Never forget about the 70's. It's the 70's that brought us Hip Hop. If it wasn't for the 70's, there wouldn't be no Hip Hop culture. Respect the roots!
Absolutely fantatic. A real eye-opener that intensifies one's respect for Hip-Hop and Rap. From a small-time Australian white girl. (maybe a poet, definitely a visual artist, but definitely not a musician!
If i took hip hop classes, GZA would be the science teacher, KRS for history, Rakim for English classes, Mos Def for mathematics, Dilla for music theory, Nas for Language Arts and Chuck D for P.E
and master p and russell Simmons for business economics and snoop doog for chemistry or sex education 101. 2-pac for social and political science for cultural studies. That would be almost like school or the university of hard knocks run by the hip hop creaters.
That’s been debunked. Herc started in the wreck room with house speakers. It was the park djs that had the big sound systems. And I’ve heard herc bought his speakers off of them.
The sad thing is that Hip-Hop started because DISCO was so far from the reality of Black Ghetto life. Now Hip-Hop today is so far from Black ghetto life. "Oh The irony"
Hip hop has always been braggadocios so rappers are just doing what they always have. There’s still a lot of rappers that rap about what life is like for average African Americans and what life is like in the hood, popular artists like Kendrick Lamar, JCole, Pusha T, Killer Mike, etc. There’s artists like Childish Gambino, Kanye, Chance, & Earl Sweatshirt who have sampled and taken influence from music from their roots: soul, gospel, Afrobeat, RnB, & blues.
Thank you for uploading!!! The music takes on a whole new life when you learn about the culture behind it, what drives it forward as an art form. Youth will never stop fighting the power, keeping the discussion alive, and that is what's UP!
The media always gives Disco music a negative image. Growing up as a Black teenager in the 70's, I hung around my people. We rarely, rarely mixed socially with whites. The Disco music that the White media always touts was not the Disco tracks we were playing and dancing to. The so-called "Disco Music" we, in our Black community (those of us who were into more uptempo 4/4 things and Disco) was really uptempo R&B, Soul & Funk along side the more soulful, funky side of Disco. We played a lot of those same James Brown records that the hip hop kats were playing at our so-called "Disco" underground (Black/Latin) clubs/parties we were going to. Our core sound was that 4/4 Philly Sound, Motown dance cuts, and whatever was coming out of NYC on those independent labels that the UK calls "boogie" and that was nothing but R&B/Funk with a 4/4 kick. We also were playing Jazz-Funk records, Latin Funk & Soul next to Cerrone, Giorgio Moroder's "Evolution", Martin Circus, Change, Gino Soccio, Machine and other Funky Disco tracks. This Black/Latin underground club scene grew along side the hip hop scene but stayed underground and very separate b/c certain elements of the scene had a "gay" element. The straight Black/Latin kids were going to the Paradise Garage, Zanzibar, The Loft (the three big underground "pioneering" clubs) and created a culture of music, fashion, language and dance that with the creation of Chicago's House music is now what we call "Soulful House". We also played those early Hip Hop records, not all but the ones that had that groove like a 4/4 uptempo R&B tune. Please, DJ Red Alert does so-called "Disco" a/k/a uptempo R&B dance sets on WBLS-FM in NY and be killin' it.
word whats up with that ,,,as if they totally ignore the record Good times by chic was not used to create the first hip hop record - rappers delight - as for me i break dance to disco,,in 78''' media bullshit hype it was - this cause the beef when traditional Caucasian rock burned discos albums @ shee stadium.
Thank you NYC Thank you Kool Herc, thank you for Hip Hop. I was born 1972, England, a white kid... as far from the Bronx as you could imagine but loved the stuff in the 80s, Electro, onto Yo MTV Raps, Public Enemy, Boogie Down Productions. Rap with meaning and heart. Makes me sad what it is now, just bling, booty and blagging !
right now we are living in exciting times , its trendy corporate music vs quality music and there is going to be something that is going to pop in the air waves that is going to blow the trendy shit out the ears of ppl who have been program to think that low quality music is hot , i cant wait to see that period of time
Coming to you from 5 years in the future where times are not exciting and the quality of commercial garbage has degraded further but is now more popular than ever.
Poison Control The west Africans brought to America had traditional folk music before they left the continent.West African people still to this day play traditional music.The word folk is European word to described their traditional music .. Basically all cultures around the planet have their traditional music.If u listen to Malian music u can hear remnants of blues.
man, i have these all on tape, used to stay up late and record from channel 4... damn that was like 14 years ago! thankfully this is online though, iv no vhs player anymore
Thanks for uploading this; I haven't watched it since Channel 4 first broadcast it. Great to see all that old footage cut with new interviews. It's a shame there isn't an official high definition release..
Awesome upload= thanks for the post - trying to school my peoples - Hip Hop - especially old school infuses everything! Only wish Hip Hop still felt its roots...these days
Outstanding..!! Brings back many great memories.. Thanks for sharing.. I've never seen this documentary.. So I take it you'll be posting the rest at some point in time..? I sure hope so.. Glad to see Doug Wimbish get a some credit.. Him and the rest of the Sugar Hill house band(Keith & Skip) contributed a lot to those tracks..
Wow that made me feel GOOD im a rock heavy metal hardcore head glad to know we re a "minority", it makes it more exciting now every time I go to a show a concert even a bar with the local rock band playing
Facts TBB. b boys and Rock steady crew and many others. star chil la rock And CC crew.And new york city breakers for keeping it alive....Can't hate for that .Bronx Love 183.Belive in your self...
Yessss ha ha you gotta keep them beats to ya self. Rinse em quick before other cats recognize the sources of them breaks. Still the same today. Good doc and thanks for the upload.
this documentary is surprisingly revealing about early hip hop. its crazy that so many of the early hip hop "legends" have such a phony luster surrounding their status or lack there of. although these old school heads didn't have orchestrated beefs to sell records the way many of the low to no talent pop rappers do today they were apparently still mad petty & seem bitter & resentful to this day. at the very least its dope to see how so many of them helped each other get on.
I'm annoyed that none of these documentaries 'hip hop years' mention reggae and the profound influence of jamaican culture. Kool Herc was Jamaican and was initially influenced by reggae/dancehall and the sound system culture, there should be mention of it here. otherwise banging docu
mutha fuckin Crazy Legs. I remember being excited to see Beat Street because we were finally going to get to see Crazy Legs and not just HEAR about him.
@ 24:04 "the ultimate point", Hiphop is where it is all encompassed, All that music B-Boys used is housed under Hiphop, including Funk, Electro, Jazz etc; Kool Herc states this at around 24:25 minutes. Yet again, making my point even stronger. The hippity Hiphop!!!
The Great Father of Hip Hop..Kool Herc! respect to the big homie for givin us the greatest gift in music...fuck the haters hip hop has a PULSE thats the difference
it dont matter who actually created this master piece, what matters is that we keep this music bumping because today theres this so call 'Rapers' are just garbage that dont deserve to be called rapers! OLD SCHOOL ALL THE WAY
Dj Kool Herc was influenced greatly by Jamaican sound system culture. But What dj Kool Herc did was regrettable, instead of acknowledged his Jamaican roots and influenced he pretended to be American why? Because back in the 1970s you would be teased if you came from the Caribbean thus not taken seriously. Some people actually thought that the Jamaican sound system culture was a new phenomenon which started in the 70s, but actually Jamaican had two turn tables and a microphone with tall tower speakers from the 1940s giving street dancing in the inner city ghettos of Kingstown, look it up. Count matchuki, U Roy, king stitch and others are the creators. Bronx or anywhere else in the states didn't have that street dj concept in the 40s, 50s, or 60s. It wasn't until Kool Herc started to give block parties in the 70s where he copied the conceptual ideas from Jamaicans, however he never played reggae or dancehall primarily playing Disco and funk instead.
Because Rapper's Delight is more like Biter's Delight. The OG rap community didn't like it, so the band Blondie actually mentioning Grandmaster Flash was more appealing. But you're right, where's Kurtis?
This is very accurate and informative, thank you very much for sharing. I am also intrigued to apprehend that there are some women (like Robinson, Blondie, Ruza B.) at the roots of early hip hop success. Women who foresaw the potential of it and contributed to its success.This is the first documentary I've seen that mentions them.
Never forget about the 70's. It's the 70's that brought us Hip Hop. If it wasn't for the 70's, there wouldn't be no Hip Hop culture. Respect the roots!
"Here Comes The Judge" was released by Pigmeat Markham in 1968 but it didn't spark a sucessive movemnt or trend at that time.
@@fredsmith2378 wow
Absolutely fantatic. A real eye-opener that intensifies one's respect for Hip-Hop and Rap. From a small-time Australian white girl. (maybe a poet, definitely a visual artist, but definitely not a musician!
If i took hip hop classes, GZA would be the science teacher, KRS for history, Rakim for English classes, Mos Def for mathematics, Dilla for music theory, Nas for Language Arts and Chuck D for P.E
Fuck yes.
and master p and russell Simmons for business economics and snoop doog for chemistry or sex education 101. 2-pac for social and political science for cultural studies. That would be almost like school or the university of hard knocks run by the hip hop creaters.
where's cube? where's dre? ice t? kool moo dee? havard vs princeton shizzled perhaps
WORD
nah, immortal technique, paris or menteroja would be the history teacher
Thank You NewYork...And A Big Shot Out To The Jamaican Sound Systems,
Big Herc Is Jamaican and Jamaicans Have Been Rocking The Mic For Years.
@Starlin Peña from a guy with Jamaican roots.
Ask Mos and Talib, they will tell you that hip hop has reggae roots.
facts Bronx Love 183
One love
That’s been debunked. Herc started in the wreck room with house speakers. It was the park djs that had the big sound systems. And I’ve heard herc bought his speakers off of them.
@@davesargent7304I'm reading talib's book vibrate higher right now he mentioned it.
The creativity of using different beats is what made rap music so interesting in the beginning!
From Jamaica he came to bring us Music!!!!!
The sad thing is that Hip-Hop started because DISCO was so far from the reality of Black Ghetto life. Now Hip-Hop today is so far from Black ghetto life. "Oh The irony"
New movement needs to come through.
People singing about $200,000 cars and flying first class, not many can relate to that.
Muxi Max Damn.
Hip hop has always been braggadocios so rappers are just doing what they always have.
There’s still a lot of rappers that rap about what life is like for average African Americans and what life is like in the hood, popular artists like Kendrick Lamar, JCole, Pusha T, Killer Mike, etc. There’s artists like Childish Gambino, Kanye, Chance, & Earl Sweatshirt who have sampled and taken influence from music from their roots: soul, gospel, Afrobeat, RnB, & blues.
Actually hip hop will allways stay true to where it came from and the streets I think u mean rap has has gone so far, hip hop will never change
this documentry inspires me to make music history
Its still is underground... The real hip hop that is..
Hip hop started in bronxdale , RIP Disco King Mario
Wow, I remember watching all this and loving it back in ? 1999 on channel 4 uk. Hard to believe 25 years have passed …
Jazzy Jay said something that is still relevant today “None of the good music is played on the Radio”.
woow, this is thee best hiphop doc i ever seen, it literally step by step showed the evolution of the culture in the beginning
Thank you for uploading!!! The music takes on a whole new life when you learn about the culture behind it, what drives it forward as an art form. Youth will never stop fighting the power, keeping the discussion alive, and that is what's UP!
...You Just Had to Be In New York City In The '70s and '80's !!!
Where Hip-Hop Started !!!
...Nuff Said !!!
The media always gives Disco music a negative image. Growing up as a Black teenager in the 70's, I hung around my people. We rarely, rarely mixed socially with whites. The Disco music that the White media always touts was not the Disco tracks we were playing and dancing to. The so-called "Disco Music" we, in our Black community (those of us who were into more uptempo 4/4 things and Disco) was really uptempo R&B, Soul & Funk along side the more soulful, funky side of Disco. We played a lot of those same James Brown records that the hip hop kats were playing at our so-called "Disco" underground (Black/Latin) clubs/parties we were going to. Our core sound was that 4/4 Philly Sound, Motown dance cuts, and whatever was coming out of NYC on those independent labels that the UK calls "boogie" and that was nothing but R&B/Funk with a 4/4 kick. We also were playing Jazz-Funk records, Latin Funk & Soul next to Cerrone, Giorgio Moroder's "Evolution", Martin Circus, Change, Gino Soccio, Machine and other Funky Disco tracks. This Black/Latin underground club scene grew along side the hip hop scene but stayed underground and very separate b/c certain elements of the scene had a "gay" element. The straight Black/Latin kids were going to the Paradise Garage, Zanzibar, The Loft (the three big underground "pioneering" clubs) and created a culture of music, fashion, language and dance that with the creation of Chicago's House music is now what we call "Soulful House". We also played those early Hip Hop records, not all but the ones that had that groove like a 4/4 uptempo R&B tune. Please, DJ Red Alert does so-called "Disco" a/k/a uptempo R&B dance sets on WBLS-FM in NY and be killin' it.
word whats up with that ,,,as if they totally ignore the record Good times by chic was not used to create the first hip hop record - rappers delight - as for me i break dance to disco,,in 78''' media bullshit hype it was - this cause the beef when traditional Caucasian rock burned discos albums @ shee stadium.
Y'all skins should not matter when it comes to music. It's universal. Stop with the bullshit
This is one of the most comprehensive history lesssons of hip hip. Next to the Chuck D documentary this is one of the BEST
Which one?
Thank you NYC Thank you Kool Herc, thank you for Hip Hop. I was born 1972, England, a white kid... as far from the Bronx as you could imagine but loved the stuff in the 80s, Electro, onto Yo MTV Raps, Public Enemy, Boogie Down Productions. Rap with meaning and heart. Makes me sad what it is now, just bling, booty and blagging !
right now we are living in exciting times , its trendy corporate music vs quality music and there is going to be something that is going to pop in the air waves that is going to blow the trendy shit out the ears of ppl who have been program to think that low quality music is hot , i cant wait to see that period of time
I am two years from future, and it is still trendy corporate vs quality.
3 years ahead now and the best we got from recent is eminem and j.cole
Coming to you from 5 years in the future where times are not exciting and the quality of commercial garbage has degraded further but is now more popular than ever.
one of the best hip hop documentaries!
this is the only video ive seen without ANYdislikes.. good
The glasses Bang Booty wearing, my mother had them in the 80's.
Rock was also a black invention that has been appropriated!
was that DJ red alert at 17:00
not really, country music and folk music was appropriated by blacks to make blues. Rock evolved from all those sources.
Poison Control The west Africans brought to America had traditional folk music before they left the continent.West African people still to this day play traditional music.The word folk is European word to described their traditional music .. Basically all cultures around the planet have their traditional music.If u listen to Malian music u can hear remnants of blues.
True. Chuck Berry is the Godfather of Rock N Roll.
@@poisoncontrol4488 well Rock N Roll was just a bunch of white guys ripping off people like Chuck Berry.
hip hop is the best music ever
Very rarely do other genres touch on various topical subject matter. Every other genre is generally just ‘love, love, love, she/he left me’
man, i have these all on tape, used to stay up late and record from channel 4... damn that was like 14 years ago! thankfully this is online though, iv no vhs player anymore
Imagine Twitter back then...
"Hank ain't tweet my cassette! He ain't even write his Rapper's Delight verse!"
-@fastcashcass
Taylor Chausky 😂
Lol 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I know right.
imagine what their Twitter beef would be like back then 😂😂😂😂 lol I'm deceased you took me out ??.
I have to do a project on the history of hip hop. I know next to nothing about this type of music so this was a big help!
original like back in the days great work to all in the video & the making of it
i love the beats especially from part 1!
Amazing soundtrack to this documentary
the incredible bongo band is sooo sampled there is a whole documentary about it.
Now you would have thought Neucleus would have got a mention Jam on it and Wiki wiki masive hip hop joints in the day.
Powerful documentary .. Hip hop I love you
The Message by Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five, a great breakthrough in music.
This documentary was made in 1999, so it is now older than Rapper's Delight was when they filmed this. 🤯
Thanks for uploading this; I haven't watched it since Channel 4 first broadcast it.
Great to see all that old footage cut with new interviews. It's a shame there isn't an official high definition release..
Wow this was actually one of the best hip hop docs ive ever seen
Awesome documentary,originally on channel 4 in UK if memory serves me correctly.
Thanks for uploading :),,,And 22 dislikes?WTF !!
Awesome upload= thanks for the post - trying to school my peoples - Hip Hop - especially old school infuses everything! Only wish Hip Hop still felt its roots...these days
ohhhh bratha. i love it.
WoWonderful B-Boy and B-Girl Unite!!
Brilliance!!!!!
Thanks for getting this video
Vaugh Mason & Crew on that Brunswick label took me back...
this 🎥 is on 🔥!
true history of Hip Hop, beautiful, astonishing, WE ARE HIP HOP!!!
Outstanding..!! Brings back many great memories.. Thanks for sharing.. I've never seen this documentary.. So I take it you'll be posting the rest at some point in time..? I sure hope so.. Glad to see Doug Wimbish get a some credit.. Him and the rest of the Sugar Hill house band(Keith & Skip) contributed a lot to those tracks..
this is a pretty dope doco. cheers!~
really really good..
Cassanova Fly deserves a writing credit on Rapper Delight.
A credit?... He wrote the entire lyric... Nile Rodgers of Chic wrote the music...
Facts Facts Facts. .One of my best underground rappers. Long live thevCOLD CRUSH BROTHERS....CANT FORGET THE FANTASTIC 5.
grandmaster caz got a groove hat on. big fucking ups :)
Before Herc there was Pete Jones, Grand Master Flowers (where Flash got his name from)...
Wow that made me feel GOOD im a rock heavy metal hardcore head glad to know we re a "minority", it makes it more exciting now every time I go to a show a concert even a bar with the local rock band playing
It's the same song at 13:35, Isaac Hayes - The Look Of Love. Was also in the Dead Presidents Soundtrack.
Look at hip hop today, wtf happened
Respect to everyone who tries to keep all of the elements alive and true
B-Boy for life
Bro IDK wtf happen 💔💔💔💔
Facts TBB. b boys and Rock steady crew and many others. star chil la rock And CC crew.And new york city breakers for keeping it alive....Can't hate for that .Bronx Love 183.Belive in your self...
great documentary
Much Love
50 years of hip hop /rap !!!!!! love it my shit !!!
Hip hop, Punk, Disco, Street Rock... you name it, the moral of the story is that NYC has been the beacon of worldwide culture since the 70s.
Yessss ha ha you gotta keep them beats to ya self. Rinse em quick before other cats recognize the sources of them breaks.
Still the same today.
Good doc and thanks for the upload.
AWESOME documentary, nice upload ;)
damn! that was just going crazy!
THANKS 4 UPLOADING THIS
So nice to see people stoned in a interview :-)
Hip hop began as a reaction to Disco, then became as pop as Disco. How sad.
Wish I could go back to The Bronx in the summer of 1982.
remember this comment ?
Nice video!
I love real Hip Hop.
this documentary is surprisingly revealing about early hip hop. its crazy that so many of the early hip hop "legends" have such a phony luster surrounding their status or lack there of. although these old school heads didn't have orchestrated beefs to sell records the way many of the low to no talent pop rappers do today they were apparently still mad petty & seem bitter & resentful to this day.
at the very least its dope to see how so many of them helped each other get on.
Where are the other episodes?? Can't find them anywhere 😐💖
Kool moe Dee
Doug Whimbish! Don't sleep on the bass, on the melodies of the music.
Wake up the next day.. might do it again. hahaha!
it hurts me 2 c what hip hop has come 2 i was a hip hop head. i dont listen 2 this so call hip hop now i listen 2 reggae now of days...
I keep all my late 80's early 90's shit on CD and listen to that. I don't play none of this new garbage
I listen to old-school. Lil Wayne birthed these mumble rappers and shit is trash.
Check out locksmith and apollo brown, will refresh your paradigm for hip hop
You sound like a mong
expand your taste. there’s just as many great rappers now as there were before. forget about the mainstream
I'm annoyed that none of these documentaries 'hip hop years' mention reggae and the profound influence of jamaican culture. Kool Herc was Jamaican and was initially influenced by reggae/dancehall and the sound system culture, there should be mention of it here. otherwise banging docu
Skinshape No mention of the godfather of Rap, Rudy Ray Moore aka Dolemite.
facts!
Facts if u don't know u just don't know Respect 183 Bronx Ny
LOVE HIP HOP
I remember when cats when take a Black marker and redact the artist and name of the song-lol
mutha fuckin Crazy Legs. I remember being excited to see Beat Street because we were finally going to get to see Crazy Legs and not just HEAR about him.
Kool Herc is such a g.
knowledge glad i saw this
@ 24:04 "the ultimate point", Hiphop is where it is all encompassed, All that music B-Boys used is housed under Hiphop, including Funk, Electro, Jazz etc; Kool Herc states this at around 24:25 minutes. Yet again, making my point even stronger. The hippity Hiphop!!!
The Great Father of Hip Hop..Kool Herc! respect to the big homie for givin us the greatest gift in music...fuck the haters hip hop has a PULSE thats the difference
@manifest918 -I wanna up vote this video over and over - 1 time doesn't seem enough!
No way, Dr. Syntax doing the commentary?! Yes!! Big up UK Hip-Hop!!
TheFunkjuice yeah but hip hop is pushing 40 not 20
what's your point?
TheFunkjuice You cant be that slow!
this Doc was released in 1999
it dont matter who actually created this master piece, what matters is that we keep this music bumping because today theres this so call 'Rapers' are just garbage that dont deserve to be called rapers! OLD SCHOOL ALL THE WAY
oh and spoonie gee was one of the starting masters too. look him up.
Dj Kool Herc was influenced greatly by Jamaican sound system culture. But What dj Kool Herc did was regrettable, instead of acknowledged his Jamaican roots and influenced he pretended to be American why? Because back in the 1970s you would be teased if you came from the Caribbean thus not taken seriously. Some people actually thought that the Jamaican sound system culture was a new phenomenon which started in the 70s, but actually Jamaican had two turn tables and a microphone with tall tower speakers from the 1940s giving street dancing in the inner city ghettos of Kingstown, look it up. Count matchuki, U Roy, king stitch and others are the creators. Bronx or anywhere else in the states didn't have that street dj concept in the 40s, 50s, or 60s. It wasn't until Kool Herc started to give block parties in the 70s where he copied the conceptual ideas from Jamaicans, however he never played reggae or dancehall primarily playing Disco and funk instead.
Wow i didnt know that thankyou for the knowledge
Watching because of Sean combs
how the fuck u go from rappers delight to blonde like Kurtis Blow didn't walk this earth
Because Rapper's Delight is more like Biter's Delight. The OG rap community didn't like it, so the band Blondie actually mentioning Grandmaster Flash was more appealing.
But you're right, where's Kurtis?
Long-live Hip Hop, in all It's glory~
thanks :)
ill like to see more 7o's footage featuring boys of the mid 70's i have enough 80's ...i like U.s the 8 track generation to get that shine..
Blonde raps better than mumble rappers today
Ashley's Roachclip, it's also part of the song playing in the beginning with the horns
I'm outt crying out here wondering where did we go wrong 😔 all peace to hiphopa
they performed 'the messege' song at the 2011 grammys concert lupe ll cool j and common joined them it was sick
yey i looked it up. i did look like 97-99.
It is interesting
need to find the song played at 7.12 the mexican by baby huey. its not on youtube or spotify or even google!
This is very accurate and informative, thank you very much for sharing.
I am also intrigued to apprehend that there are some women (like Robinson, Blondie, Ruza B.) at the roots of early hip hop success. Women who foresaw the potential of it and contributed to its success.This is the first documentary I've seen that mentions them.
Can we just imagine the legendary breaks Herc might have hidden away in his collection. That'd be amazing