'd agree, a child's or grandchild's respect is one of the best you can ever have.
Total respect it's a damn honor to be hearing this man's voice still to this day. The music you helped pioneer has changed my life. Thank you for everything coke la rock.
This was a good interview but it needs to be said Coke LA Rock was one of the first mcs but people need to understand that their are different areas of the Bronx Kool Herc and Coke LA Rock was mostly on the westside of the Bronx performing. You also had Hip-Hop going on at the eastside of the Bronx like the Soundview Bronx River Bronxdale areas which Disco King Mario and the Chuck Chuck City Crew Dj Kool Dee MC Feva Dee and the Puma City Crew also Mario also had Dj Jazzy Jay MC Sundance Master Ice if I'm not mistaken Master Bee lil Starski who all left Mario to start performing with Africa Bambaata to create the Zulu Nation. All im saying I don't know who was the first but you had different areas of the Bronx performing this music we call Hip- Hop.
Man, that guy was a creative individual, not looking for attention. Guess what he was was so popular, that people turned it into a lifestyle and profession.
Coke LaRock, was the first DJ that mixed in famous leader speeches with the music, which assist in me getting the ‘third eye’ of knowledge and wisdom . Thanks for the memories, ‘ma mellow!
You’ve been inspiring during my youth . I use to receive the flyers y’all handed out ‘round da way’, that had a drawing of DJ Clark Kent ( not the producer ) Leave out of Harlem River State Park, and cross the street to the Riverside Park, where you, Kool Herc , and Clark Kent would rock da park, well into the dark .
when he said that one of his friends was Dominican when he was about to get jumped👉🏾that right there blew my mind because I’m Dominican and the way I am and watch anybody’s back if I have to💪🏾God bless forever infinitely🙌🏾🙏🏾Long live the real hip hop kings👑👑👑✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾✌🏾
Legendary interview. Coke La Rock helped lay the foundation of the genre of Rap music, so I'm happy that Vlad chose to interview him. Now we need to see Vlad do an interview with even more Hip Hop legends like DJ Kool Herc, Grandmaster Flash, and Wonder Mike and Master Gee of The Sugarhill Gang.
Og so proud of what he started and loving every minute of recounting the tales. Its dope to be in an era where the first rapper ever is still around to spit old war stories and keep inspiring folk
I remembered Coke LA Rock and Kool Herc in 75 in the Bronx, playing at Highbridge Park and Cedar Park. He definitely would hype the party. I don't remembered him as a rapper. These guys were pioneers for the culture and deserve their flowers. Other neighborhoods had their local stars, like Mario and others. Kool Herc and Coke LA Rock were the West Bronx stars back then.
Toasting was the first form of rappin' in an MC sense. They say DJ Hollywood was the first to toast back in '71. And Grandmaster Caz was the first to put structured rhymes together.
@@KtotheG Correct! Dj Hollywood was a beast. If you can find some of his radio promos and bumpers, you'll hear him rhyming on the beat. While Caz was the first to advance the structured rhyming schemes, it was Kool moe Dee that took that game to the next level.
@@funkyfreshzorro00 Before Coke La Rock started rocking for Herc,Djs used to do their own Emceeing, this is why an Emcee is still called "Deejay" in Jamaica. The evolution of toasting into rapping happened much earlier in Jamaica.
This was a fantastic interview! I never met Coke La Rock but seen him at venues (it’s a NYC thing). His name is legendary with real pioneers of Hip Hop. I personally appreciate when the legend exposes the truth. God bless you and family Coke La Rock!
Hip Hop is a 100% a Black American creation, but it was Herc who brought the greats together...Coke La Rock, Trixie, Legendary Twinz....Not my words, but their own.
@@maaruz1979 Fam Hip Hop was the culture of the Bronx before it was even called that. Parties, then Music, dancing, dressing Fly, etc...Nowadays it's rare to see block parties and dancing in the streets
@@maaruz1979 Fam, I'm a New York Rican. Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans have always been around but the culture was in it's infancy in the Black communities and everyone embraced it. We all lived around each other, went to the same schools and churches. It was a natural progression and birthed a worldwide culture.
I grew up in 1600 Sedgwick Ave facing the park and saw the first block party by Kool Herc and Coke laRock . My friend Jeffrey Wyatt the first BBoy from 1520 we called him Spook . Spooky taught me the art of Break Dancing and I danced with him plus our friend Mark Dean who lived above Kool Herc . Mark Deans younger siblings are the CEO’s of Ruff Ryder . Waaken Darren and Chivon. Their mother Sandra was a nurse and always asked Herc to turn down the music when she came home, how Ironic?!
Nobody ever said he started Hip-Hop. They are saying he is the first MC......which isn't entirely true. People always want to dumb things down...dont they. (?)
@@danfield6030 He started Hip Hop music. We were rapping in the 40s, Jamaicans heard us on the radio, played our records on their sound systems, copied our style and created Dancehall. Puerto Ricans imitated James Brown and black folks were Lindy Hopping and doing back flips on the dance floor decades before breaking existed. Put some respect on Coke La Rock and ✊🏽🇺🇸. The immigrants adapted to us, we didn’t adapt to them.
@@danfield6030 Brother I listen to all genre. R&B, Jazz, Blues show respect to the Pioneers to the pass Pioneers, but Some Hip Hop artist. Hardly respect the Pioneers of Hip Hop not herc, baambaata, and not flash. Some Hip Hop called the Pioneers Of Hip Hop. They are just Disco DJs. Chuck Berry is one of the Pioneers of Rock and Roll but Chuck Berry said Willi Thornton is the true queen of Rock Roll because he learned from her, even elvis said that too. But it is a shame how some Hip Hop artist referred that the Pioneers of Hip Hop from 1960s, 1970, 71, 72, 73 that they were only Disco DJs but not Hip Hop DJs. not it was
@@danfield6030The True Pioneers Fathers of Hip Hop are African Americans DJs such as Grandmaster Flowers from Brooklyn 1960s DJing, DJ Smokey, DJ Pete Jones, Disco King Mario, Kool DJ Dee, and Mixologist Tyrone. herc, baambaata, and flash did not start Hip Hop.
This man should be in the Rock and Roll HOF with Kool Herc but I guarantee you 99% of the Rappers Rapping today have never even heard of a Coke LaRock and if it wasn't for him and Kool Herc there would be No Jay-Z, Will Smith, Dr.Dre, Drake or even a Sugar Hill Gang. He definitely needs more praise and exposure to these young Rappers who are getting Rich off of what he started.
The new school rappers have no respect for old school rappers. They disrespect those who paved the way for them. Drake would probably be the only one who dosent know who Coke LA rock is. Anyone who's familiar with old school Hip-Hop coming from NY would have heard this man's name.
They got all these drink champs interviews 6 years straight talking hip hop stories but never him up there the first mc ever shit Krazy did anyone else notice that
Dope interview. Props to vlad for the interview. This was like the missing link. And vlad beats em to the punch. I’m starting to see the big picture of vlads journalism of hip hop. Thourogh. Props
No need to mention Jamaica at all when rap is so deeply embedded in African American music and culture in general dating back to slavery. Especially once you figure out Herc said Jamaican toasting, soundsytems, and Reggae had nothing to do with the formation of Hip Hop, and even more so once you figure out Jamaicans got toasting from African Americans in the first place.
I’m Jamaican but hip hop started in the bronx. Humans have been rhyming words since the beginning of time. Melodically rhyming words over break beats started in the bronx at kool herc parties
@@queenofnyc5584 ...You using the word "Just" explains your ignorance. It's called RAP 😂😂😂 he was the first rapper. To be honest Kool Herc was just a Jamaican that played a lot of James Brown records 🤷🏿♂️.
@@queenofnyc5584 ... Furthermore, Kool Herc was JUST a Jamaican that couldn't play ANY Jamaican records at a party because he got Booo'd off stage. He could only play records made by FBA Artists. Also, he said out of his own mouth that he got laughed at when he dressed in a Jamaican style and had to change his style of dress to assimilate to Black American style.... You Blood Clot 😂😂
Thanks VLAD. Coke LA Rock is my first Hip Hop Hero and Legend who inspired the graphic design t shirt on the front of a train. Kool Herk is also my favorite Hip Hop Legendary father of DJ MIC check one two. One love Afro G64 lamiert Park Village LA Crenshaw 👼🌟❤️🔥
@@thelastdon9000 send evidence, tell me how that was disproven that herc is a founding father, because I just watched a bunch of videos with ALOT of legends saying it 🤣🤣🤣
I don't get why people from the culture can't just give this man his flowers,saying he's not "technically" the first rapper..95% of what he's saying,he's saying it from first hand account...can't stand the disrespect,when it's time to give someone all their flowers..smfh
Music is technically a group effort historically, I can't quite say one person is responsible for a genre, unless we're talking musicianship in conjunction with Songwriting to innovate a whole new sound, I would probably have to first accredit that to either Prince or Rick James... more so Prince probably because he knew how to fuse different genres from scratch not snatch
Because I lived in New York and this is everywhere not just NY some people hardly leave their community. Remember, the Bronx was divided up by gangs so people were afraid to go to other parts of their neighborhood.
@@godsin7299coke la rock said herc was playing the Breakbeats, extending the Breakbeats, pretty much herc was the only one playing Funk music Breakbeats, Soul Music, Breakbeats, Apache song, THE Bong song and the others things I mentioned aready already which that is a lie because. YOU said Grandmaster Flowers. DJ Smokey, DJ Pete Jones, King Disco Mario, Kool DJ Dee, and Mixologist Tyrone and I had a few other names to your list. Coke la rock said he went to other parties and they were not playing the music like herc one dj play 100s like another dj. If a DJ played the Breakbeats, extending the Breakbeats some times or then play the Breakbeats like herc played the Breakbeats in a different way it is still Hip Hop. herc has saying pretty much Hip Hop are the Breakbeats, extending, the Breakbeats, Coke la rock did not go to all of these Pioneer Fathers of Hip Hop.
@@godsin7299Here is another Lie herc is saying that he had the first system which is two turntables and a mixer. The early Pioneer Fathers of Hip Hop African Americans DJs who invented Hip Hop such as Grandmaster Flowers, DJ Smokey, DJ Pete Jones, King Disco Mario, Kool DJ Dee, and Mixologist Tyrone Had Two turntables and a mixer before herc.
Respect to Coke LaRock💯💪🏾 Vlad really diggin in the crates tryna validate himself... You still ain foolin US tho Glad!!! It ain you that brings US, it's OUR culture and it will always be OUR content that makes you.
That was ignorant (....Are you jealous of Vlad ?). And by the way this is not "your" culture anymore. People of Afrikan descent are a minority in world hip hop
@@danfield6030 not jealous of Glad at all, just MY opinion... As far as being a minority in hip hop, that's Kool but You'll never have" SOUL" ... Try as "they" may... 💪🏾😎
@@ianditwin7443 True it wasnt just Jamaicans. But most people don't know the central role that Jamaica played in founding hip hop. This video gives part of the story
The seed of Hip Hop was born in the West Bronx, at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in 1973. What makes Kool Herc special beside other great Dj's before (such as Disco King Mario), was his breaks and MC Coke La Rock. Hip Hop was born and the rest follows...
All rappers over a certain tax bracket should pay $100 a month towards the foundation of Hip Hop fund for our pioneer's of this thing we love that has become a global sensation 🎤🎧🌎🎵
Dj Coke rite cause my brother and uncle didn't have no licenses but they was buying BMW'S and Lexus without it and I'm like in shocked. Such expensive things and my brother was the same way in jersey city and some of my friends in the tri state of NYC and etc. I loved diss interview ❤real recognized real 💯🤝
Dj coke rite a lot of these foreigners didn't want nobody know they was foreigners cause my brother and sisters R people like dem and now dem older and they see dats wats popping now, now dem want people to know they're 🇯🇲 just like Busta Rhymes. And especially wen dem see me come to 🇺🇸 in 94 and dem see i was proud of 🇯🇲 then about inna di early 2000's wen i became 18 and starts going to the 🇯🇲 parties den dem start learn more and more bout dem heritage and dem was only in 🇺🇸 since 89 and dat shocked mi how it was so quick for dem to transform into a 🇺🇸 culture cause everyone knows Jamaicans R born strong people period. And out of the five kids my mom&dad I'm the only one who didn't sell out my culture R my Roots💯❤️🤝✌️
Rap is music, Hip-Hop is a subculture. Rap started in the South, Hip-Hop started in New York. Rap is sometimes called Hip-Hop because it's the music of Hip-Hop. Both are EXCLUSIVELY Foundational Black American creations. 🇺🇸✊🏾🇺🇸✊🏽🇺🇸✊🏿
@@gaffle-411 The region has always had the largest black population in the United States, it's the home of Black American culture and first region where anyone is known to rap over music. Some early examples of people rapping in music are: 'The Dirty Dozens' by Speckled Red(1929), 'Here Comes the Judge' by Pigmeat Markham(1968), 'It's a Good Thing' by the Beale St. Sheiks(1927), 'Rap Dirty' by Blowfly(1975), 'I Am The Greatest' by Muhammad Ali(1964), and 'You Gotta Have a Beat' by Louis Jordan(1948).
@@kas3583 Yes... I'm definitely familiar with Pigmeat Markham and the Jubilaires now. I knew NOTHING about them a few years ago. Most people didn't. After hearing Pigmeat, there is NO WAY anyone can deny that THAT is the first Rap song. Others sound like harmony / melodies. Dude was straight 70's style Rapping in the 60's...
If you call yourself a rapper. Pay homage to this man. He open the door for these other rappers to do this. SALUTE!.
I definitely pay homage he the reason I get to put out music and tell my story and make music I'm proud of. Coke la rock will never be forgotten
I get mad when I think about how ungrateful these rappers are millions of dollars with diamond chain and have no respect for the ones who created that opportunity for them
@@hkizzle4869 all you can do is try and to take there lead way and build something and do things your way.
OPENED
@@hkizzle4869 DJ ackademics made this comment age beautiful!!🤝✍️
Salute to the legend Coke La Rock. Hopefully other platforms will bring him on and let him tell his story
“ IF IT WASN’T FOR THE BRONX , THIS RAP SHIT PROBABLY NEVER WOULD BE GOING ON “ 🔥🔥
Stop capping. Everybody knows hip hop started in Manhattan ghey nightclubs in the late 60s
@@lmthefirst Who's man's is this?!?!
@@amc7755 I’m not even going to pay mind too that CORNBALL , the world already know the truth! 💪🏾
If it wasnt for Billy dumpleton's advanced use of 1,2 counted verse measure from rhythmic syllaby there would be no rap. It all came from Shakespeare
@@croplaya And late 60s Manhattan ghey nightclub's deejays
A true legend. Someone who deserves to be in a hall of fame. You can hear when he speaks he’s still performing his art. It’s in rhythm. So much respect to the pioneer of hip hop. I don’t know where we would be without this man 💯
its weird that nobody ever had the idea to do a "coke la rock intro" "coke la rock skit" "coke la rock interlude" on his album. coke la rocks thing, where he is talking over the beat is mad dope.
That’s a ill idea
We boutta make that happen
@@mikevargas7792 yo I’m actually a producer/artist if you serious about this, I would like to be apart in a way possible. That’s history and my whole aim
is to be apart of that
@@parisflacko let’s make it happen!
I was just thinking about that, for my artist...!
Respect to Coke La Rock for laying down foundation and always being a cool humble knowledgeable dude.
About time we get blessed with another Coke La Rock interview..A TRUE man of his own and never a stepping stone..Coke La Rock the first God of Hip Hop!
37:15 "...I don't need nobody to cosign me" The fact that even his grandson at six years old understands how important this guy is to the culture(and to the world I'd argue) is amazing. I'd agree, a child's or grandchild's respect is one of the best you can ever have.
ngl cried a little
The last 5 minutes, mannn
Powerful shit. I love this culture so much
Real Talk bredda ❤
Thank you Coke La Rock! 🙌🏾💪🏾👑🌍🔥 Such a phenomenal interview, I could see everything happening in the Bronx as he described it so vividly🗽
Total respect it's a damn honor to be hearing this man's voice still to this day. The music you helped pioneer has changed my life. Thank you for everything coke la rock.
This was a good interview but it needs to be said Coke LA Rock was one of the first mcs but people need to understand that their are different areas of the Bronx Kool Herc and Coke LA Rock was mostly on the westside of the Bronx performing. You also had Hip-Hop going on at the eastside of the Bronx like the Soundview Bronx River Bronxdale areas which Disco King Mario and the Chuck Chuck City Crew Dj Kool Dee MC Feva Dee and the Puma City Crew also Mario also had Dj Jazzy Jay MC Sundance Master Ice if I'm not mistaken Master Bee lil Starski who all left Mario to start performing with Africa Bambaata to create the Zulu Nation. All im saying I don't know who was the first but you had different areas of the Bronx performing this music we call Hip- Hop.
I’m from Bx River and those are facts sir!
Damn, he’s one of the forefathers, not even a pioneer. Coke La Rock did it before the pioneers, everyone else just added to what he was doing.
To paraphrase what he said he's the patent not the product
This is probably one of VLAD’s best interviews.
Man, that guy was a creative individual, not looking for attention. Guess what he was was so popular, that people turned it into a lifestyle and profession.
And now the most commercially dominant vocal style in the US and other countries across the globe. We’re blessed to still have this man alive 🙏🏽
Coke LaRock, was the first DJ that mixed in famous leader speeches with the music, which assist in me getting the ‘third eye’ of knowledge and wisdom . Thanks for the memories, ‘ma mellow!
You’ve been inspiring during my youth . I use to receive the flyers y’all handed out ‘round da way’, that had a drawing of DJ Clark Kent ( not the producer ) Leave out of Harlem River State Park, and cross the street to the Riverside Park, where you, Kool Herc , and Clark Kent would rock da park, well into the dark .
Thanks for that info. Good to know.
Man this is authentic Bronx history. With street perspective. Even got the gang history. Wow!!
This is world history. He’s a UN Heritage site in human form. One of the pioneers of the largest contemporary form of popular music.
This should have millions of views he’s literally the Goat for creating the best genre of music
when he said that one of his friends was Dominican when he was about to get jumped👉🏾that right there blew my mind because I’m Dominican and the way I am and watch anybody’s back if I have to💪🏾God bless forever infinitely🙌🏾🙏🏾Long live the real hip hop kings👑👑👑✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾✌🏾
I cried when I heard that myself when he said Ramon was dominican🇩🇴
Legendary interview. Coke La Rock helped lay the foundation of the genre of Rap music, so I'm happy that Vlad chose to interview him. Now we need to see Vlad do an interview with even more Hip Hop legends like DJ Kool Herc, Grandmaster Flash, and Wonder Mike and Master Gee of The Sugarhill Gang.
Og so proud of what he started and loving every minute of recounting the tales. Its dope to be in an era where the first rapper ever is still around to spit old war stories and keep inspiring folk
Legendary figure…here’s your 💐 O.G.
I remembered Coke LA Rock and Kool Herc in 75 in the Bronx, playing at Highbridge Park and Cedar Park. He definitely would hype the party. I don't remembered him as a rapper. These guys were pioneers for the culture and deserve their flowers. Other neighborhoods had their local stars, like Mario and others. Kool Herc and Coke LA Rock were the West Bronx stars back then.
Mario had any emcee's??? Was emceeing in his parties middle 70s before 75?
@@funkyfreshzorro00 I do not remember. However, that does not mean he did not have rappers or hype MCs. I never witnessed it.
Toasting was the first form of rappin' in an MC sense. They say DJ Hollywood was the first to toast back in '71. And Grandmaster Caz was the first to put structured rhymes together.
@@KtotheG Correct! Dj Hollywood was a beast. If you can find some of his radio promos and bumpers, you'll hear him rhyming on the beat. While Caz was the first to advance the structured rhyming schemes, it was Kool moe Dee that took that game to the next level.
@@funkyfreshzorro00 Before Coke La Rock started rocking for Herc,Djs used to do their own Emceeing, this is why an Emcee is still called "Deejay" in Jamaica. The evolution of toasting into rapping happened much earlier in Jamaica.
Wish things were still like it was for our elders.
Only 14k views. It's a shame ppl only wanna hear about fuckery instead of hearing from someone who was a part of hip hops birth.
29:51 - "It's better for the police to catch you with your gun, than stick-up guys to catch you without it."
Great vid. Watched the whole thang. He's a true legend. Thanks, Vlad! 🤟🏿
Nuff respect Vlad 4 doing dis 1 a great interview must see for many
Thanks for this interview
We need 2 hear from more of these living legends.
I agree
This was a fantastic interview! I never met Coke La Rock but seen him at venues (it’s a NYC thing). His name is legendary with real pioneers of Hip Hop. I personally appreciate when the legend exposes the truth. God bless you and family Coke La Rock!
Hip Hop is a 100% a Black American creation, but it was Herc who brought the greats together...Coke La Rock, Trixie, Legendary Twinz....Not my words, but their own.
you can cut Herc out so it could be 100% smh
@@maaruz1979 Fam Hip Hop was the culture of the Bronx before it was even called that. Parties, then Music, dancing, dressing Fly, etc...Nowadays it's rare to see block parties and dancing in the streets
@@badapplenyc save the hot air. you're trying to write caribbean people out of the history
@@maaruz1979 Fam, I'm a New York Rican. Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans have always been around but the culture was in it's infancy in the Black communities and everyone embraced it. We all lived around each other, went to the same schools and churches. It was a natural progression and birthed a worldwide culture.
@@badapplenyc my bad if I misunderstood your post
I grew up in 1600 Sedgwick Ave facing the park and saw the first block party by Kool Herc and Coke laRock . My friend Jeffrey Wyatt the first BBoy from 1520 we called him Spook . Spooky taught me the art of Break Dancing and I danced with him plus our friend Mark Dean who lived above Kool Herc . Mark Deans younger siblings are the CEO’s of Ruff Ryder . Waaken Darren and Chivon. Their mother Sandra was a nurse and always asked Herc to turn down the music when she came home, how Ironic?!
This needs millions of views
Hands down, the classiest interview pertaining to hip hop history.. thank you.
You need to talk to Black Spades from Bronxdale, Soudview, etc..Disco King Mario, RIP
He got so much energy and built up exuberance!! He’s a National treasure
That's crazy he started hip hop.
Talk about legendary. Just a random guy you wouldn’t recognize on the street.
And what came natural to him put the global music industry on its head.
Nobody ever said he started Hip-Hop. They are saying he is the first MC......which isn't entirely true. People always want to dumb things down...dont they. (?)
@@danfield6030 He started Hip Hop music.
We were rapping in the 40s, Jamaicans heard us on the radio, played our records on their sound systems, copied our style and created Dancehall.
Puerto Ricans imitated James Brown and black folks were Lindy Hopping and doing back flips on the dance floor decades before breaking existed.
Put some respect on Coke La Rock and ✊🏽🇺🇸.
The immigrants adapted to us, we didn’t adapt to them.
@@danfield6030 Brother I listen to all genre. R&B, Jazz, Blues show respect to the Pioneers to the pass Pioneers, but Some Hip Hop artist. Hardly respect the Pioneers of Hip Hop not herc, baambaata, and not flash. Some Hip Hop called the Pioneers Of Hip Hop. They are just Disco DJs. Chuck Berry is one of the Pioneers of Rock and Roll but Chuck Berry said Willi Thornton is the true queen of Rock Roll because he learned from her, even elvis said that too. But it is a shame how some Hip Hop artist referred that the Pioneers of Hip Hop from 1960s, 1970, 71, 72, 73 that they were only Disco DJs but not Hip Hop DJs.
not it was
@@danfield6030The True Pioneers Fathers of Hip Hop are African Americans DJs such as Grandmaster Flowers from Brooklyn 1960s DJing, DJ Smokey, DJ Pete Jones, Disco King Mario, Kool DJ Dee, and Mixologist Tyrone. herc, baambaata, and flash did not start Hip Hop.
I could listen to him tell stories all day.
Real g truth gangster sure
Congratulations the first MC of hip hop/Rap 🤩✌️
Superb interview, history told properly. Many thanks for all your work Vlad! Greets from Berlin
This man should be in the Rock and Roll HOF with Kool Herc but I guarantee you 99% of the Rappers Rapping today have never even heard of a Coke LaRock and if it wasn't for him and Kool Herc there would be No Jay-Z, Will Smith, Dr.Dre, Drake or even a Sugar Hill Gang. He definitely needs more praise and exposure to these young Rappers who are getting Rich off of what he started.
The new school rappers have no respect for old school rappers. They disrespect those who paved the way for them. Drake would probably be the only one who dosent know who Coke LA rock is. Anyone who's familiar with old school Hip-Hop coming from NY would have heard this man's name.
They got all these drink champs interviews 6 years straight talking hip hop stories but never him up there the first mc ever shit Krazy did anyone else notice that
Dope interview. Props to vlad for the interview. This was like the missing link. And vlad beats em to the punch. I’m starting to see the big picture of vlads journalism of hip hop. Thourogh. Props
Thanks Robert
12:19 Before that you got toasting in Jamaica and you got spoken word such as The Last Poets, Gil Scott-Heron, and Lighting Rod RIP.
No need to mention Jamaica at all when rap is so deeply embedded in African American music and culture in general dating back to slavery. Especially once you figure out Herc said Jamaican toasting, soundsytems, and Reggae had nothing to do with the formation of Hip Hop, and even more so once you figure out Jamaicans got toasting from African Americans in the first place.
And you left out numerous examples of African Americans rapping before Hip Hop.
I’m Jamaican but hip hop started in the bronx.
Humans have been rhyming words since the beginning of time.
Melodically rhyming words over break beats started in the bronx at kool herc parties
@@americasmakerYall always using slavery. My thing is was you there? How you even know? Anything to discredit people. Yall so jealous and miserable.
Legendary
Coke La Rock is FBA...his parents are from the South. He is NOT from the Caribbean.
What that suppose to mean. He not the creator of hip hop he’s just a rapper.. We all know Jamaican kool herc created hip hop.
@@queenofnyc5584 ...You using the word "Just" explains your ignorance. It's called RAP 😂😂😂 he was the first rapper. To be honest Kool Herc was just a Jamaican that played a lot of James Brown records 🤷🏿♂️.
@@queenofnyc5584 ... Furthermore, Kool Herc was JUST a Jamaican that couldn't play ANY Jamaican records at a party because he got Booo'd off stage. He could only play records made by FBA Artists.
Also, he said out of his own mouth that he got laughed at when he dressed in a Jamaican style and had to change his style of dress to assimilate to Black American style.... You Blood Clot 😂😂
Herc wasn’t the first hip hop dj. Kool dj dee and Mario Smokey predate him
@@queenofnyc5584 What is Hip Hop? who came up with the name Hip Hop? Did Kool Herc create all aspect of Hip Hop? it doesn't add up!!!!!
Big respect to the Dan Dada of them all ... Coke La Rock.
I love that Vlad is giving the legends their flowers while they are with us! RESPECT! LA ROCK = THE TRUE GOAT
COKE LA ROCK SALUTE KING🤴🏾
This is so amazing! Thanks!!!!
Thanks VLAD. Coke LA Rock is my first Hip Hop Hero and Legend who inspired the graphic design t shirt on the front of a train. Kool Herk is also my favorite Hip Hop Legendary father of DJ MIC check one two. One love Afro G64 lamiert Park Village LA Crenshaw 👼🌟❤️🔥
Fucking classic interview. Hope it get more views!
He is so humble
I don't like Vlad for many reasons, but I like that he interviewed Coke La Rock 💯
I like at 12:00 he smiles when he knows where the story is going
This was the best interview and I usually don’t like vlad interviews but this is a masterpiece. Great questions
Him and herc started this shit we call hip hop
Herc didn't start it at all
Hip-Hop is a 1970s Bronx sub-culture, not a genre of music.
@@thelastdon9000 according to sources more credible than you, herc is a founding father of hip hop. It’s a google search away
@@thejonesbass bruh according to sources more credible than you andr that lie has been exposed homie
@@thelastdon9000 send evidence, tell me how that was disproven that herc is a founding father, because I just watched a bunch of videos with ALOT of legends saying it 🤣🤣🤣
This is such a real interesting video. But I just can’t get over the interviewer sounding like Bob from Bobs Burgers.
This is excellent. Can't Stop Won't Stop is a solid history book on the subject, annd hearing it told live is fascinating.
There’s a lot of mistakes & false claims in that book.
Amazing ✊🏾
mann this guy is a legend what a conversation
he hustle his way out of documented history. they didn't think it was gonna last
I don't get why people from the culture can't just give this man his flowers,saying he's not "technically" the first rapper..95% of what he's saying,he's saying it from first hand account...can't stand the disrespect,when it's time to give someone all their flowers..smfh
Hold up were are the Latinos they say they help created hip-hop .....lmao lmao 🤣
Music is technically a group effort historically, I can't quite say one person is responsible for a genre, unless we're talking musicianship in conjunction with Songwriting to innovate a whole new sound, I would probably have to first accredit that to either Prince or Rick James... more so Prince probably because he knew how to fuse different genres from scratch not snatch
😂
Whatever.
Kool Herc was one of the first guys that I ever see buy equipment…..Jamaicans ain’t create shit 🙏🏾🙌🏾 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 thank you Coke
I wonder why coke la roc never mentions Pete dj jones, Mario, or flowers, or Hollywood, those are the real creators
Because I lived in New York and this is everywhere not just NY some people hardly leave their community. Remember, the Bronx was divided up by gangs so people were afraid to go to other parts of their neighborhood.
Coke la rock got played by herc.
@@godsin7299coke la rock said herc was playing the Breakbeats, extending the Breakbeats, pretty much herc was the only one playing Funk music Breakbeats, Soul Music, Breakbeats, Apache song, THE Bong song and the others things I mentioned aready already which that is a lie because. YOU said Grandmaster Flowers. DJ Smokey, DJ Pete Jones, King Disco Mario, Kool DJ Dee, and Mixologist Tyrone and I had a few other names to your list. Coke la rock said he went to other parties and they were not playing the music like herc one dj play 100s like another dj. If a DJ played the Breakbeats, extending the
Breakbeats some times or then play the Breakbeats like herc played the Breakbeats in a different way it is still Hip Hop. herc has saying pretty much Hip Hop are the Breakbeats, extending, the Breakbeats, Coke la rock did not go to all of these Pioneer Fathers of Hip Hop.
@@godsin7299Here is another Lie herc is saying that he had the first system which is two turntables and a mixer. The early Pioneer Fathers of Hip Hop African Americans DJs who invented Hip Hop such as Grandmaster Flowers, DJ Smokey, DJ Pete Jones, King Disco Mario, Kool DJ Dee, and Mixologist Tyrone Had Two turntables and a mixer before herc.
I see how Muhammad Ali influenced rap from the first line he spit when he was challenged by the other Dj
Lived on Prospect Avenue would love to know the gang that went into the school that's crazy I've seen a lot of things never knew this
If I could take a guess, most likely The Black Spades
Hoping to meet Coke La Rock someday. Such a legend.
Powerful man
Respect to Coke LaRock💯💪🏾
Vlad really diggin in the crates tryna validate himself... You still ain foolin US tho Glad!!! It ain you that brings US, it's OUR culture and it will always be OUR content that makes you.
That was ignorant (....Are you jealous of Vlad ?). And by the way this is not "your" culture anymore. People of Afrikan descent are a minority in world hip hop
@@danfield6030 not jealous of Glad at all, just MY opinion... As far as being a minority in hip hop, that's Kool but You'll never have" SOUL" ... Try as "they" may... 💪🏾😎
This interview is DOPE!
Salute. Give respect to Jamaica for founding hip hop
For helping. It wasn't just Jamaican(s)
No non black Americans founded anything about Hip Hop.
@@ianditwin7443 True it wasnt just Jamaicans. But most people don't know the central role that Jamaica played in founding hip hop. This video gives part of the story
@@andrewizz7526 I agree. It's just sad how as a race we can't seem to see the big picture.
@@ianditwin7443 What's the big picture?
Heroin hit hard in the 60's to the early to mid 70's.
Salute to the Father of Hip-Hop! What's so nice about him is that after all he did, he remained humble.
Yoooooo “COACH” …..manggggg I’ve been around him for YEARS at St.James Park in the BRONX ….He would call me “Extra”
Blessing, peace & unity
FIRST RAPPER!?!?!? Somebody call soulja boy
The seed of Hip Hop was born in the West Bronx, at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in 1973. What makes Kool Herc special beside other great Dj's before (such as Disco King Mario), was his breaks and MC Coke La Rock. Hip Hop was born and the rest follows...
Bless all the African-American single Mothers, who molded these artists.
I'm a man of my own not a stepping stone. Love that
All rappers over a certain tax bracket should pay $100 a month towards the foundation of Hip Hop fund for our pioneer's of this thing we love that has become a global sensation 🎤🎧🌎🎵
Vlad...Thank you
❤❤❤ much love to you sir..
Did he go to Alfred E. Smith in the Bronx because I did and I got off at 149 and 3rd ave and I took the train there too
where are those Coke La Rock 8 track tapes?
Shout out to Vlad for reaching out to Coke La rock
Dj Coke rite cause my brother and uncle didn't have no licenses but they was buying BMW'S and Lexus without it and I'm like in shocked. Such expensive things and my brother was the same way in jersey city and some of my friends in the tri state of NYC and etc. I loved diss interview ❤real recognized real 💯🤝
Where is the A-Tracks he recorded his music at? Those A-Tracks would be worth millions now.especially if its brought by the hip-hop museum.
8-track was a big casing around the tape film. Like a big tape with a different kind of plastic
Dj coke rite a lot of these foreigners didn't want nobody know they was foreigners cause my brother and sisters R people like dem and now dem older and they see dats wats popping now, now dem want people to know they're 🇯🇲 just like Busta Rhymes. And especially wen dem see me come to 🇺🇸 in 94 and dem see i was proud of 🇯🇲 then about inna di early 2000's wen i became 18 and starts going to the 🇯🇲 parties den dem start learn more and more bout dem heritage and dem was only in 🇺🇸 since 89 and dat shocked mi how it was so quick for dem to transform into a 🇺🇸 culture cause everyone knows Jamaicans R born strong people period. And out of the five kids my mom&dad I'm the only one who didn't sell out my culture R my Roots💯❤️🤝✌️
This guy got to be one of the old G Legend of all time
Can you try to get me to 1K please thank you
Rap is music, Hip-Hop is a subculture. Rap started in the South, Hip-Hop started in New York. Rap is sometimes called Hip-Hop because it's the music of Hip-Hop.
Both are EXCLUSIVELY Foundational Black American creations. 🇺🇸✊🏾🇺🇸✊🏽🇺🇸✊🏿
Thank you for the “history” lesson but can you elaborate on Rap starting in the South?
@@gaffle-411 The region has always had the largest black population in the United States, it's the home of Black American culture and first region where anyone is known to rap over music. Some early examples of people rapping in music are: 'The Dirty Dozens' by Speckled Red(1929), 'Here Comes the Judge' by Pigmeat Markham(1968), 'It's a Good Thing' by the Beale St. Sheiks(1927), 'Rap Dirty' by Blowfly(1975), 'I Am The Greatest' by Muhammad Ali(1964), and 'You Gotta Have a Beat' by Louis Jordan(1948).
Facts
@@gaffle-411 do a UA-cam search on the Jubilaires or Pigmeat Markham and you'll see
@@kas3583 Yes... I'm definitely familiar with Pigmeat Markham and the Jubilaires now. I knew NOTHING about them a few years ago. Most people didn't. After hearing Pigmeat, there is NO WAY anyone can deny that THAT is the first Rap song. Others sound like harmony / melodies. Dude was straight 70's style Rapping in the 60's...
this is so cool
Protect this man
Only 35k views. That is crazy.
Here is another herc said that he had the first system which is two turntables and a mixer that is another Lie.
All due respect to this brother,this is not when the first rap occurred. I'm as old as this brother is ,and was in New York and the Bronx .
Expound please
This seems like bs
Peace to the Elder 👑
Coke said "149th to catch the 2 to the 4" if you're not from the Bronx, you won't understand.
How's the first mc, still so underated