@@jaxieltorres8247 not true I’m boricua and my fam is white straight blonde hair blue eyes etc … all boricua don’t have black blood in fact most barely have any anymore …. Slaves were dropped off over a century ago and there were already people existing on island before Africans were taken there ….. don’t spread false info SOME have black blood not most and not all .
@@jaxieltorres8247 I’m born in isabela PR don’t tell me what I am ……. I AM Puerto Rican 💯 in fact I’m more boricua than anything my point is most of us don’t have black blood or a SIGNIFICANT amount on average Puerto Rican’s are between 60 - 80 % European 10% or less African NOW African blood in Puerto Rico went down by 80% I’m not saying we’re not mixed up is Puerto Rican’s have a mixture of European taino African middle eastern and Asian blood mixed together . But I doubt you’re a Puerto Rican talking like that probably a black person or a Mexican pretending to be one of us like the rest of them we don’t say “gringa” you obviously are a Mexican ……..
@@swiffcashthor You must not be familiar with how the bloods formed in rikers island in nyc.Have Blacks and latins been cool to co exist?Sure but brothers isnt a term I would use to describe our relationship.
Puerto Rican’s are the few if not only ethnic group In Latin America that embraces their African heritage . They don’t deny their roots They are aware of who they are without bashing everyone else . The culture and people are beautiful . Salute to the pioneers
nos victurium ok a song ... we don’t go all day talking about “mejorar la raza” .. thats not something we say.. we don’t reject “blacks” just for being black pa “mejorar la raza”
Man that’s dope af. Hip-hop man. A powerful force created from raw nothingness in a time when two peoples were being beaten down into the dirt and forced out of their neighborhoods with gentrification induced fires and extreme poverty that created incredible violence. Out of all that pain two peoples vibed together and created something beautiful that has grown to captivate the entire world. Thanks Bus for lettin me know.
nah the first graffiti artist is Darryl McCray "Cornbread" and he was black. WHY ARE YOU LYING?? latino is not a race!! when they say black people includes the afro-latinos.
@@stockleycarmichael8187 it's not your culture, it's our culture. Did you not just listened to Busta, someone that witnessed this great culture?? Why is it so hard for you to except?? Leave our culture alone. Stop trying to destroy it v
Puerto Rican’s never deny our African heritage. This is why we are as one when it comes to blacks. We grew up in the hood and share the same struggles. Thank God we grew up in the same hood and broke bread with our families together. I’m a 80’s kids and I’m humble to have share these experiences in the hood.
🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🎤🎧🎶🎵🎛🎚☝️✌️👍Hip-Hop began as an expression of poverty- stricken inner city minority youths who grew up during the 1960s and 1970s. It is a musical form that incorporates a shared, lived urban experience that revolved around music-rhyming and dancing; often makes a social statement against the harsh realities they must deal with on a daily basis; and graffiti. While African Americans concentrated on serving as disc jockeys and master of ceremonies, Puerto Ricans and other Latino Caribbeans contributed heavily to the hip hop aspects of break dancing and graffiti (6)Although it is widely acknowledged that hip-hop began in the early 1970s in the South Bronx, New York, the mainstream media view it as an African American cultural expression. African American tend to view it as exclusively their own, and even Puerto Ricans and other Latinos tend to view it as "black" music. However, its birth and development were a joint creative effort of African American and Latino Afro Caribbean youngsters, particularly, Puerto Ricans. Some researches have suggested that Puerto Ricans' significant role has often been overlooked due to the lack of knowledge concerning Puerto Ricans in general, their small population in comparison to African American throughout the Unites States, and their relatively recent arrival, as opposed to the long history of African Americans in the US.Puerto Ricans have played a fundamental role in the development of hip-hop since its inception in the early 1970’s. In those days they were primarily celebrated for their contributions to breakdancing and graffiti, but although their presence wasn’t as profound on the mic or in the DJ booth since day one there were definitely Ricans putting it down across all elements. “I wanna remind everybody that may not know - how the origin of hip-hop was started. The origin of hip-hop was started by the power of Black and Puerto Rican people. In case you needed to be reminded,” Busta said to cheers from the Coliseo de Puerto Rico crowd. “A lot of motherf**kers wanna try to gentrify our culture. A lot of motherf**kers wanna try to act like they conveniently forget who fathered this s**t. Black people and Puerto Rican people together. We created the greatest culture in the f**king world and its called hip hop. Facts!”Puerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.Pumpkin was a legendary music producer, of Afro-Costa Rican/Afro-Panamanian descent, and known as the King of the Beat. Born Errol Eduardo Bedward, Pumpkin was right there at the beginning of hip-hop, working with OG artists such as Treacherous Three, Grandmaster Caz, Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, and Spoonie Gee, from 1979 to 1984.Hip-Hop is one of the most vibrant products of the late 20th century youth culture. Now York Puerto Ricans have been key participants, as producers and consumers of the culture and hip-hop art forms since hip-hop's very beginning during the early 1970's in the South Bronx. We continue showcasing Latinx OGs who were pioneers of the hip-hop element of graffiti with Lee Quiñones. The legendary Nuyorican artist was part of a group of artists who created art on New York subway trains, and is considered to be “the single most influential artist to emerge from the New York City subway art movement.” Lee’s first subway piece was created in 1974 and in late 1975, he was asked to join the graffiti crew The Fabulous Five. The crew painted the only running 10-car subway train that was painted on from top to bottom, and from end to end. Quiñones’ work appeared in the iconic 1983 graffiti documentary, Style Wars, and since then, he was collaborated with several brands, including Adidas and Nike.Next on our list of Latinxs who were pioneers in the musical genere of hip-hop is the artist Tracy 168. Also known as Michael Tracy, the New York native is one of the pioneers of graffiti. He is credited with inventing the Wildstyle graffiti style (you’ve seen it before - it features overlapping and interlocked letters, arrows, and curves; all the detail often makes the words hard to read). Wild Style was also the name of the graffiti crew he founded, which also includes fellow Puerto Rican artist and graffiti pioneer Cope2. In addition to being one of the OG’s of graffiti, Tracy 168 also mentored some other major artists, such as SAMO, and Keith Haring.Errol Eduardo Bedward, known as Pumpkin was a musician, percussionist and band leader. He was renowned for being the one behind many break beats and hip hop tracks from 79' to 84' such as Spoonie Gee, Treacherous 3, Grandmaster Caz, Fearless Four, Funky 4, Dr Jeckyll & Mr HydeLatinos have virtually been erased, or at least consistently left out, of stories regarding the origins of hip-hop. But we were there! Hip-hop is made up of four elements: MCs/rappers, B-boys/B-girls, graffiti, and DJing. Did you know that a lot of the b-boys, or breakers (calling these talented dancers “breakdancers” or referring to the style as “breakdancing” is considered to be both inaccurate and passe), were Latinx (more often than not Puerto Rican)? Pioneering breaking crews such as the Rock Steady Crew and the New York City Breakers had Latinx members and founders.If you look up the history of Hip-hop music, there is always credit given to the African-American youth of the Boogie Down Bronx, who created the most popular genre in the world, out of nothing. They used their stories, life experiences, and their natural talent to create music which has since resonated with people all around the world. But it wouldn’t really be hip-hop without also giving credit to the other two POC groups who helped create the genre and seasoned it with their influence - Caribbeans and Latinos. is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.South Bronx is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.Often, when people here Hip-Hop they associate it with only African-Americans. However, Hip-Hop is actually the combination of West Indian, Puerto Rican, Blacks of New York. Hip-Hop has always been open to a diverse audience, and thus is not limited to one specific group. DJing started in Jamaica, where the artist would mix and scratch music with repetitive phrases mixed it. In Jamaica, and in many area of the West Indies, music is used as important as politics. Music was used to express the voice of the citizens. Political parties themselves used the musics of DJs to represent their positions. As people from the West Indies moved into New York and specifically the Bronx, they began to incorporate their values of music as a form as expression. When the West Indians began to live with the Puerto Ricans and African Americans of the South Bronx, their art of music mixed in with the rapping and rhyming of the people living there. Hip-Hop began to include in general, Rapping, DJing, Graffiti and Break Dancing. DJ Kool Herc and other DJ from the West Indies, gaining popularity from their style of music, began to encourage the youth to get involved in the art of Hip-Hop. Soon some gangs began to focus their concentration on Hip-Hop rather than using violence to express their anger with the environment they were in. Afrika Bambaataa would find the Universal Zulu Movement, which was a gang that focused on Hip-Hop. What all the people involved in Hip-Hop do have in common is how the merge the struggles of every day life, and their environment into their various forms of art in a way that people facing similar difficulties can also relate. Hip-Hop then turns into a voice of all those New Yorkers, and even beyond, who are constantly trying to improve their lives in a difficult environment.
Thank you for this Busta! I school people all the time about this fact that Puerto Rican's dont get the credit that we deserve on Hip-Hop culture. We were the ones that birthed this beautiful culture Hip Hop along with our black brothers and sister's. And just in case you didn't know, we are of African descent too! Salud.
Oh please.hip hop was created in the bronx by west indians and puerto ricans and that is a fact.the majority of the people that are from the bronx are caribbean immigrants most of them from puerto rico and the DR.get over it
@@raissatang2126 To what?what do them being from the bronx have anything to do with creation??? type in "crazy legs and latinos say blacks invented breakdance"....they said it themselves that blacks created hip hop and the came in later...again you contributed to it not created
@Dunamis drama I know you were "there" you were there because you just so happened lived in the same communities at the time. What does have to do with creating something???
@@sterlingturner5318 again dude you need to stop projecting the stupid propaganda and trying to diminish the contributions of another community. Stop trying to segregate us from a culture that we were a part of regardless if we were the ones that invented it directly or we contribute to its gradual growth and influence
@@silverskyscraper1179 "Clive Campbell The first major hip-hop deejay was DJ Kool Herc (Clive Campbell), an 18-year-old immigrant who introduced the huge sound systems of his native Jamaica to inner-city parties. Using two turntables, he melded percussive fragments from older records with popular dance songs to create a continuous flow of music." - BRITANNICA.
@@silverskyscraper1179 I'm NOT discrediting African Americans for the OBVIOUS. Of Course majority of the people he was around, (introducing it to) are African Americans and Puerto Ricans because that's who majority of the population in The Bronx was. Wikipedia IS NOT A VALID SOURCE. They see ALL BLACKS AS AFRICAN AMERICAN (the uneducated that wrote it). I can go edit Wikipedia and say Chinese started Hip-Hop until a more educated person fixes it.
@@colorfulcodes I also highlighted Puerto Rico. Why do you only focus on Jamaican? Rewrite...Nobody til this very second is rewriting anything. DJ Kool Herc (a Jamaican ...NOTHING REWRITTEN) was the one that bought the sound to NY as an 18 year old immigrant. Puerto Ricans & African Americans bought the dances and lyrics. The EXACT same thing that was done in Jamaica many years prior to Hip-Hop, was the birth of Dancehall. Kool Herc only did what was already going on in his homeland to NY and it birthed Hip-Hop because it was under different circumstances.
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.
@@awesomeasever8370 I NEVER said Busta was correct, nor did I say I agreed with him. I indicated what I believe to be his reasoning and motivation for saying what he said. If Kool Herc never had an influence he would have become an unknown a long time ago. He was one early pioneer to be mentioned during the development of the technique, but did he exclusively begin the hip hop/rap culture as an early form of music and all it included? NO! I agree with you. There were many other hands/artists at play. I do feel he is going to receive all of this attention in Busta's mind, regardless of the accuracy or impact of KH's contribution, due to the stand out ethnic relationship between the two, and the desire of Busta to make things more prominent at the historical acknowledged ethnic affiliation of the two. The novel "Roots" by Alex Haley can be dubbed a fairy tale as well, but for some Alex Haley wrote a masterpiece, because he had the sense to twist things to make himself look good. In the minds of some, they get credit for an excellent lie that fooled the masses. Just go ask Trump and his supporters if you don't believe me.
I’m glad he set the record straight. I was there at 1520 Sedgwick Ave. when the birth of hip-hop began officially it has always been a black and Puerto Rican movement. Only years later, as it has swept through the globe that haters have begun to creep in and try to create another narrative. All the people that were there originally know the real deal. It was black innovation brought to the world by African-American, and Carribean (Jamaican & Puerto Ricans) kids from the Bronx. If you weren’t there from the start, please don’t try to school the rest of us who were. We know the real deal.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
@@ontario1411 he didnt do grafitti or djaying or breakdancing. sure he danced but he wasnt breakdancing, and even if he did, he still didnt invent djaying or grafitti.
Pandora Pina Puerto Rican isn’t a race, but it’s a culture that many of any color embraces. Watch my video on Puerto Rican rappers. Kevin Gates in an interview doesn’t like saying he’s Puerto Rican because black and other people will attack because Puerto Rican isn’t a “race” but if you are a fan of him, you listen to his songs and lyrics, especially how he names his songs, he fully embraces his Puerto Rican heritage 🇵🇷
@Unapologetically B1 Puerto Ricans are not mestizos, that doesn't exist in Puerto Rico, Puerto Ricans are tri racials, usually the majority been white blood then black blood and the the native american blood, mestizo is only White and native american blood which Puerto Ricans are not.. mexicans are mestizos! do you understand?
@Unapologetically B1 stfu meztizo is Caucasian and native american, Puerto Ricans are not Mestizos.. they are Tri Racial majority of Puerto Ricans are 70% European, 18% Black and 12% Native American.. the black Puerto Ricans ones are 60% Black, 30% European and 10% Native Americans..
Coriacka te equivocas mucho antes de que Vico empezara a rapear ya habian otros. Lo que sucede es que Vico lo hizo mejor y en el tiempo indicado. Luego de Vico quien hizo famoso el rap en PR, vini DY que en el 2004 logro hacer que el rap puertorriqueño/Reggaeton saliera del underground ak maintream y se hiciera parte cruciak de la cultura musical de PR fue DY.
@@josequiles6278 Jose recuerda que de eso no hay video. The Mean Machine Rappers son los primeros en 1981 con disco y todo, pero quien formó el genero mundial, fue Vico.
@@pandoraworld7251 puertoricand are part of the african culture i have ancestors that are born in Kenya africa but are puertoricans. in New York hip hop was alwayz coming from puertoricans and blacks, puertoricans also started breakdancing and so on . Music is just in our blood.
@Unapologetically B1 If Busta Rhymes tells you, you don't have to go anywhere else to confirm that what he says is true, hahaha. I don't understand why you don't like to accept that Puerto Ricans were the majority along with blacks in the Bronx and together they created Hip Hop. And if you don't believe Busta, believe Spike Lee and Fat Joe who say exactly the same thing: "Hip Hop was created by blacks and Puerto Ricans". GGs
Rap and Hip-Hop are both Black AmericanDOS creations, however they're two different things with different histories. Ninety nine percent of the time when people say Hip-Hop what they really mean is Rap, the "Hip-Hop" term needs to be fazed out when discussing music. Technically, Hip-Hop is a youth movement that was birthed in the Bronx and died there. The Hip-Hop term has been misused and thrown around loosely and inappropriately for decades, it's caused confusion and that's one of the reasons Rap doesn't have a proper standard history as a music genre. You don't associate the creation of Blues or Jazz with any type of separate youth or cultural movement so why would you do it with Rap?
Caribbeans and Puerto Ricans did NOT create hip hop..this is a lie. We in America didn't do or create anything together. Didn't unite until the late 70's.
.......Which is exactly when Hip-hop evolved. But you forget when blacks, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, etc were getting down together at The Palladium in 50's doing the Mambo.
@@TRUTHTEACHER2007 how is my statement a lie? I know my ppl, we are some innovative beings that can get along with anyone. Everything that went into the creation of Hip hop is black American. We didn't get the drums from Puerto Ricans or any classified latino.We didn't dress, act, speak, style, dance nor sing like you. Most black folk don't even know too many Ricans. Black kids are always dancing, and innovating something random. They been rapping, tribal dances, hitting the floor, tapping. That's how we are. I feel like you're trying to take something that is not rightfully yours to claim. There is no lie in that - its what i know. Do you homie
@@noneofyourbusiness1114 Apache is one of the original break beats that the B-boys use to get down to in the breaking circles. The beat has the bongos driving the whole rythm.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Oh so this is what have the Black Americans knickers in a twist. They are saying to cancel Busta Rhymes and referencing his Jamaican origins. Well Tariq Nasheed has a film called microphone check, in which he disputes what Busta is saying and this will be interesting.
ok can i ask you fba people a simple question regarding about what you fba are claiming, By claiming creation or invention , it should mean that FBA created or invented every art form element in Hip Hop which is Graffiti, Djing, Beakin and Mcing.. so now that you know the art form elements can you name me a single art for element adopted by Hip Hop that was created or invented by FBA ?? if you can name me one art element in Hip Hop that was invented by any FBA then i will accept that Hip Hop was created or invented by FBA and every other culture are the guest and the copycats of what fba created, but it needs to be proven that fba created or invented any art element in Hop Hop, which means that documented history should show that any of the art form was not created or invented before fba culture, because that is what creating and inventing means, that no other person or group had made nothing similar before it was created or invented ??
@@SLPGroundSoundMusicALSO, WHO GIVES A FK ABOUT WHAT A THIRD WORLD FOREIGNER WILL ACCEPT? PUERTO RICANS HAD ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE CREATION OF HIP HOP! STAY MAD! WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT CHUMP?
Hip-Hop is a subculture not a genre of music, there was NEVER any music created in the Bronx. Rap/Rapping was already a part of Black American society before the Hip-Hop Movement existed. Many books, articles and documentaries contain false and misleading information. The people who've spread the most misinformation and caused confusion in the process are from Caribbean backgrounds; first in the early 1980s it was Afrika Bambaataa and the Universal Zulu Nation, then KRS-One and most recently Busta Rhymes. In the early 80s white corporations marketed "Rap" and "Hip-Hop" together using the terms interchangeably creating the false impression that they're one and the same and have the same history.
Stop it what language y'all speak white man who taught blacks English. White man. Why was rap invented white man treatment of blacks living conditions. Whites are all over two hip hop also oppression created hip hop rap..white southerners rairl road first rappers Ryming songs white southerners created rap Jews afro American Puerto Ricans took it to Jordan level. Then Dominican Panamanian Mexicans are the Kobe lebron d wade of rap music .what's 6.9.nine Puerto Rican Mexican ..who sand do it properly... Hello. 2 Puerto Rican a black man & a DominicaN...
We all (Bl Ams and Caribbean folks,) adopted rap from Africa... The roots of the rap element can be traced back to post-colonial West Africa and the Griot tradition. In fact Afrika Bambaataa calls rap a postmodern GRIOT. A type of music of African origin in which rhythmic and usually rhyming speech is chanted to a musical accompaniment. NYC Hip Hop Pioneers gave it the name "rap." PRs rapped (chanted) in their very own Plena and Bomba Afro resistance music of the 1500s... One element; breakdancing in the Bronx was dominated by Nuyoricans, it began with the Nuyorican Boogaloo inspiration, Boogaloo music of the 1950s. James Brown used to Boogaloo during the 1960s... Mills Bros., adopted their dance moves from this African tradition... All began with the 1500s Afro-Brazilian Capoeira dance ritual that potentially influenced the development of break dancing, which emerged as part of the Hip Hop movement in New York City in the 1970s. There are documented troops that were in New York City during that period and there are numerous similarities between the two styles. Both focus in acrobatic movements, largely of the lower body, with the hands, and sometimes head used for stability. NYC Pioneers gave it the name; "breakdancing." Yet it's all African and the Caribbean folks embrace their African heritage the strongest. Hip Hop is Bronx Resistance... It is a culture created by those that lived the poverty lines you cannot possibly ever imagine. Hip Hop was being shunned over and over, especially by Bl Am, Jamaican, and the PR elders... It was pathologically pummeled to the brink of nonbeing that Millions of Bronx residents were going through. It was a “movement” of the South Bronx... It was a cultural response to certain political, social, economic challenges that were facing the millions of people in the South Bronx who were being made invisible and abandoned by New York City’s government. Those of Carribbean bloodlines (PRs and Jamaicans,) created; "Hip Hop," with a Black American influence. Caribbean folks brought their African diaspora and Black Americans had theirs... Hip Hop is Funk, Electro, Disco, Toast, and Latin touch especially during the breaks... Funk is Electro and Jazz. A French man by the name of; Edgard Varese created "Electro-music." It was later upgraded in the US by another wh guy named; John Cage. The root of Jazz is Ragtime and Ragtime consists of the Piano which is from Italy, Banjo from "Africa," and the Fiddle is from Western Europe. Ragtime composers used a Polka beat from Europe and used Irish Melodies... Wyt folks' music’s roots lie in the ballads, folk songs, and popular songs of the English, Scots, and Irish settlers of the Appalachians, Folk, Polka, and Bluegrass.. Blues however, incorporated spiritual work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the African culture. Yet most Bl Ams would not admit to any affiliation to Africa. Take away the wyt folks' Country music; Folk, Polka, and Bluegrass music then what are Bl Ams left with? Same goes for Rock n Roll since Rock n Roll is all those genres mixed together to begin with... The percussion is from "Africa." If it wasn't for wyt folks, there wouldn't have been any Bl Am music... The trumpet is from Egypt, Saxaphone from Belgium, Trombone from Western Europe, Clarinet from Germany, Piano from Italy, Bass Guitar- Paul Tutmarc, first Electric Bass Guitar- Leo Fender... Both wh men. After mixing genres together to create Hip Hop, the Rolland Drum Machine was then used to create this unique music that became the Hip Hop genre on it's very own... This drum machine consists of Caribbean instruments. Point is; all Bl Am music was "derived" from wh folks' music and Hip Hop was "derived" from Bl Am music, European music, Caribbean music, and all the Hip Hop elements were created by Bronx residents of Caribbean bloodlines. There is not one Bl Am that created Hip Hop.
@@awesomeasever8370 Nuttin but facts. I'm Puerto Rican so no, we were never immigrants... PR is part of the US. I also fought for this country... Have you? You think this country is yours? Lol! Did you forget how your family got here? Mine got here by choice. Got your feelings hurt? I kinda thought we can carry this intelligently but I see now what I'm dealing with... .
@@awesomeasever8370 Give us all a name of a Bl Am that created Hip Hop, just One name is all I ask for. You know nothing of MY Hip Hop culture, ya just copy us.
He's been G-checked numerous times over spreading misinformation, Your people had absolutely nothing to do with the creation of HIP HOP and those are real facts.
@@blackrevolutionary1819 don't lie to the people with your ignorance. It's 2022, nobody believes those lies anymore. It was proved wrong already. BUSTA was proven right and no one had shyat to say about the factz he presented. You're in denial
@@blackrevolutionary1819 you need to stop spreading false information while we're trying to fight for the truth. You're going against our culture. Educate yourself on this topic for real because you're going to see the truth come out more and more.
@@blackrevolutionary1819 the black spades of the Bronx are highly mistaken. There's allot of truth that comes from Black Americans from the Bronx and NY period saying that it's not a black culture, that Puerto Ricans and Caribbeans are just as responsible for the creation. You never learned this till now, be open to the new information you're recieving and you'll love the culture just as much as I do. Stay in denial and you'll get left behind in ignorance While your brothers and sisters of all colors enjoy the culture that the New York Gangz birthed. You think only black Americans was in gangz?? Ya was trying to move like the mob when the Puerto Ricans came savagely to the ghettos after 1917. From then on, the streets got ghetto. The black Americans saw the Puerto Ricans with afros and gang vests killing these so called big time made men in front of everyone like cowboys and respected that shyat, they loved it. They started doing the same and shyat got ghetto but real. Amongst these black and Puerto Rican gangz was a group that started mixing different genre in records on turntables and put words with it. After that everyone in NY fell in love with it and helped make it as big as it is today. Prove me wrong.
@@crespo7216 How are you gonna tell real hip hop pioneers who were there since day 1 that they're wrong?? The nerve if you culture vultures, so disrespectful smh
@@jerrygraves6531 I didn't say they did but they were definitely in da room and who gives a fuck if they were never in a da room. I still got a million reasons to be proud either way plus I didn't say it Busta Ryhmes said it
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
I’m making a 2020 mini doc so it can wake people’s heads up again. Not an actual doc but a mini compilation of important clips talking about Puerto Rican’s in hip hop to get people in tune again.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
@@nycricanpapi I'm not from New York City however I would tell you guys in New York to not give up and lose hope. The best thing you can do at this stage is to come for those children of the people who've been genderifying modern New York. Y'all been willing to turn those youngsters out into accepting that it was Puerto Ricans and black Americans in West Indian blacks who started Hip Hop. That's where y'all can do is just to force the information on people regardless if they want to hear it or not. It's your city and it's y'all's legacy and y'all need to start fighting back and force these gen z hipsters how things really are
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Yea, ya'll Caribbean's can have Busta...As you can see, in four years ain't nobody Black in Hip-Hop came to co-sign his FALSE statements. Don't get it twisted I got love for ricans and the caribbean, but like ya'll say "I no Black" and I believe you.....one
Lol…man these interracial sexual access buck dancers will sell their own mother down the river for a non black person to pat them on the head and PRETEND to like them.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Hip-Hop isn't a genre of music...it's a 1970s Bronx subculture that died out in the early 80s. Rapping/Rap was a part of Black American society DECADES before the Hip-Hop movement existed.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Hip Hop is elements of JAZZ, FUNK, BLUES and RAPPING.....All BLACK AMERICAN Genres of Music. Everyone else participated , but they weren't the founders. Stop trying to steal BLACK AMERICAN culture.
That is the absolute truth! Waaaay back in the 1970's you had The Grand Wizard Theodore and the Fantastic Five MC's: Master Rob, his brother Kevi-Kev, Dota Rock, Whipper Whip and Ruby Dee. The real name of Ruby Dee was Ruben Diaz. Ruby Dee was Puerto Rican. Whipper Whip was also of Puerto Rican influence. Then you had the Fearless Four MC's which had two DJ's. The DJ's were OC and Crazy Eddie. Crazy Eddie was Puerto Rican. The four MC's were DLB, Mike Cee, Tito (Tito was also Puerto Rican besides Crazy Eddie), and finally Peso. You had Puerto Rican Zulu Nation members as well. Lisa Lee and The Cult Jam were also an active group in the 80's. Along side Wendy Williams (until they had their personal beef) there was radio personality Angie Martinez. She also was Puerto Rican. Of the Cold Crush Four (later the Cold Crush Brothers) there was DJ Tony Tone and DJ Charlie Chase whom was Puerto Rican. IT STARTED IN NEW YORK CITY AND BLACK AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICANS WERE THE TWO DOMINANT HOOD GROUPS, AND NEARLY THE ONLY HOOD GROUPS THAT EXISTED THEN. Busta Rhymes is absolutely correct! He should have done Gettin Wild Tonight as he made the song with Rampage...
Crazy Eddie is BLACK AMERICAN I know him from around my way(homies), as I know Tito(we went to Brandies H.S.) I know Kool Moe Dee, L.A. Sunshine, Mike C, all from the same hood! The Goat MELLE MEL, The Cold Crush 4/Brothers was rocking before the fearless 4. Grandmaster Caz( Casanova Fly), I know Prince Whipper Whip, Mean Gene of the L.brothers who is Grand Wizard Theodores Brother Facts! I'm a first generation MC of the Payback Crew out of the Bronx(Where KRS-1 did My Philosophy video, I was 8 when I lived over there, 24 when that video dropped) and out of Harlem. There was no black and Latino coalition! Latinos got down later! Charlie Chase explains it well in his interview and you can't name a Puerto Rican DJ before him(Caz put him down with Cold Crush, Tony tone is Blk American)! Between Ruby Dee or Whip were the first Puerto Ricans to pick up a Mic then came Tito, Facts! Tito and Ruby Dee use to say the same Rhyme that proves who started Hip Hop; " you might think I'm *BLACK* by the way I'm speaking, but let me tell you something I'm Puerto Rican"! Both Ruby and Tito said this same rhyme, Facts. We was banging on the lunch room table when I first heard Tito rock it, then heard Ruby said it on a tape! There was No Latinos Down with Hip Hop before '77, if so Name 'em! Crazy Legs got down with Jimmy Dee and Jimmy Lee of Rock Steady Crew, other Puerto Ricans followed them! Name one song that Puerto Ricans started break dancing too? I'll give 20+ B-Boying Beats that a Puerto Rican wouldn't know about, but we were B-Boying to these Beats and know the name and artist! I never seen a Latino or Jamaican in The Disco Fever, The Renaissance(The Reny), The Audubon Ballroom, The T-Connection, Harlem World, ect. Unless they were down with a crew performing(Fantastic, Coldcrush, or Fearless)! Break Dancing wasn't the only Dance of Hip Hop! We had The Freak, The Rock, Patti Duke, The Spank, later came the Animals, we even CREATED a dance in Harlem called the "WEBO"(hence the Spanish name)! I know this Fact because me and my homie Mark worked at a buttons and novelty company, Mark (Blk American) made the first ever Webo Belt! We gave it that Latin name to match the Dance, and I still got pictures. Back in '75 Van McCoy dropped a song called "Do the Hustle' a Black American Dance as well. The Latinos bite that and came out with the Latin Hustle, we didn't say nothing about it, then took the same dance added a little waist twist to it then called it Salsa FACTS! Check the dance you'll see! We came out with the Dougie, tootsie Roll, The Harlem Shake, ect. And Puerto Ricans are still breakdancing??? Nothing New??? We all lived in the same hood, why aren't Blk Americans speaking fluid Spanish doing salsa, Merengue or anything pertaining to Latino or Caribbean culture? Because we respect that it's not ours! Why can't these other groups do the same, respect what's not yours! Busta was "Not" around, wasn't even born then, he's confused. First he says it was Jamaicans, then he says Puerto Ricans, now it's Puerto Ricans and Blks! Dude don't know! No offense to my Latin homies, they know I speak Facts! Peace!
@@gregcooper5672 You won't get any argument from me, and thanks for the corrections. Just two things. 1) There is the contemporary White supremacists group "The Boogaloo Boys". Strange that they would name their group after a Puerto Rican dance. Do you remember when that dance came out? And 2) It'd be good if you went over to the UA-cam channel of 'Sabir Bey', and try to convince him to stop spreading so much misinformation. Peace!
@@doubleutee8867 Thanks Fam.! I am familiar with the Wyt group called the boogalooo boys also the dance. However, the Dance was created in Chicago in the early '60, by Blk Americans! "Boogalooo"- -Sam Solomon was said to have created it, Oakland had William Penguin Randolph of the "BLACK RESURGENTS" a street dance crew also in '64-65! The Electric Boogie also a Black creation(samething basically)! They (The Black Resurgents challenge the the Wyt supremacists group about the name Boogalooo Boys)! James Brown brought it to stage in 1964, "NOT" Puerto Ricans! The Puerto Ricans are still trying to hit us up,?? this is what happens when you put different ethnic groups in the same community ; "I create something over here, somebody see it, then take it over there and say they started it because "over there" never seen what took place "over here"! I'm still here in NYC, I'm pushing 60 years, but don't look it(staying in shape), my homie who became the King of Harlem "Boogalou/Gangster Lou" not a Dancer, but just to give you an idea what group of people use these words! Puerto Ricans have a strong pride and they have their culture from their country, they didn't loose anything coming to America, neither did any other people who came to America, they all kept their culture So, why not give your creations "LATIN NAMES ", Jamaican Names, this will kill the confusion! The names of all things in Hip Hop is of BLK American slang, our broken language! It was KEEF COWBOY(BLK American) who "FIRST" uttered the phrase "HIP HOP" FACTS!" HIP HOP AND DON'T STOP, TAKE A LOOK AT YOUR ARM AND CHECK YOUR CLOCK!!! Swag, goes way back in the Blk community, our term, everything was done "FLY" is why we have those who try to bite and rewrite that Flyness to say they CREATED it, if they can't get away with saying that they created it, then they'll say we "HELPED" created it, we had "INFLUENCED" in it, or there was a "COALITION',(wtf), where did all th!is justification come from, Just to be included??? They got Down later even after calling it that N-word Music Facts! If you was good, we put you down with the crew! That's why it wasn't that many Latinos or Jamaicans down in the beginning of Hip Hop,Facts! None before '77 and I can name/count all of them on one hand! Again No Offense to them, just Facts! Peace!(pardon the long Writing)!
@@gregcooper5672 You're a little older than I am. Waaay back when I was young growing up in the 70's, we were break dancing back then. I loved rap music so much. Then one day my older brother brought home a mixed cassette of DJ Jazzy Jay with Mr. Freeze (RIP), Master Ice, and Master Bee (RIP) rhyming to it.I ran that tape nearly everyday. I ran that tape so much the neighbor came outside, and said that's all I play. At that time, the group was in a transitioning period (Mr. Freeze spoke about Charlie Choo on the microphone, and another MC that left the group. I can't remember his name. Either he or Charlie Choo started college). AJ Les & Master Dee was not yet down. Maaaaannnn Mr, Freeze could rhyme!!! Wow! I was just mesmerized! He became my favorite Rapper back then. Because of him alone I was a Jazzy Five fan first and foremost. At that young age, in my mind, Soundview Houses was like a fantastic fantasy land. "Mr.Freeze is alias Chuuuuucky! Cause I'm the M-R-F-R the Double E-Z-E, Mr. Freeze is alias Chuuucky!" Jazzy Jay knew how to time that just PERFECT!!! He became my favorite DJ. At that time Brooklyn didn't really have anyone. I believe Queens had Kurtis Blow. Was Love Bug Starski from Queens? Busy Bee Starsky & Kool DJ AJ was from the Bronx. Staten Island had Force MC's (before they became Force MD's). Wait! Interestingly enough, Brooklyn may have birthed the first White act. Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't at least two of the Beasty Boys come outta Brooklyn (including their DJ)? Eric B and Rakim didn't come til the 80's. As I got older, and the 70's act was on the wane, my favorite 80's act emerged as Public Enemy. When the 90's came around it was Wu Tang Clan. After Wu Tang things weren't the same into the 2000's era til now. Don't get me wrong, I loved a LOT of other groups in those respective eras. In the latter 70's, Sha-Rock was incredible. Her voice and flow alone caught anyone's attention. With Cosmic Force and Soul Sonic Force, Lisa Lee was the thing. Master Don and the Def Committee finally brought along Pebblee-Poo, and as a female who could rhyme, for me at that time, she completed the trio. Mercedes Ladies was Theodore's answer (And the Fantastic Five's) for the women thing, but personally they never moved me. There was Wanda Dee & Debbie Dee but I was less familiar with their style. The Boogie Down Bronx was first, and Money Makin' Manhattan was second: The Treacherous Three were legendary with that fast rapping style, and the Fearless Four reminded me of a knock off of them. I loved "Rockin It". There was this tape of Tito and Peso rhymin' at Harlem World and they killed it without DLB and Mike Cee (who couldn't make it). There was the mighty Crash Crew (I like that name... Haha!). Jeckle & Hyde. Was DJ Spivey their DJ? There was Ravon and Johnny Wa of the Magnificent 7. I REMEMBER ALL OF THAT! I remember the infamous jumping of Ski-Jump in East Harlem by the Puerto Rican gang, The Down Boys. I once read in the 70"s, Cigar Mob would protect better known crews performing in Manhattan, while Zulu Nation would protect better known groups in the Bronx. Eventually, Cigar Mob broke up and Zulu would enlarge, but in my mind the most powerful Zulu in NYC was in the latter 70's (and possible early 80's. I am familiar with a previous Zulu - Latin Kings showdown, but ZULU was much smaller by then, and I believe that was localized to the Bronx only in the early to mid 90's(?)). Anyway, thanks for getting back to me. Crazy reminiscing! NYC was so different back then. I miss it so much. America is something else nowadays. Some Black women complained that Black men were voting for Trump in the past. Black men didn't vote for Trump cause they liked him. They wanted to use Trump's racism as the only tool they knew to stop the gentrification, because they saw the things we once enjoyed (including jobs) under threat. . I miss the 90's R&B music too. I loved the music of that era, and even before then. O' well... Whacha gonna do? Thanks for the feedback. Lastly, I took a DNA test. I had 3 genetic groups. Two are Black American & one is Puerto Rican. But, that Puerto Rican genetic group came as a shock to me, cause I never knew anything about it. That was about two years ago. So, it's still new for me. Anyway, Peace!
Yo, you said the cigar Mobb,,💯🔥! You Took me Back on that! You know some sh!+💪🏿! Master Don(R.I.P) and the Death Committee, they had Peebely Poo from the start, with my big homie Gangster Boo! My first inside Jam was in '77, me and my brother helped carry DJ Easy Lee equipment to "RANDY'S" place(Harlem, also rocking there was DJ B-Fats, and DJ Crazy Eddie, he was Rocking with DJ Easy Lee before the Fearless 4)! I was going to Rock with the Fearless 4, but stayed with my Crew The Payback Crew! While at DJ Lee's Crib, I saw a brother sitting on the floor reading off a piece of paper to himself. I didn't know who he was at the time, but when we got to Randy's Place, I soon found out who dude was! DJ B-Fats Crew rocked first, they had The "ECHO CHAMBER"(REMEMBER THAT)? DJ Easy Lee didn't have one, and this is when I found out who dude was reading off a piece of paper. It was the young "MC KOOL MOE DEE"! This is before The Treacherous 3 although L.A Shine was there. Without the Echo Chamber, Moe Dee straight up Flatlined the whole show🔥🔥! To me, Kool Moe Dee is the father of Spoony G, Treacherous, and The Fearless 4. All of them is from out of Grant and Manhattanville PJs and on Convent Ave., in Harlem! Kurtis Blow out of Harlem/Bronx, "NOT" queens. The Ladies was; Sha Rock Mercedes Ladies, Sequence, Missy Dee, and the ones you named! Me my homie Ike, Melle Mel and two of his homies(can't remember their name), we Jumped the line to see the first show of(Star Wars)Return of the Jedi! Still got pictures of me with the leather gear😂😂(never again)! True story, someone of whom people call hip hop greats back then, bit off MY style had The shades before Moe Dee, Fearless 4 album cover got my Whole red leather out fit, I still got the flicks for proof. My crew did a house party in Hollis Queens Back in '81 me and one of my MC partners, we both had on the "Black Fedora Hats" about a year later, Run DMC came out(True Story)! I'm Cool Cooper G, aka The Rock Coop gee! The Payback Crew, We got a single on YT somewhere! No doubt big homie, you are on point with most of this, I don't get paid for speaking, so I "DON'T" have no agenda to spread BS info. I speak all Facts as well as I know it! Man you took me back, I can address alot of your questions but I'll be typing for days 😅! However, it's been official sharing knowledge, straight up humble dialogue! Much Respect💯👊🏿! Peace!
I almost lost my life to my own kind in Brooklyn ENY “ricans” and my black and rican friends got suited and booted for me so us NYC do it different, I would kill and die for my black homie
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
TELL IT!!! PROUD BORICUA RIGHT HERE🇵🇷💯🙌🏼 HE'S SPEAKING FACTS!!! BORN IN & RAISED IN THE BRONX!!! HIP-HOP WAS BORN RIGHT IN FRONT OF MY FACE. DJ PARTIES OUTSIDE IN THE PARK WAS NORMAL. B-BOYS, B-GIRLS BREAK DANCING UPROCKING. HERE & IN PR. AND THE LIST GOES ON.
Puerto Ricans and Dominicans: " Me no black, no no no no. Me Hispanic pappy" Who are the creators of hip-hop? Puerto Ricans and Dominicans: " Ok ok poppy me black me black"
Spliff 🇹🇹 Busta Rhymes 🇯🇲 carribean we run hip-hop 🇵🇷🇩🇴🇭🇹 🏝🏝🏝🏝🎤🎧🎶🎵🎛🎚👑Hip-Hop began as an expression of poverty- stricken inner city minority youths who grew up during the 1960s and 1970s. It is a musical form that incorporates a shared, lived urban experience that revolved around music-rhyming and dancing; often makes a social statement against the harsh realities they must deal with on a daily basis; and graffiti. While African Americans concentrated on serving as disc jockeys and master of ceremonies, Puerto Ricans and other Latino Caribbeans contributed heavily to the hip hop aspects of break dancing and graffiti (6)Although it is widely acknowledged that hip-hop began in the early 1970s in the South Bronx, New York, the mainstream media view it as an African American cultural expression. African American tend to view it as exclusively their own, and even Puerto Ricans and other Latinos tend to view it as "black" music. However, its birth and development were a joint creative effort of African American and Latino Afro Caribbean youngsters, particularly, Puerto Ricans. Some researches have suggested that Puerto Ricans' significant role has often been overlooked due to the lack of knowledge concerning Puerto Ricans in general, their small population in comparison to African American throughout the Unites States, and their relatively recent arrival, as opposed to the long history of African Americans in the US. is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.South Bronx is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.Often, when people here Hip-Hop they associate it with only African-Americans. However, Hip-Hop is actually the combination of West Indian, Puerto Rican, Blacks of New York. Hip-Hop has always been open to a diverse audience, and thus is not limited to one specific group. DJing started in Jamaica, where the artist would mix and scratch music with repetitive phrases mixed it. In Jamaica, and in many area of the West Indies, music is used as important as politics. Music was used to express the voice of the citizens. Political parties themselves used the musics of DJs to represent their positions. As people from the West Indies moved into New York and specifically the Bronx, they began to incorporate their values of music as a form as expression. When the West Indians began to live with the Puerto Ricans and African Americans of the South Bronx, their art of music mixed in with the rapping and rhyming of the people living there. Hip-Hop began to include in general, Rapping, DJing, Graffiti and Break Dancing. DJ Kool Herc and other DJ from the West Indies, gaining popularity from their style of music, began to encourage the youth to get involved in the art of Hip-Hop. Soon some gangs began to focus their concentration on Hip-Hop rather than using violence to express their anger with the environment they were in. Afrika Bambaataa would find the Universal Zulu Movement, which was a gang that focused on Hip-Hop. What all the people involved in Hip-Hop do have in common is how the merge the struggles of every day life, and their environment into their various forms of art in a way that people facing similar difficulties can also relate. Hip-Hop then turns into a voice of all those New Yorkers, and even beyond, who are constantly trying to improve their lives in a difficult environment.
BS! Hip-hop is based and derived from Black American Culture. Hip-hop ain't nothing but remixed Funk and Soul Breaks and Jive Talk Black Americans been rapping on wax since the 1920s Stop it Latinos copied and emulated what Black Americans were already doing
@claudiakramer4516 u wouldn't know because u was born yesterday 🤣😂🤣😂 South Bronx is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.Often, when people here Hip-Hop they associate it with only African-Americans. However, Hip-Hop is actually the combination of West Indian, Puerto Rican, Blacks of New York. Hip-Hop has always been open to a diverse audience, and thus is not limited to one specific group. DJing started in Jamaica, where the artist would mix and scratch music with repetitive phrases mixed it. In Jamaica, and in many area of the West Indies, music is used as important as politics. Music was used to express the voice of the citizens. Political parties themselves used the musics of DJs to represent their positions. As people from the West Indies moved into New York and specifically the Bronx, they began to incorporate their values of music as a form as expression. When the West Indians began to live with the Puerto Ricans and African Americans of the South Bronx, their art of music mixed in with the rapping and rhyming of the people living there. Hip-Hop began to include in general, Rapping, DJing, Graffiti and Break Dancing. DJ Kool Herc and other DJ from the West Indies, gaining popularity from their style of music, began to encourage the youth to get involved in the art of Hip-Hop. Soon some gangs began to focus their concentration on Hip-Hop rather than using violence to express their anger with the environment they were in. Afrika Bambaataa would find the Universal Zulu Movement, which was a gang that focused on Hip-Hop. What all the people involved in Hip-Hop do have in common is how the merge the struggles of every day life, and their environment into their various forms of art in a way that people facing similar difficulties can also relate. Hip-Hop then turns into a voice of all those New Yorkers, and even beyond, who are constantly trying to improve their lives in a difficult environment.🇵🇷🇯🇲☝️💪👍👑
Jamaicans in Puerto Ricans did not create hip Hop foundational black Americans created hip hop with no influence from the Caribbean or Puerto ricans. This is a lie
Puerto Ricans didn't create Hip Hop, Freestyle, or Reggaeton. They picked all up after they were created. The first freestyle artists were Shannon and Jenny Burton. PR singers came after them, just check the timestamps on the songs. Same wit Reggaeton. PRs came on the scene in the late 70s/80s when Hip Hop got popular. And many PR rappers portrayed themselves as Light Skin Black Americans to gain acceptance.
No that's false, Your people had absolutely nothing to do with the creation of hip hop and freestyle and rapping goes back even further than what you're babbling about. Real facts lol
ok look for the cold cruch brothers the puertorican charlie chasse n tony tone 1975 look for the History puertorican n nuyorican in hip hop magazine prince whippers whip Ruby D Richard crazy legs colon Receives culture Award 31 st Hispanic Heritage the best brekedance end the world n 1977 charlie chasse wiht the cold cruchs brothers mix the rap with salsa and more
@@blackrevolutionary1819 you stand alone cuz you choose to stand alone. You ignore Puerto Ricans part in standing with Black Americans when I'm here trying to tell you that you're not alone brother. We've always been there, if you was from NY you would know that. Hip hop was created to represent our unity and freedom. It was a way for us seperate to sperate form the Ghettos and better ourselves and our souls. I'm from the BX, I was schooled on this culture since birth. It's my culture, black people down south tend to think that they're alone in the world, that's what the racist white man wants ya to think. That's how they oppress us all, they seperate us. Why you think they only advertise police brutality against blacks?? My uncle was Puerto Rican with white skin and he was killed the same way as the blacks they show on TV, it didn't make the news cuz he' wasn't black. It's a whole strategy to keep us seperate and ya Alone. You letting them while I'm fighting them with truth and Factz. Open your mind young black man, black Americans in NY sends you that message. You're not alone buddy, pay attention to what I'm telling you.
@@blackrevolutionary1819 Puerto Ricans have always been with the blacks, we're the same in culture and spirit (hence to the creation of hip hop) even the Young lords party stood with black Panthers fighting for equality. They was very political for all equality. We fought for the rights of Spanish people and they too turned on us with racism because we're Americans and we chill with the blacks in the ghettos. The Ghetto brothers was very political. We was all over back then along with blacks and Caribbean, helping each other with survival till this day. We fight for each other, fight together, stand together and fall together. That's the world I grew up on, not down south where its only blacks, Mexicans and whites. I grew up in NY, the influence of the world. NY changed THE WORLD, The BX more specifically. The Puerto Ricans, islanders and black Americans changed the world for the greater God together even turned the word nigg@ into a positive slang use, why are you going against that?? That's unity. That's MLK JRd dream. You down south Black better get with time and realize ya not alone in this world before the whites pushes you further into this modern slave mentality. They got you fooled. I got you schooled if you pay attention. I'm Puerto Rican brother, I'll always look out for my people, blacks are my people too.
Hip-Hop is Black American, that’s its foundation, no one else, nothing else. Point blank period. Came from the south, migrated to many other parts of America.
No difference between Ricans and Blacks , we are one , Puerto Rican’s are made from Taina, Black , and Indian mix, NY my HT and we stay close to our brothers
You forget Spaniards. Most Puerto Rican´s are from Spaniard descent. Actually Puerto Rico was build mostly on Basques and people from the Canary Island. Africans and Tainos are a minority.
Again, people in Puerto Rico do not practice that kind of separatism. No one is just going to separate from people just because of a difference in skin complexion or ethnicity. Puerto Rico is not a race but it not just a nationality but it's also a cultural identity.
Man Lord Jamar got put in his place by Melle mel. Lord jamar's just some fake bougie type that wants to rewrite history just because he thinks he's blacker than black.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture. Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC. Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY. No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
@@arrellehnisrael8229 dude stop trying to project your brand of supremacy on people. Every major old school hip hop pioneer acknowledges this including folk like Busta rhymes. I bet you you're not even from New York so why are you even talking on this? This fake gatekeeping of a history you don't even know about is getting old and and sad And for your information dude you can't sit here and try to distort facts like no PR came in till the 80s. Neither here nor there. First of all Puerto Ricans have been in New York City prior to that point in hip Hop for for generations already & had already established a huge cultural foundation of modern New York City. You cannot sit here and tell people with a straight face that Puerto Ricans didn't have prior involvement with some aspects of what is now recognized as complementarily black music and culture. We already had our own forms of music like salsa music, bomba and plana, in other traditional sounding music that was common prior to hip hop's birth. Just because some people or many people within the Old guard generation held their views or prejudices does not mean that that disqualifies anybody from being recognized. Black people in other parts of the country like the South Midwest or California didn't even fully embrace hip hop like that till the late 80s. Just because you sit here and Yap your mouth about about your fake interpretation does not mean that it becomes the truth. At the end of the day unless you're actually from New York City and from the South Bronx, you have no business trying to tell people who started what and trying to exclude others just because you have a prejudice No one's saying that black people didn't invent hip Hop. But you keep on trying to erase an entire group from the history books just because you have a prejudice or a gross. Nobody's stealing hip hop from anybody's
@@arrellehnisrael8229 at least the 4th of the rappers coming out of New York nowadays come from either some Latin ancestry or mix ancestry where they have at least one parent of Hispanic descent whether it be Dominican Puerto Rican and with the case of pop smoke who who got killed he had a Panamanian parent. So stop with this fake gatekeeper in
@@ricanredru4760 I was THERE. I'm still here. NO PUERTO RICANS were at HERC'S PARTIES. NO PUERTO RICANS WERE BREAK DANCING AT HERC'S PARTIES because BREAK DANCING was about POPPING and POPPING evolved from POP LOCKING and POP LOCKING evolved from THE ROBOT and if PUERTO RICANS WEREN'T DOING THOSE DANCES which were part of the evolution... HOW can they just come in at the end of it and get credit. BUSTER and all those other artists are bound by the same LIE that WHITE PEOPLE are BOUND TO when THEY LIE ABOUT THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. Its all about ERASING TRUTH. Once you can erase the truth YOU CAN CREATE ANY NARRATIVE. I have no beef with you personally nor anyone taking pride in this lie. I just think TRUTH is more important than uniting over a LIE. I want peace between American Blkpeople, and Caribbean but not unity over a LIE. BUSTA RHYMES is ill informed. But their is a machine behind him pushing this lie and it will get serious pushback soon.
Proud Black Boricua right here 🇵🇷
EVERY Boricua is black...✍🏼
@@jaxieltorres8247 not true I’m boricua and my fam is white straight blonde hair blue eyes etc … all boricua don’t have black blood in fact most barely have any anymore …. Slaves were dropped off over a century ago and there were already people existing on island before Africans were taken there ….. don’t spread false info SOME have black blood not most and not all .
@@goddessboricuaa1313 every puertorriqueño is taino,african and spanish doesnt matter the skin color.... learn your history ✍🏼 and stop the ignorance
@@goddessboricuaa1313 to be Boricua you have to be born and raised in PR...seems to me like youre a gringa
@@jaxieltorres8247 I’m born in isabela PR don’t tell me what I am ……. I AM Puerto Rican 💯 in fact I’m more boricua than anything my point is most of us don’t have black blood or a SIGNIFICANT amount on average Puerto Rican’s are between 60 - 80 % European 10% or less African NOW African blood in Puerto Rico went down by 80% I’m not saying we’re not mixed up is Puerto Rican’s have a mixture of European taino African middle eastern and Asian blood mixed together . But I doubt you’re a Puerto Rican talking like that probably a black person or a Mexican pretending to be one of us like the rest of them we don’t say “gringa” you obviously are a Mexican ……..
Don’t get it twisted, Black Americans and Ricans are very tight in NYC among other states.
Thank you i'm from the south bronx, and black and Ricans always been together
Facts 💯
Facts
True because Puerto Rican people are coolest Hispanics, I'm Nuyorican i can go to any neighborhood in NYc and have no issues.
@@swiffcashthor You must not be familiar with how the bloods formed in rikers island in nyc.Have Blacks and latins been cool to co exist?Sure but brothers isnt a term I would use to describe our relationship.
Puerto Rican’s are the few if not only ethnic group In Latin America that embraces their African heritage . They don’t deny their roots They are aware of who they are without bashing everyone else . The culture and people are beautiful . Salute to the pioneers
Is it? but they still talk about "mejorar la raza"
Big facts of life no one can trick me with this false narrative we ne a yt debate
Pandora Pina never heard a puerto rican say that .. we dont even say “raza” lol thats a saying mexicans and central americans say ..
nos victurium um no
nos victurium ok a song ... we don’t go all day talking about “mejorar la raza” .. thats not something we say.. we don’t reject “blacks” just for being black pa “mejorar la raza”
Man that’s dope af. Hip-hop man. A powerful force created from raw nothingness in a time when two peoples were being beaten down into the dirt and forced out of their neighborhoods with gentrification induced fires and extreme poverty that created incredible violence. Out of all that pain two peoples vibed together and created something beautiful that has grown to captivate the entire world. Thanks Bus for lettin me know.
Blondie started rap she white
Rap started 1980......before that don't matter cause there no dialogue it's all here say..let's leave herssy out go with facts Blondie first rapper
WOOOOOO WWWWWEEEEEEPPPPPAAAAAA 🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷
FACTS! This man brought a tear to my eyes! ✊🏽🇵🇷🔥
Africa Bambataa Said The Same Thing,The First Grafetti Artist And Breakdancers We're Puertorock
True⭐🌙
whats the name of the first break dancer?
nah the first graffiti artist is Darryl McCray "Cornbread" and he was black. WHY ARE YOU LYING??
latino is not a race!!
when they say black people includes the afro-latinos.
Wrong! The first B-boys are the Legendary Twins and Graffiti art started in Philadelphia and the first Graffiti artists were African Americans.
Bro this is serious look at jazz look at rock look at hiphop when a partner of a different ethnic culture have a piece of power they want to lay claim
Wow Busta is the first rapper say that salutes my dude I'm glad he recognized that we did have some influence in hip-hop wepaaaaaa
th'at's not true hip hop is 100% black culture. Leave our culture alone
+Stockley Carmichael check your history and old footage ,
Stockley Carmichael do your research boy
@@stockleycarmichael8187 Africa Bambataa Said Puertorican Created Hip Hop ,Fuck Away
@@stockleycarmichael8187 it's not your culture, it's our culture. Did you not just listened to Busta, someone that witnessed this great culture?? Why is it so hard for you to except?? Leave our culture alone. Stop trying to destroy it v
Blacks have always been family and I passed that on to my kids.
Thanks, fam
Yeah they family when hispanics have their hands out
@@nineballssj9 Exactly
HIP HOP originated in the Bronx, I'm Nuyorican from the Bronx, Tremont Ave. Grand Concourse baby.
Big facts. Fox st & 167th. Southern Blvd 🙌🏼
Puerto Rican’s never deny our African heritage. This is why we are as one when it comes to blacks. We grew up in the hood and share the same struggles. Thank God we grew up in the same hood and broke bread with our families together. I’m a 80’s kids and I’m humble to have share these experiences in the hood.
🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🎤🎧🎶🎵🎛🎚☝️✌️👍Hip-Hop began as an expression of poverty- stricken inner city minority youths who grew up during the 1960s and 1970s. It is a musical form that incorporates a shared, lived urban experience that revolved around music-rhyming and dancing; often makes a social statement against the harsh realities they must deal with on a daily basis; and graffiti. While African Americans concentrated on serving as disc jockeys and master of ceremonies, Puerto Ricans and other Latino Caribbeans contributed heavily to the hip hop aspects of break dancing and graffiti (6)Although it is widely acknowledged that hip-hop began in the early 1970s in the South Bronx, New York, the mainstream media view it as an African American cultural expression. African American tend to view it as exclusively their own, and even Puerto Ricans and other Latinos tend to view it as "black" music. However, its birth and development were a joint creative effort of African American and Latino Afro Caribbean youngsters, particularly, Puerto Ricans. Some researches have suggested that Puerto Ricans' significant role has often been overlooked due to the lack of knowledge concerning Puerto Ricans in general, their small population in comparison to African American throughout the Unites States, and their relatively recent arrival, as opposed to the long history of African Americans in the US.Puerto Ricans have played a fundamental role in the development of hip-hop since its inception in the early 1970’s. In those days they were primarily celebrated for their contributions to breakdancing and graffiti, but although their presence wasn’t as profound on the mic or in the DJ booth since day one there were definitely Ricans putting it down across all elements.
“I wanna remind everybody that may not know - how the origin of hip-hop was started. The origin of hip-hop was started by the power of Black and Puerto Rican people. In case you needed to be reminded,” Busta said to cheers from the Coliseo de Puerto Rico crowd. “A lot of motherf**kers wanna try to gentrify our culture. A lot of motherf**kers wanna try to act like they conveniently forget who fathered this s**t. Black people and Puerto Rican people together. We created the greatest culture in the f**king world and its called hip hop. Facts!”Puerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.Pumpkin was a legendary music producer, of Afro-Costa Rican/Afro-Panamanian descent, and known as the King of the Beat. Born Errol Eduardo Bedward, Pumpkin was right there at the beginning of hip-hop, working with OG artists such as Treacherous Three, Grandmaster Caz, Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde, and Spoonie Gee, from 1979 to 1984.Hip-Hop is one of the most vibrant products of the late 20th century youth culture. Now York Puerto Ricans have been key participants, as producers and consumers of the culture and hip-hop art forms since hip-hop's very beginning during the early 1970's in the South Bronx. We continue showcasing Latinx OGs who were pioneers of the hip-hop element of graffiti with Lee Quiñones. The legendary Nuyorican artist was part of a group of artists who created art on New York subway trains, and is considered to be “the single most influential artist to emerge from the New York City subway art movement.” Lee’s first subway piece was created in 1974 and in late 1975, he was asked to join the graffiti crew The Fabulous Five. The crew painted the only running 10-car subway train that was painted on from top to bottom, and from end to end. Quiñones’ work appeared in the iconic 1983 graffiti documentary, Style Wars, and since then, he was collaborated with several brands, including Adidas and Nike.Next on our list of Latinxs who were pioneers in the musical genere of hip-hop is the artist Tracy 168. Also known as Michael Tracy, the New York native is one of the pioneers of graffiti. He is credited with inventing the Wildstyle graffiti style (you’ve seen it before - it features overlapping and interlocked letters, arrows, and curves; all the detail often makes the words hard to read). Wild Style was also the name of the graffiti crew he founded, which also includes fellow Puerto Rican artist and graffiti pioneer Cope2. In addition to being one of the OG’s of graffiti, Tracy 168 also mentored some other major artists, such as SAMO, and Keith Haring.Errol Eduardo Bedward, known as Pumpkin was a musician, percussionist and band leader. He was renowned for being the one behind many break beats and hip hop tracks from 79' to 84' such as Spoonie Gee, Treacherous 3, Grandmaster Caz, Fearless Four, Funky 4, Dr Jeckyll & Mr HydeLatinos have virtually been erased, or at least consistently left out, of stories regarding the origins of hip-hop. But we were there! Hip-hop is made up of four elements: MCs/rappers, B-boys/B-girls, graffiti, and DJing. Did you know that a lot of the b-boys, or breakers (calling these talented dancers “breakdancers” or referring to the style as “breakdancing” is considered to be both inaccurate and passe), were Latinx (more often than not Puerto Rican)? Pioneering breaking crews such as the Rock Steady Crew and the New York City Breakers had Latinx members and founders.If you look up the history of Hip-hop music, there is always credit given to the African-American youth of the Boogie Down Bronx, who created the most popular genre in the world, out of nothing. They used their stories, life experiences, and their natural talent to create music which has since resonated with people all around the world. But it wouldn’t really be hip-hop without also giving credit to the other two POC groups who helped create the genre and seasoned it with their influence - Caribbeans and Latinos. is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.South Bronx is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.Often, when people here Hip-Hop they associate it with only African-Americans. However, Hip-Hop is actually the combination of West Indian, Puerto Rican, Blacks of New York. Hip-Hop has always been open to a diverse audience, and thus is not limited to one specific group. DJing started in Jamaica, where the artist would mix and scratch music with repetitive phrases mixed it. In Jamaica, and in many area of the West Indies, music is used as important as politics. Music was used to express the voice of the citizens. Political parties themselves used the musics of DJs to represent their positions. As people from the West Indies moved into New York and specifically the Bronx, they began to incorporate their values of music as a form as expression. When the West Indians began to live with the Puerto Ricans and African Americans of the South Bronx, their art of music mixed in with the rapping and rhyming of the people living there. Hip-Hop began to include in general, Rapping, DJing, Graffiti and Break Dancing. DJ Kool Herc and other DJ from the West Indies, gaining popularity from their style of music, began to encourage the youth to get involved in the art of Hip-Hop. Soon some gangs began to focus their concentration on Hip-Hop rather than using violence to express their anger with the environment they were in. Afrika Bambaataa would find the Universal Zulu Movement, which was a gang that focused on Hip-Hop. What all the people involved in Hip-Hop do have in common is how the merge the struggles of every day life, and their environment into their various forms of art in a way that people facing similar difficulties can also relate. Hip-Hop then turns into a voice of all those New Yorkers, and even beyond, who are constantly trying to improve their lives in a difficult environment.
Puñetaaaaaaaaa 🇵🇷🇵🇷
I'm from the south bronx, and black and Ricans always been put in the same hoods, or ghetto whatever you wanna call it.
Don't get it twisted anti blackness deep in the latinx community.
@Mixtape Central
?
@Mixtape Central
If you say so.
@Mixtape Central
Who came up with latinx?
PR ain't started shit
Thank you for this Busta! I school people all the time about this fact that Puerto Rican's dont get the credit that we deserve on Hip-Hop culture. We were the ones that birthed this beautiful culture Hip Hop along with our black brothers and sister's. And just in case you didn't know, we are of African descent too! Salud.
yall did not birth the culture you contribute it to it..Black people started hip hop (Kool Herc and Bambatta) and everyone else came in later
Oh please.hip hop was created in the bronx by west indians and puerto ricans and that is a fact.the majority of the people that are from the bronx are caribbean immigrants most of them from puerto rico and the DR.get over it
@@raissatang2126 To what?what do them being from the bronx have anything to do with creation??? type in "crazy legs and latinos say blacks invented breakdance"....they said it themselves that blacks created hip hop and the came in later...again you contributed to it not created
@Dunamis drama I know you were "there" you were there because you just so happened lived in the same communities at the time. What does have to do with creating something???
@@sterlingturner5318 again dude you need to stop projecting the stupid propaganda and trying to diminish the contributions of another community. Stop trying to segregate us from a culture that we were a part of regardless if we were the ones that invented it directly or we contribute to its gradual growth and influence
Busta Rhymes is Jamaican and DJ KOOL HERC is Jamaican, so SALUTE TO THE CARIBBEAN PEOPLE JAMAICA & PUERTO RICO for introducing HIP-HOP.
I'd say hip hop is 1/3 of each. Puerto Rican, jamaican and African American. Highlighting jamaican makes people clam up and try to rewrite history.
Hip Hop was started by African Americans And Puerto Ricans period. Jamaicans was there too but the other to started it.
@@silverskyscraper1179 "Clive Campbell
The first major hip-hop deejay was DJ Kool Herc (Clive Campbell), an 18-year-old immigrant who introduced the huge sound systems of his native Jamaica to inner-city parties. Using two turntables, he melded percussive fragments from older records with popular dance songs to create a continuous flow of music." - BRITANNICA.
@@silverskyscraper1179 I'm NOT discrediting African Americans for the OBVIOUS. Of Course majority of the people he was around, (introducing it to) are African Americans and Puerto Ricans because that's who majority of the population in The Bronx was. Wikipedia IS NOT A VALID SOURCE. They see ALL BLACKS AS AFRICAN AMERICAN (the uneducated that wrote it). I can go edit Wikipedia and say Chinese started Hip-Hop until a more educated person fixes it.
@@colorfulcodes I also highlighted Puerto Rico. Why do you only focus on Jamaican? Rewrite...Nobody til this very second is rewriting anything. DJ Kool Herc (a Jamaican ...NOTHING REWRITTEN) was the one that bought the sound to NY as an 18 year old immigrant. Puerto Ricans & African Americans bought the dances and lyrics. The EXACT same thing that was done in Jamaica many years prior to Hip-Hop, was the birth of Dancehall. Kool Herc only did what was already going on in his homeland to NY and it birthed Hip-Hop because it was under different circumstances.
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.
Whatba joke😂😂😂😂
Busta is saying this because you have to study the influence of Kool Herc. He was Jamaican. Read about him.
@@doubleutee8867 Dude stop trolling, the Kool Herc myth has been debunked all over the internet.
@@awesomeasever8370 I NEVER said Busta was correct, nor did I say I agreed with him. I indicated what I believe to be his reasoning and motivation for saying what he said. If Kool Herc never had an influence he would have become an unknown a long time ago. He was one early pioneer to be mentioned during the development of the technique, but did he exclusively begin the hip hop/rap culture as an early form of music and all it included? NO! I agree with you. There were many other hands/artists at play. I do feel he is going to receive all of this attention in Busta's mind, regardless of the accuracy or impact of KH's contribution, due to the stand out ethnic relationship between the two, and the desire of Busta to make things more prominent at the historical acknowledged ethnic affiliation of the two. The novel "Roots" by Alex Haley can be dubbed a fairy tale as well, but for some Alex Haley wrote a masterpiece, because he had the sense to twist things to make himself look good. In the minds of some, they get credit for an excellent lie that fooled the masses. Just go ask Trump and his supporters if you don't believe me.
@@awesomeasever8370 Benjy Melendez And The Ghetto Brothers.
I’m glad he set the record straight. I was there at 1520 Sedgwick Ave. when the birth of hip-hop began officially it has always been a black and Puerto Rican movement. Only years later, as it has swept through the globe that haters have begun to creep in and try to create another narrative. All the people that were there originally know the real deal. It was black innovation brought to the world by African-American, and Carribean (Jamaican & Puerto Ricans) kids from the Bronx. If you weren’t there from the start, please don’t try to school the rest of us who were. We know the real deal.
Love you busta rhymes, the OGs no the truth! 🇵🇷
@@ontario1411 hip-hop as a culture is more than rap
@@ontario1411 that has zero relevance to what I just said
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
@@ontario1411 he didnt do grafitti or djaying or breakdancing. sure he danced but he wasnt breakdancing, and even if he did, he still didnt invent djaying or grafitti.
Hip-hop is a black thing you wouldn't know nothing about that.
FACTS!!!! IF you truly knew hip hop culture, you'd know this. 🇵🇷
I really dont get it... the only latinos i saw in the beginning of hip hop were of african descent.
can somebody give me some sources?
Pandora Pina Puerto Rican isn’t a race, but it’s a culture that many of any color embraces. Watch my video on Puerto Rican rappers. Kevin Gates in an interview doesn’t like saying he’s Puerto Rican because black and other people will attack because Puerto Rican isn’t a “race” but if you are a fan of him, you listen to his songs and lyrics, especially how he names his songs, he fully embraces his Puerto Rican heritage 🇵🇷
@Unapologetically B1 Puerto Ricans are not mestizos, that doesn't exist in Puerto Rico, Puerto Ricans are tri racials, usually the majority been white blood then black blood and the the native american blood, mestizo is only White and native american blood which Puerto Ricans are not.. mexicans are mestizos! do you understand?
@Unapologetically B1 stfu meztizo is Caucasian and native american, Puerto Ricans are not Mestizos.. they are Tri Racial majority of Puerto Ricans are 70% European, 18% Black and 12% Native American.. the black Puerto Ricans ones are 60% Black, 30% European and 10% Native Americans..
@@Drilltales yep i am a Kevin gate fan and i know that it
Love u Bus tell em the truth take em to church. Been rocken with you since day 1. One of the best in the game.
Just if you don't know: Vico C was the first rapper who did rap in spanish!
Por si no sabes: Vico C fue el primer rapero en hacer rap en español!
Coriacka te equivocas mucho antes de que Vico empezara a rapear ya habian otros. Lo que sucede es que Vico lo hizo mejor y en el tiempo indicado. Luego de Vico quien hizo famoso el rap en PR, vini DY que en el 2004 logro hacer que el rap puertorriqueño/Reggaeton saliera del underground ak maintream y se hiciera parte cruciak de la cultura musical de PR fue DY.
Actually there were way more puertoricans that were first they were just not lucky enough to be exposed, they use to rap. Street rappers
el primer boricua fue prince whipper whip en español 1981 en ny
@@josequiles6278 Jose recuerda que de eso no hay video. The Mean Machine Rappers son los primeros en 1981 con disco y todo, pero quien formó el genero mundial, fue Vico.
@@CharlieP.R. the mean machine fue en el 80 prince whipper 81
That's hiphop history for real I was there to see that ...blacks and Latinos invented hiphop culture together in the ghettos of america
I really dont get it... the only latinos i saw in the beginning of hip hop were of african descent.
can somebody give me some sources?
@@pandoraworld7251 puertoricand are part of the african culture i have ancestors that are born in Kenya africa but are puertoricans. in New York hip hop was alwayz coming from puertoricans and blacks, puertoricans also started breakdancing and so on . Music is just in our blood.
@Unapologetically B1 If Busta Rhymes tells you, you don't have to go anywhere else to confirm that what he says is true, hahaha. I don't understand why you don't like to accept that Puerto Ricans were the majority along with blacks in the Bronx and together they created Hip Hop. And if you don't believe Busta, believe Spike Lee and Fat Joe who say exactly the same thing: "Hip Hop was created by blacks and Puerto Ricans".
GGs
@@pandoraworld7251 I wrote it out on here...
The Black Spades
Proud Puerto Rican here here, and love y’all black cuzzos
We're not cousins, Besides the majority of Y'all identifies as white anyway lol
@@blackrevolutionary1819 you a hater 🤣
@@blackrevolutionary1819 I can tell you're not from NY. You're those down south MFs that copies my city and culture
@@crespo7216 You're a vulture, FACTS🤣
@@blackrevolutionary1819 who told you that lie dude.
This is the 1920s anymore dude
Stop trying to make everything into a skin color and race war
Rap and Hip-Hop are both Black AmericanDOS creations, however they're two different things with different histories. Ninety nine percent of the time when people say Hip-Hop what they really mean is Rap, the "Hip-Hop" term needs to be fazed out when discussing music. Technically, Hip-Hop is a youth movement that was birthed in the Bronx and died there. The Hip-Hop term has been misused and thrown around loosely and inappropriately for decades, it's caused confusion and that's one of the reasons Rap doesn't have a proper standard history as a music genre. You don't associate the creation of Blues or Jazz with any type of separate youth or cultural movement so why would you do it with Rap?
fucking culture vulture
Caribbeans and Puerto Ricans did NOT create hip hop..this is a lie. We in America didn't do or create anything together. Didn't unite until the late 70's.
.......Which is exactly when Hip-hop evolved. But you forget when blacks, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, etc were getting down together at The Palladium in 50's doing the Mambo.
Your weird lies
@@blackavenger2437 is this referred to me?
@@visionarylast Must be, because I just spoke fact that can be easily verified...... Just sayin....
@@TRUTHTEACHER2007 how is my statement a lie? I know my ppl, we are some innovative beings that can get along with anyone. Everything that went into the creation of Hip hop is black American. We didn't get the drums from Puerto Ricans or any classified latino.We didn't dress, act, speak, style, dance nor sing like you. Most black folk don't even know too many Ricans. Black kids are always dancing, and innovating something random. They been rapping, tribal dances, hitting the floor, tapping. That's how we are. I feel like you're trying to take something that is not rightfully yours to claim. There is no lie in that - its what i know. Do you homie
Listen to the beginning of Apache and tell me Puerto Rican’s wasn’t involved. If you don’t know what Apache is don’t comment.
Even rappers delight you hear the cowbell the guiro and the maracas
Id actually want to know what do you mean hy apache? Legit educate me.
@@noneofyourbusiness1114 Apache is one of the original break beats that the B-boys use to get down to in the breaking circles.
The beat has the bongos driving the whole rythm.
I look at it like this if you not from nyc don't talk hip hop
I really dont get it... the only latinos i saw in the beginning of hip hop were of african descent.
can somebody give me some sources?
Atlease someone acknowledges this
🇵🇷
Because it's a lie
@@jerrygraves6531 Busta>>>>You
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Oh so this is what have the Black Americans knickers in a twist. They are saying to cancel Busta Rhymes and referencing his Jamaican origins. Well Tariq Nasheed has a film called microphone check, in which he disputes what Busta is saying and this will be interesting.
ok can i ask you fba people a simple question regarding about what you fba are claiming,
By claiming creation or invention , it should mean that FBA created or invented every art form element in Hip Hop which is Graffiti, Djing, Beakin and Mcing..
so now that you know the art form elements can you name me a single art for element adopted by Hip Hop that was created or invented by FBA ??
if you can name me one art element in Hip Hop that was invented by any FBA then i will accept that Hip Hop was created or invented by FBA and every other culture are the guest and the copycats of what fba created, but it needs to be proven that fba created or invented any art element in Hop Hop, which means that documented history should show that any of the art form was not created or invented before fba culture, because that is what creating and inventing means, that no other person or group had made nothing similar before it was created or invented ??
@@SLPGroundSoundMusicWHAT HAS A $PIC CREATED OR INVENTED IN THE LAST 500 YEARS??
@@SLPGroundSoundMusicALSO, WHO GIVES A FK ABOUT WHAT A THIRD WORLD FOREIGNER WILL ACCEPT? PUERTO RICANS HAD ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH THE CREATION OF HIP HOP! STAY MAD! WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT CHUMP?
Hip-Hop is a subculture not a genre of music, there was NEVER any music created in the Bronx. Rap/Rapping was already a part of Black American society before the Hip-Hop Movement existed. Many books, articles and documentaries contain false and misleading information. The people who've spread the most misinformation and caused confusion in the process are from Caribbean backgrounds; first in the early 1980s it was Afrika Bambaataa and the Universal Zulu Nation, then KRS-One and most recently Busta Rhymes. In the early 80s white corporations marketed "Rap" and "Hip-Hop" together using the terms interchangeably creating the false impression that they're one and the same and have the same history.
Stop it what language y'all speak white man who taught blacks English. White man. Why was rap invented white man treatment of blacks living conditions. Whites are all over two hip hop also oppression created hip hop rap..white southerners rairl road first rappers Ryming songs white southerners created rap Jews afro American Puerto Ricans took it to Jordan level. Then Dominican Panamanian Mexicans are the Kobe lebron d wade of rap music .what's 6.9.nine Puerto Rican Mexican ..who sand do it properly... Hello. 2 Puerto Rican a black man & a DominicaN...
We all (Bl Ams and Caribbean folks,) adopted rap from Africa... The roots of the rap element can be traced back to post-colonial West Africa and the Griot tradition. In fact Afrika Bambaataa calls rap a postmodern GRIOT. A type of music of African origin in which rhythmic and usually rhyming speech is chanted to a musical accompaniment. NYC Hip Hop Pioneers gave it the name "rap." PRs rapped (chanted) in their very own Plena and Bomba Afro resistance music of the 1500s... One element; breakdancing in the Bronx was dominated by Nuyoricans, it began with the Nuyorican Boogaloo inspiration, Boogaloo music of the 1950s. James Brown used to Boogaloo during the 1960s... Mills Bros., adopted their dance moves from this African tradition... All began with the 1500s Afro-Brazilian Capoeira dance ritual that potentially influenced the development of break dancing, which emerged as part of the Hip Hop movement in New York City in the 1970s. There are documented troops that were in New York City during that period and there are numerous similarities between the two styles. Both focus in acrobatic movements, largely of the lower body, with the hands, and sometimes head used for stability. NYC Pioneers gave it the name; "breakdancing." Yet it's all African and the Caribbean folks embrace their African heritage the strongest.
Hip Hop is Bronx Resistance... It is a culture created by those that lived the poverty lines you cannot possibly ever imagine. Hip Hop was being shunned over and over, especially by Bl Am, Jamaican, and the PR elders... It was pathologically pummeled to the brink of nonbeing that Millions of Bronx residents were going through. It was a “movement” of the South Bronx... It was a cultural response to certain political, social, economic challenges that were facing the millions of people in the South Bronx who were being made invisible and abandoned by New York City’s government. Those of Carribbean bloodlines (PRs and Jamaicans,) created; "Hip Hop," with a Black American influence. Caribbean folks brought their African diaspora and Black Americans had theirs... Hip Hop is Funk, Electro, Disco, Toast, and Latin touch especially during the breaks... Funk is Electro and Jazz. A French man by the name of; Edgard Varese created "Electro-music." It was later upgraded in the US by another wh guy named; John Cage. The root of Jazz is Ragtime and Ragtime consists of the Piano which is from Italy, Banjo from "Africa," and the Fiddle is from Western Europe. Ragtime composers used a Polka beat from Europe and used Irish Melodies... Wyt folks' music’s roots lie in the ballads, folk songs, and popular songs of the English, Scots, and Irish settlers of the Appalachians, Folk, Polka, and Bluegrass.. Blues however, incorporated spiritual work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the African culture. Yet most Bl Ams would not admit to any affiliation to Africa. Take away the wyt folks' Country music; Folk, Polka, and Bluegrass music then what are Bl Ams left with? Same goes for Rock n Roll since Rock n Roll is all those genres mixed together to begin with... The percussion is from "Africa." If it wasn't for wyt folks, there wouldn't have been any Bl Am music... The trumpet is from Egypt, Saxaphone from Belgium, Trombone from Western Europe, Clarinet from Germany, Piano from Italy, Bass Guitar- Paul Tutmarc, first Electric Bass Guitar- Leo Fender... Both wh men. After mixing genres together to create Hip Hop, the Rolland Drum Machine was then used to create this unique music that became the Hip Hop genre on it's very own... This drum machine consists of Caribbean instruments. Point is; all Bl Am music was "derived" from wh folks' music and Hip Hop was "derived" from Bl Am music, European music, Caribbean music, and all the Hip Hop elements were created by Bronx residents of Caribbean bloodlines. There is not one Bl Am that created Hip Hop.
@@eachoneteachone8320 Obvious New York immigrant babble.
@@awesomeasever8370 Nuttin but facts. I'm Puerto Rican so no, we were never immigrants... PR is part of the US. I also fought for this country... Have you? You think this country is yours? Lol! Did you forget how your family got here? Mine got here by choice. Got your feelings hurt? I kinda thought we can carry this intelligently but I see now what I'm dealing with... .
@@awesomeasever8370 Give us all a name of a Bl Am that created Hip Hop, just One name is all I ask for. You know nothing of MY Hip Hop culture, ya just copy us.
Thank you! Busta Rhymes 🇵🇷 ❤️ 🔥
Unapologetically B1 it's seriously hurts
He's been G-checked numerous times over spreading misinformation, Your people had absolutely nothing to do with the creation of HIP HOP and those are real facts.
@@blackrevolutionary1819 don't lie to the people with your ignorance. It's 2022, nobody believes those lies anymore. It was proved wrong already. BUSTA was proven right and no one had shyat to say about the factz he presented. You're in denial
Country @$$ MFs think they know about BX NY culture 🤣
This is the biggest lie why everybody keep coming from us. Black Americans.
You're not from NY are you?
Dicho por uno de los diros.. los fundadores del hip hop fueron los morenos y los boricuas.. cuantos estan mordidos ?
I really dont get it... the only latinos i saw in the beginning of hip hop were of african descent.
can somebody give me some sources?
DJing since 74' & with DJ Kool Herc , he's right... Busta is the man...
'Alot mf try 2 gentrified our culture"
Da Foundation is black n P.R. ppls"
.......... Hip Hop💯
No the foundation is exclusively BLACK AMERICAN, Ya'll need to stop leeching off of us wmh
@@blackrevolutionary1819 you need to stop spreading false information while we're trying to fight for the truth. You're going against our culture. Educate yourself on this topic for real because you're going to see the truth come out more and more.
@@crespo7216 There's alot of truth coming from the black spades of the Bronx and they're telling the world that hip hop is Black American culture 💯
@@blackrevolutionary1819 the black spades of the Bronx are highly mistaken. There's allot of truth that comes from Black Americans from the Bronx and NY period saying that it's not a black culture, that Puerto Ricans and Caribbeans are just as responsible for the creation. You never learned this till now, be open to the new information you're recieving and you'll love the culture just as much as I do. Stay in denial and you'll get left behind in ignorance While your brothers and sisters of all colors enjoy the culture that the New York Gangz birthed. You think only black Americans was in gangz?? Ya was trying to move like the mob when the Puerto Ricans came savagely to the ghettos after 1917. From then on, the streets got ghetto. The black Americans saw the Puerto Ricans with afros and gang vests killing these so called big time made men in front of everyone like cowboys and respected that shyat, they loved it. They started doing the same and shyat got ghetto but real. Amongst these black and Puerto Rican gangz was a group that started mixing different genre in records on turntables and put words with it. After that everyone in NY fell in love with it and helped make it as big as it is today. Prove me wrong.
@@crespo7216 How are you gonna tell real hip hop pioneers who were there since day 1 that they're wrong?? The nerve if you culture vultures, so disrespectful smh
2:15 Puertorricans are gorgeous 😍😍😍😍 Linda mi bandera Linda mi gente
Another reason of being proud of ny race....🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷
Puerto Ricans not a race though lol
And Puerto Ricans didn't create hip hop though
@@aggravatedman7912 lol a Puerto recan must of fucked yo girl at one point t
@@jerrygraves6531 I didn't say they did but they were definitely in da room and who gives a fuck if they were never in a da room. I still got a million reasons to be proud either way plus I didn't say it Busta Ryhmes said it
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Black and cuban here
WEPAAAA!!! on another topic busta rhymes is one of the greatest hands down!!! I'll lyricist!
Yes!
Look for a documentary ' From Mambo to Hip-hop.'
I’m making a 2020 mini doc so it can wake people’s heads up again. Not an actual doc but a mini compilation of important clips talking about Puerto Rican’s in hip hop to get people in tune again.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
I miss when NY was mostly African American and Puerto Ricans...
Me too
Me too
Me too. It changed now..
@@nycricanpapi I'm not from New York City however I would tell you guys in New York to not give up and lose hope.
The best thing you can do at this stage is to come for those children of the people who've been genderifying modern New York.
Y'all been willing to turn those youngsters out into accepting that it was Puerto Ricans and black Americans in West Indian blacks who started Hip Hop.
That's where y'all can do is just to force the information on people regardless if they want to hear it or not.
It's your city and it's y'all's legacy and y'all need to start fighting back and force these gen z hipsters how things really are
Facts. It was ❤️🗽🇵🇷✊🏽✊🏿
Big Pun was the greatest, respect to Busta Rhymes🇵🇷💙🇺🇸 proud to be Puerto Rican.✊🏾
ok but who was the first who helped to create hip hop?
@@pandoraworld7251 blacks and Puerto Rican’s in the Bronx
Big Pun was kool but not the greatest
@@christopherstephens1129 he may not necessarily be the greatest rapper but he could definitely hang with biggie with lyricism
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Yea, ya'll Caribbean's can have Busta...As you can see, in four years ain't nobody Black in Hip-Hop came to co-sign his FALSE statements. Don't get it twisted I got love for ricans and the caribbean, but like ya'll say "I no Black" and I believe you.....one
Me no black poppy
🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷 I am Puerto Rican and black
Me to
What type of black? In Puerto Ricans didn't invent s***
Facts 🗽🇵🇷🇺🇸🇯🇲🗽
That’s garbage and trash !! Busta Rhymes been smoking too much loud and laying down with too many mestizos. Sit down!!! B1 ✊🏿
Lol…man these interracial sexual access buck dancers will sell their own mother down the river for a non black person to pat them on the head and PRETEND to like them.
I see this video and i get inspired a lot for keeping doing my music 🇵🇷
It's full of lies though
Look up the “Fat Boys” and Markie Dee🇵🇷🗽 will inspire you
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Ricans are not hip hop... it's not your culture.
@@BoricuaNyc Markie Dee is a PARTICIPANT... not a creator of the genre. 🤣
Hip-Hop isn't a genre of music...it's a 1970s Bronx subculture that died out in the early 80s. Rapping/Rap was a part of Black American society DECADES before the Hip-Hop movement existed.
Love Busta, he's 100% correct, I'm a Nuyorican from the south Bronx, grew up there in the 70's, I'm 63 yrs old now, still love Rap music.
He’s lying, hip hop is as African American creation. Puerto Rico doesn’t even have any cultural traditions that would lead to the creation of hip hop.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
Um a lot of these OGs were/are Puerto Rican. A lot of them also Half Puerto Rican. Tf you on.
Love Busta!! love hip hop
Hip Hop is elements of JAZZ, FUNK, BLUES and RAPPING.....All BLACK AMERICAN Genres of Music. Everyone else participated , but they weren't the founders. Stop trying to steal BLACK AMERICAN culture.
That is the absolute truth! Waaaay back in the 1970's you had The Grand Wizard Theodore and the Fantastic Five MC's: Master Rob, his brother Kevi-Kev, Dota Rock, Whipper Whip and Ruby Dee. The real name of Ruby Dee was Ruben Diaz. Ruby Dee was Puerto Rican. Whipper Whip was also of Puerto Rican influence. Then you had the Fearless Four MC's which had two DJ's. The DJ's were OC and Crazy Eddie. Crazy Eddie was Puerto Rican. The four MC's were DLB, Mike Cee, Tito (Tito was also Puerto Rican besides Crazy Eddie), and finally Peso. You had Puerto Rican Zulu Nation members as well. Lisa Lee and The Cult Jam were also an active group in the 80's. Along side Wendy Williams (until they had their personal beef) there was radio personality Angie Martinez. She also was Puerto Rican. Of the Cold Crush Four (later the Cold Crush Brothers) there was DJ Tony Tone and DJ Charlie Chase whom was Puerto Rican. IT STARTED IN NEW YORK CITY AND BLACK AMERICANS AND PUERTO RICANS WERE THE TWO DOMINANT HOOD GROUPS, AND NEARLY THE ONLY HOOD GROUPS THAT EXISTED THEN. Busta Rhymes is absolutely correct! He should have done Gettin Wild Tonight as he made the song with Rampage...
Crazy Eddie is BLACK AMERICAN I know him from around my way(homies), as I know Tito(we went to Brandies H.S.) I know Kool Moe Dee, L.A. Sunshine, Mike C, all from the same hood! The Goat MELLE MEL, The Cold Crush 4/Brothers was rocking before the fearless 4. Grandmaster Caz( Casanova Fly), I know Prince Whipper Whip, Mean Gene of the L.brothers who is Grand Wizard Theodores Brother Facts! I'm a first generation MC of the Payback Crew out of the Bronx(Where KRS-1 did My Philosophy video, I was 8 when I lived over there, 24 when that video dropped) and out of Harlem. There was no black and Latino coalition! Latinos got down later! Charlie Chase explains it well in his interview and you can't name a Puerto Rican DJ before him(Caz put him down with Cold Crush, Tony tone is Blk American)! Between Ruby Dee or Whip were the first Puerto Ricans to pick up a Mic then came Tito, Facts! Tito and Ruby Dee use to say the same Rhyme that proves who started Hip Hop; " you might think I'm *BLACK* by the way I'm speaking, but let me tell you something I'm Puerto Rican"! Both Ruby and Tito said this same rhyme, Facts. We was banging on the lunch room table when I first heard Tito rock it, then heard Ruby said it on a tape! There was No Latinos Down with Hip Hop before '77, if so Name 'em! Crazy Legs got down with Jimmy Dee and Jimmy Lee of Rock Steady Crew, other Puerto Ricans followed them! Name one song that Puerto Ricans started break dancing too? I'll give 20+ B-Boying Beats that a Puerto Rican wouldn't know about, but we were B-Boying to these Beats and know the name and artist! I never seen a Latino or Jamaican in The Disco Fever, The Renaissance(The Reny), The Audubon Ballroom, The T-Connection, Harlem World, ect. Unless they were down with a crew performing(Fantastic, Coldcrush, or Fearless)! Break Dancing wasn't the only Dance of Hip Hop! We had The Freak, The Rock, Patti Duke, The Spank, later came the Animals, we even CREATED a dance in Harlem called the "WEBO"(hence the Spanish name)! I know this Fact because me and my homie Mark worked at a buttons and novelty company, Mark (Blk American) made the first ever Webo Belt! We gave it that Latin name to match the Dance, and I still got pictures. Back in '75 Van McCoy dropped a song called "Do the Hustle' a Black American Dance as well. The Latinos bite that and came out with the Latin Hustle, we didn't say nothing about it, then took the same dance added a little waist twist to it then called it Salsa FACTS! Check the dance you'll see! We came out with the Dougie, tootsie Roll, The Harlem Shake, ect. And Puerto Ricans are still breakdancing??? Nothing New??? We all lived in the same hood, why aren't Blk Americans speaking fluid Spanish doing salsa, Merengue or anything pertaining to Latino or Caribbean culture? Because we respect that it's not ours! Why can't these other groups do the same, respect what's not yours! Busta was "Not" around, wasn't even born then, he's confused. First he says it was Jamaicans, then he says Puerto Ricans, now it's Puerto Ricans and Blks! Dude don't know! No offense to my Latin homies, they know I speak Facts! Peace!
@@gregcooper5672 You won't get any argument from me, and thanks for the corrections. Just two things. 1) There is the contemporary White supremacists group "The Boogaloo Boys". Strange that they would name their group after a Puerto Rican dance. Do you remember when that dance came out? And 2) It'd be good if you went over to the UA-cam channel of 'Sabir Bey', and try to convince him to stop spreading so much misinformation. Peace!
@@doubleutee8867 Thanks Fam.! I am familiar with the Wyt group called the boogalooo boys also the dance. However, the Dance was created in Chicago in the early '60, by Blk Americans! "Boogalooo"- -Sam Solomon was said to have created it, Oakland had William Penguin Randolph of the "BLACK RESURGENTS" a street dance crew also in '64-65! The Electric Boogie also a Black creation(samething basically)! They (The Black Resurgents challenge the the Wyt supremacists group about the name Boogalooo Boys)! James Brown brought it to stage in 1964, "NOT" Puerto Ricans! The Puerto Ricans are still trying to hit us up,?? this is what happens when you put different ethnic groups in the same community ; "I create something over here, somebody see it, then take it over there and say they started it because "over there" never seen what took place "over here"! I'm still here in NYC, I'm pushing 60 years, but don't look it(staying in shape), my homie who became the King of Harlem "Boogalou/Gangster Lou" not a Dancer, but just to give you an idea what group of people use these words! Puerto Ricans have a strong pride and they have their culture from their country, they didn't loose anything coming to America, neither did any other people who came to America, they all kept their culture
So, why not give your creations "LATIN NAMES ", Jamaican Names, this will kill the confusion! The names of all things in Hip Hop is of BLK American slang, our broken language! It was KEEF COWBOY(BLK American) who "FIRST" uttered the phrase "HIP HOP" FACTS!" HIP HOP AND DON'T STOP, TAKE A LOOK AT YOUR ARM AND CHECK YOUR CLOCK!!! Swag, goes way back in the Blk community, our term, everything was done "FLY" is why we have those who try to bite and rewrite that Flyness to say they CREATED it, if they can't get away with saying that they created it, then they'll say we "HELPED" created it, we had "INFLUENCED" in it, or there was a "COALITION',(wtf), where did all th!is justification come from, Just to be included??? They got Down later even after calling it that N-word Music Facts! If you was good, we put you down with the crew! That's why it wasn't that many Latinos or Jamaicans down in the beginning of Hip Hop,Facts! None before '77 and I can name/count all of them on one hand! Again No Offense to them, just Facts! Peace!(pardon the long Writing)!
@@gregcooper5672 You're a little older than I am. Waaay back when I was young growing up in the 70's, we were break dancing back then. I loved rap music so much. Then one day my older brother brought home a mixed cassette of DJ Jazzy Jay with Mr. Freeze (RIP), Master Ice, and Master Bee (RIP) rhyming to it.I ran that tape nearly everyday. I ran that tape so much the neighbor came outside, and said that's all I play. At that time, the group was in a transitioning period (Mr. Freeze spoke about Charlie Choo on the microphone, and another MC that left the group. I can't remember his name. Either he or Charlie Choo started college). AJ Les & Master Dee was not yet down. Maaaaannnn Mr, Freeze could rhyme!!! Wow! I was just mesmerized! He became my favorite Rapper back then. Because of him alone I was a Jazzy Five fan first and foremost. At that young age, in my mind, Soundview Houses was like a fantastic fantasy land. "Mr.Freeze is alias Chuuuuucky! Cause I'm the M-R-F-R the Double E-Z-E, Mr. Freeze is alias Chuuucky!" Jazzy Jay knew how to time that just PERFECT!!! He became my favorite DJ. At that time Brooklyn didn't really have anyone. I believe Queens had Kurtis Blow. Was Love Bug Starski from Queens? Busy Bee Starsky & Kool DJ AJ was from the Bronx. Staten Island had Force MC's (before they became Force MD's). Wait! Interestingly enough, Brooklyn may have birthed the first White act. Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't at least two of the Beasty Boys come outta Brooklyn (including their DJ)? Eric B and Rakim didn't come til the 80's. As I got older, and the 70's act was on the wane, my favorite 80's act emerged as Public Enemy. When the 90's came around it was Wu Tang Clan. After Wu Tang things weren't the same into the 2000's era til now. Don't get me wrong, I loved a LOT of other groups in those respective eras. In the latter 70's, Sha-Rock was incredible. Her voice and flow alone caught anyone's attention. With Cosmic Force and Soul Sonic Force, Lisa Lee was the thing. Master Don and the Def Committee finally brought along Pebblee-Poo, and as a female who could rhyme, for me at that time, she completed the trio. Mercedes Ladies was Theodore's answer (And the Fantastic Five's) for the women thing, but personally they never moved me. There was Wanda Dee & Debbie Dee but I was less familiar with their style. The Boogie Down Bronx was first, and Money Makin' Manhattan was second: The Treacherous Three were legendary with that fast rapping style, and the Fearless Four reminded me of a knock off of them. I loved "Rockin It". There was this tape of Tito and Peso rhymin' at Harlem World and they killed it without DLB and Mike Cee (who couldn't make it). There was the mighty Crash Crew (I like that name... Haha!). Jeckle & Hyde. Was DJ Spivey their DJ? There was Ravon and Johnny Wa of the Magnificent 7. I REMEMBER ALL OF THAT! I remember the infamous jumping of Ski-Jump in East Harlem by the Puerto Rican gang, The Down Boys. I once read in the 70"s, Cigar Mob would protect better known crews performing in Manhattan, while Zulu Nation would protect better known groups in the Bronx. Eventually, Cigar Mob broke up and Zulu would enlarge, but in my mind the most powerful Zulu in NYC was in the latter 70's (and possible early 80's. I am familiar with a previous Zulu - Latin Kings showdown, but ZULU was much smaller by then, and I believe that was localized to the Bronx only in the early to mid 90's(?)). Anyway, thanks for getting back to me. Crazy reminiscing! NYC was so different back then. I miss it so much. America is something else nowadays. Some Black women complained that Black men were voting for Trump in the past. Black men didn't vote for Trump cause they liked him. They wanted to use Trump's racism as the only tool they knew to stop the gentrification, because they saw the things we once enjoyed (including jobs) under threat. . I miss the 90's R&B music too. I loved the music of that era, and even before then. O' well... Whacha gonna do? Thanks for the feedback. Lastly, I took a DNA test. I had 3 genetic groups. Two are Black American & one is Puerto Rican. But, that Puerto Rican genetic group came as a shock to me, cause I never knew anything about it. That was about two years ago. So, it's still new for me. Anyway, Peace!
Yo, you said the cigar Mobb,,💯🔥! You Took me Back on that! You know some sh!+💪🏿! Master Don(R.I.P)
and the Death Committee, they had Peebely Poo from the start, with my big homie Gangster Boo! My first inside Jam was in '77, me and my brother helped carry DJ Easy Lee equipment to "RANDY'S" place(Harlem, also rocking there was DJ B-Fats, and DJ Crazy Eddie, he was Rocking with DJ Easy Lee before the Fearless 4)! I was going to Rock with the Fearless 4, but stayed with my Crew The Payback Crew! While at DJ Lee's Crib, I saw a brother sitting on the floor reading off a piece of paper to himself. I didn't know who he was at the time, but when we got to Randy's Place, I soon found out who dude was! DJ B-Fats Crew rocked first, they had The "ECHO CHAMBER"(REMEMBER THAT)? DJ Easy Lee didn't have one, and this is when I found out who dude was reading off a piece of paper. It was the young "MC KOOL MOE DEE"! This is before The Treacherous 3 although L.A Shine was there. Without the Echo Chamber, Moe Dee straight up Flatlined the whole show🔥🔥! To me, Kool Moe Dee is the father of Spoony G, Treacherous, and The Fearless 4. All of them is from out of Grant and Manhattanville PJs and on Convent Ave., in Harlem! Kurtis Blow out of Harlem/Bronx, "NOT" queens. The Ladies was; Sha Rock Mercedes Ladies, Sequence, Missy Dee, and the ones you named! Me my homie Ike, Melle Mel and two of his homies(can't remember their name), we Jumped the line to see the first show of(Star Wars)Return of the Jedi! Still got pictures of me with the leather gear😂😂(never again)! True story, someone of whom people call hip hop greats back then, bit off MY style had The shades before Moe Dee, Fearless 4 album cover got my Whole red leather out fit, I still got the flicks for proof. My crew did a house party in Hollis Queens Back in '81 me and one of my MC partners, we both had on the "Black Fedora Hats" about a year later, Run DMC came out(True Story)! I'm Cool Cooper G, aka The Rock Coop gee! The Payback Crew, We got a single on YT somewhere! No doubt big homie, you are on point with most of this, I don't get paid for speaking, so I "DON'T" have no agenda to spread BS info. I speak all Facts as well as I know it! Man you took me back, I can address alot of your questions but I'll be typing for days 😅! However, it's been official sharing knowledge, straight up humble dialogue! Much Respect💯👊🏿! Peace!
I almost lost my life to my own kind in Brooklyn ENY “ricans” and my black and rican friends got suited and booted for me so us NYC do it different, I would kill and die for my black homie
Still you didn't create hip hop though
Neither did Puerto Ricans
Or Jamaicans
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
No, hip hop started by urban Black Americans. Puerto ricans tried to gentrify our black American culture just like other groups
Puerto Ricans copy & paste everything “black Americans” do. They cool but they are so odd to me.
Latinos in general
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉 yes thank you for not forgetting where you come from love you
TELL IT!!! PROUD BORICUA RIGHT HERE🇵🇷💯🙌🏼 HE'S SPEAKING FACTS!!! BORN IN & RAISED IN THE BRONX!!! HIP-HOP WAS BORN RIGHT IN FRONT OF MY FACE. DJ PARTIES OUTSIDE IN THE PARK WAS NORMAL. B-BOYS, B-GIRLS BREAK DANCING UPROCKING. HERE & IN PR. AND THE LIST GOES ON.
@Layla Caudle A YEAP!!!
@Layla Caudle GTHOH RACIST HATER!!! WE DON'T NEED HATERS LIKE YOU HERE SO GTHOH. BYE HATER!!!
BIG FACTS💯💯💯🔥🔥🔥🔥
I’m a Puerto Rican but I was born in America in BROOKLYN NYC
Good for you
Pr didn't invent hip hop. FBA did
Even if you was born in Puerto Rico 🇵🇷 it’s part of America 🇺🇸🇵🇷🤣 You do know Puerto Ricans 🇵🇷🇺🇸are Americans 🇵🇷🇺🇸🇵🇷
Black & Latino unity 💯
It never existed, and black Americans are waking up to that fact
Puerto Ricans and Dominicans: " Me no black, no no no no. Me Hispanic pappy"
Who are the creators of hip-hop?
Puerto Ricans and Dominicans: " Ok ok poppy me black me black"
That's facts cause my grandmother was racist
@@catanito7689 not mine. She was very thorough in her teachings but this is Carolina and loiza valley💪🏽
Facts! ✊🏿🗽🇵🇷
give me one rican rapper that predates the 70s if they helped start it
love you buster tell them the truth how it started 👍🇵🇷❤👍🇵🇷❤🇵🇷👍
Spliff 🇹🇹 Busta Rhymes 🇯🇲 carribean we run hip-hop 🇵🇷🇩🇴🇭🇹 🏝🏝🏝🏝🎤🎧🎶🎵🎛🎚👑Hip-Hop began as an expression of poverty- stricken inner city minority youths who grew up during the 1960s and 1970s. It is a musical form that incorporates a shared, lived urban experience that revolved around music-rhyming and dancing; often makes a social statement against the harsh realities they must deal with on a daily basis; and graffiti. While African Americans concentrated on serving as disc jockeys and master of ceremonies, Puerto Ricans and other Latino Caribbeans contributed heavily to the hip hop aspects of break dancing and graffiti (6)Although it is widely acknowledged that hip-hop began in the early 1970s in the South Bronx, New York, the mainstream media view it as an African American cultural expression. African American tend to view it as exclusively their own, and even Puerto Ricans and other Latinos tend to view it as "black" music. However, its birth and development were a joint creative effort of African American and Latino Afro Caribbean youngsters, particularly, Puerto Ricans. Some researches have suggested that Puerto Ricans' significant role has often been overlooked due to the lack of knowledge concerning Puerto Ricans in general, their small population in comparison to African American throughout the Unites States, and their relatively recent arrival, as opposed to the long history of African Americans in the US. is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.South Bronx is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.Often, when people here Hip-Hop they associate it with only African-Americans. However, Hip-Hop is actually the combination of West Indian, Puerto Rican, Blacks of New York. Hip-Hop has always been open to a diverse audience, and thus is not limited to one specific group. DJing started in Jamaica, where the artist would mix and scratch music with repetitive phrases mixed it. In Jamaica, and in many area of the West Indies, music is used as important as politics. Music was used to express the voice of the citizens. Political parties themselves used the musics of DJs to represent their positions. As people from the West Indies moved into New York and specifically the Bronx, they began to incorporate their values of music as a form as expression. When the West Indians began to live with the Puerto Ricans and African Americans of the South Bronx, their art of music mixed in with the rapping and rhyming of the people living there. Hip-Hop began to include in general, Rapping, DJing, Graffiti and Break Dancing. DJ Kool Herc and other DJ from the West Indies, gaining popularity from their style of music, began to encourage the youth to get involved in the art of Hip-Hop. Soon some gangs began to focus their concentration on Hip-Hop rather than using violence to express their anger with the environment they were in. Afrika Bambaataa would find the Universal Zulu Movement, which was a gang that focused on Hip-Hop. What all the people involved in Hip-Hop do have in common is how the merge the struggles of every day life, and their environment into their various forms of art in a way that people facing similar difficulties can also relate. Hip-Hop then turns into a voice of all those New Yorkers, and even beyond, who are constantly trying to improve their lives in a difficult environment.
Facts 🗽
BS! Hip-hop is based and derived from Black American Culture. Hip-hop ain't nothing but remixed Funk and Soul Breaks and Jive Talk Black Americans been rapping on wax since the 1920s Stop it Latinos copied and emulated what Black Americans were already doing
@@AJ-pc5ln because u say right 😂😂😂 stop hating. U don't know shit about hip-hop nigga , stop hating on Ricans, carribean people.
This is a lie
@claudiakramer4516 u wouldn't know because u was born yesterday 🤣😂🤣😂 South Bronx is the birthplace of Hip-Hop, it comes to no surprise that the intermingling of Puerto Rican and West Indies along with Black styles are the main contributors to the basic Hip-Hop essence.Often, when people here Hip-Hop they associate it with only African-Americans. However, Hip-Hop is actually the combination of West Indian, Puerto Rican, Blacks of New York. Hip-Hop has always been open to a diverse audience, and thus is not limited to one specific group. DJing started in Jamaica, where the artist would mix and scratch music with repetitive phrases mixed it. In Jamaica, and in many area of the West Indies, music is used as important as politics. Music was used to express the voice of the citizens. Political parties themselves used the musics of DJs to represent their positions. As people from the West Indies moved into New York and specifically the Bronx, they began to incorporate their values of music as a form as expression. When the West Indians began to live with the Puerto Ricans and African Americans of the South Bronx, their art of music mixed in with the rapping and rhyming of the people living there. Hip-Hop began to include in general, Rapping, DJing, Graffiti and Break Dancing. DJ Kool Herc and other DJ from the West Indies, gaining popularity from their style of music, began to encourage the youth to get involved in the art of Hip-Hop. Soon some gangs began to focus their concentration on Hip-Hop rather than using violence to express their anger with the environment they were in. Afrika Bambaataa would find the Universal Zulu Movement, which was a gang that focused on Hip-Hop. What all the people involved in Hip-Hop do have in common is how the merge the struggles of every day life, and their environment into their various forms of art in a way that people facing similar difficulties can also relate. Hip-Hop then turns into a voice of all those New Yorkers, and even beyond, who are constantly trying to improve their lives in a difficult environment.🇵🇷🇯🇲☝️💪👍👑
That's what the fuk I'm talking about. It's a Bronx Culture. let it be known
It's a Black culture, Point blank period.
Betcha 'musty' rhymes won't continue to push his outrageous Black/jamaican/puerto rican Rap and Hip Hop nonsense after he watches MICROPHONE CHECK.
Jamaicans in Puerto Ricans did not create hip Hop foundational black Americans created hip hop with no influence from the Caribbean or Puerto ricans. This is a lie
FBA=Foundational Black Africans
LMAO let me guess you was there when it started and was bigger then Busta 🤣🤣🤣🤣😂
@@MOBHITMOBHIT yeah I am old enough to know Jamaicans and PR didn't invent HH
Puerto Ricans didn't create Hip Hop, Freestyle, or Reggaeton. They picked all up after they were created. The first freestyle artists were Shannon and Jenny Burton. PR singers came after them, just check the timestamps on the songs. Same wit Reggaeton. PRs came on the scene in the late 70s/80s when Hip Hop got popular. And many PR rappers portrayed themselves as Light Skin Black Americans to gain acceptance.
Yeah but, da real is dat 100s of years ago in P.R. old folks been freestylin and rapping bars up for fun everywhere.. Facts
That's true in Puerto Rico its called "improvisar" its for the most part folk music. There's also the "chants" in Bomba y Plena.
No that's false, Your people had absolutely nothing to do with the creation of hip hop and freestyle and rapping goes back even further than what you're babbling about. Real facts lol
There is zero proof of this
am from the Bronx born 1976 early 90 I became Zulu Nation
Together 100% facts
Lies
@@jerrygraves6531 ok if you say so.... can't fix stupid 😎😂
All the false and misleading "Rap" and "Hip-Hop" history started with Afrika Bambaataa and the Universal Zulu Nation.
Thank you my brother Busta Rhymes for letting it be known what two cultures REALLY started it
Vulture
Lies
Proud to be raise in Bronx baby!!!!
👏🏾 SPEAK ON IT 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Bronx where salsa was re evented
And hip hop was created
Blacks and Rican were a unite
It’s a little different today
Let’s get united once again.
And for all you naysayers that don't believe it are just too young to know the history or they are not from New York PERIOD
@@nolbertojcales1186 Your so called contributions are ignored, Because they're simply not true lol
ok look for the cold cruch brothers the puertorican charlie chasse n tony tone 1975 look for the History puertorican n nuyorican in hip hop magazine prince whippers whip Ruby D Richard crazy legs colon Receives culture Award 31 st Hispanic Heritage the best brekedance end the world n 1977 charlie chasse wiht the cold cruchs brothers mix the rap with salsa and more
Well the black spades and other hip hop historians says otherwise LOL
F*** Puerto Rico
One of the only times that Hip hop artists played the choliseo.
Bx 🇵🇷know we started this rap shit!
love busta ..🎤👑🇵🇷🇵🇷
FACTS !!!! Slay brother .. ricans & blacks have always been a team ... UNITED we are stronger #BLM ❤️
Oh lort😂😂😂
@@blackrevolutionary1819 you want blacks to stand alone?? That's why you spread lies??
@@crespo7216 We do stand alone and you know it, That's why you brought it up🤣
@@blackrevolutionary1819 you stand alone cuz you choose to stand alone. You ignore Puerto Ricans part in standing with Black Americans when I'm here trying to tell you that you're not alone brother. We've always been there, if you was from NY you would know that. Hip hop was created to represent our unity and freedom. It was a way for us seperate to sperate form the Ghettos and better ourselves and our souls. I'm from the BX, I was schooled on this culture since birth. It's my culture, black people down south tend to think that they're alone in the world, that's what the racist white man wants ya to think. That's how they oppress us all, they seperate us. Why you think they only advertise police brutality against blacks?? My uncle was Puerto Rican with white skin and he was killed the same way as the blacks they show on TV, it didn't make the news cuz he' wasn't black. It's a whole strategy to keep us seperate and ya Alone. You letting them while I'm fighting them with truth and Factz. Open your mind young black man, black Americans in NY sends you that message. You're not alone buddy, pay attention to what I'm telling you.
@@blackrevolutionary1819 Puerto Ricans have always been with the blacks, we're the same in culture and spirit (hence to the creation of hip hop) even the Young lords party stood with black Panthers fighting for equality. They was very political for all equality. We fought for the rights of Spanish people and they too turned on us with racism because we're Americans and we chill with the blacks in the ghettos. The Ghetto brothers was very political. We was all over back then along with blacks and Caribbean, helping each other with survival till this day. We fight for each other, fight together, stand together and fall together. That's the world I grew up on, not down south where its only blacks, Mexicans and whites. I grew up in NY, the influence of the world. NY changed THE WORLD, The BX more specifically. The Puerto Ricans, islanders and black Americans changed the world for the greater God together even turned the word nigg@ into a positive slang use, why are you going against that?? That's unity. That's MLK JRd dream. You down south Black better get with time and realize ya not alone in this world before the whites pushes you further into this modern slave mentality. They got you fooled. I got you schooled if you pay attention. I'm Puerto Rican brother, I'll always look out for my people, blacks are my people too.
Hip-Hop is Black American, that’s its foundation, no one else, nothing else. Point blank period. Came from the south, migrated to many other parts of America.
Pa que se pongan al día 🔥✌🏽🇵🇷🥶
🧢 Sugar Hill Gang . Rappers delight . African Americans from NY
FACTSSSS🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷
F*** out of here you guys invent s***
Boricuas and blacks 🤞🤞🤞
Let ‘em know Busta Rymes! 🗽🇺🇸🇵🇷🇯🇲🗽
Yup! BX in the building 🇨🇺🏳️🌈🖤🙏🏽
No difference between Ricans and Blacks , we are one , Puerto Rican’s are made from Taina, Black , and Indian mix, NY my HT and we stay close to our brothers
We are Gods chosen people, hebrew isrealites. Same people
@@84doll 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
You forget Spaniards. Most Puerto Rican´s are from Spaniard descent. Actually Puerto Rico was build mostly on Basques and people from the Canary Island. Africans and Tainos are a minority.
Hahaha ricans are more white then black my friend 🤣😂😂
@@cripbk2147 LOL exactly
Saying Puerto Rican is pretty pointless. There are white Puerto Ricans, black Puerto Ricans, Indian Puerto Ricans, etc
Okay and?
@@phantxm706 it’s not a race like they want it to be. Black is a race, Puerto Rican it’s just like saying American or Canadian.
Again, people in Puerto Rico do not practice that kind of separatism. No one is just going to separate from people just because of a difference in skin complexion or ethnicity.
Puerto Rico is not a race but it not just a nationality but it's also a cultural identity.
@@ricanredru4760 I’m aware they don’t, most Puerto Ricans are mixed between black and white. it is aimless to compare the two.
Wow, Thanks for sharing because i didn't know this but I've always LOVED my Puerto Rican Brothers and Sisters though🙏🏽🙌🏽🥰🤗😇🙌🏾🙏🏾
You didn't know it because it's false
Te amo Busta ehymes
Salute to Lord Jamar for bringing this culture fact to the forefront. Only a few guard the front door.
Man Lord Jamar got put in his place by Melle mel.
Lord jamar's just some fake bougie type that wants to rewrite history just because he thinks he's blacker than black.
REAL TALK... Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans did NOT create one element of HIP HOP. Don't believe me ... then just listen to Elder Jamaicans like CLEMENT SEYMOR DODD aka COXSANE DODD. He reveals how he got toasting from America and how Black American MUSICIANS influenced him to create REGGAE and SKA after he visited in the mid 1950s and returned to Jamaica in 1960 with musical influences to help him create REGGAE. Also... RAP as an art form was recorded in the 1920s BEFORE ANY PUERTO RICAN APPROVED of the culture.
Black Americans invented BREAK DANCING in the 1970s and the 1st Puerto Rican didn't participate until the early 80s. Jamaican DJ Rory from Stone Love Sound System, explain when they first got 2 Turntables in Jamaica 1979 and learned how to mix 2 records in early 1981. - When Blk American DJs had 2 Turntables since late 1960s and Mixing in 1972 which PREDATES KOOL HERC.
Not sure why you people are trying to erase American Blkpeople from our own invention but we will be fighting back from this bull and show you all a quick lesson in why we are who the f we are in this world which is THE ONLY RESISTANCE TO WHITE SUPREMACY.
No disrespect intended to the riders of the Black and brown diaspora but this LIE is going to end.
@@arrellehnisrael8229 dude stop trying to project your brand of supremacy on people. Every major old school hip hop pioneer acknowledges this including folk like Busta rhymes.
I bet you you're not even from New York so why are you even talking on this? This fake gatekeeping of a history you don't even know about is getting old and and sad
And for your information dude you can't sit here and try to distort facts like no PR came in till the 80s.
Neither here nor there.
First of all Puerto Ricans have been in New York City prior to that point in hip Hop for for generations already & had already established a huge cultural foundation of modern New York City. You cannot sit here and tell people with a straight face that Puerto Ricans didn't have prior involvement with some aspects of what is now recognized as complementarily black music and culture. We already had our own forms of music like salsa music, bomba and plana, in other traditional sounding music that was common prior to hip hop's birth.
Just because some people or many people within the Old guard generation held their views or prejudices does not mean that that disqualifies anybody from being recognized.
Black people in other parts of the country like the South Midwest or California didn't even fully embrace hip hop like that till the late 80s.
Just because you sit here and Yap your mouth about about your fake interpretation does not mean that it becomes the truth.
At the end of the day unless you're actually from New York City and from the South Bronx, you have no business trying to tell people who started what and trying to exclude others just because you have a prejudice
No one's saying that black people didn't invent hip Hop. But you keep on trying to erase an entire group from the history books just because you have a prejudice or a gross. Nobody's stealing hip hop from anybody's
@@arrellehnisrael8229 at least the 4th of the rappers coming out of New York nowadays come from either some Latin ancestry or mix ancestry where they have at least one parent of Hispanic descent whether it be Dominican Puerto Rican and with the case of pop smoke who who got killed he had a Panamanian parent.
So stop with this fake gatekeeper in
@@ricanredru4760 I was THERE. I'm still here. NO PUERTO RICANS were at HERC'S PARTIES.
NO PUERTO RICANS WERE BREAK DANCING AT HERC'S PARTIES because BREAK DANCING was about POPPING and POPPING evolved from POP LOCKING and POP LOCKING evolved from THE ROBOT and if PUERTO RICANS WEREN'T DOING THOSE DANCES which were part of the evolution... HOW can they just come in at the end of it and get credit.
BUSTER and all those other artists are bound by the same LIE that WHITE PEOPLE are BOUND TO when THEY LIE ABOUT THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA.
Its all about ERASING TRUTH. Once you can erase the truth YOU CAN CREATE ANY NARRATIVE.
I have no beef with you personally nor anyone taking pride in this lie. I just think TRUTH is more important than uniting over a LIE.
I want peace between American Blkpeople, and Caribbean but not unity over a LIE.
BUSTA RHYMES is ill informed. But their is a machine behind him pushing this lie and it will get serious pushback soon.
🇵🇷✊🏾🗽🇵🇷✊🏿🗽🇵🇷✊🏽🗽
State those FACTS Busta 👏
You mean state those FAIRYTALES Busta👏🏾
@@aggravatedman7912 up north blacks and hispanics get along. Im sorry you didnt experience the same upbringing 🤷🏽♀️
@@Kiaraliz The fact that the latin kings and trinatarios targets my people in your area, Proves we're not getting along after all🤷🏾♂️
@RealTalk if you’re not from NY you wouldn’t know the foundation. Go be miserable else where.
@@Kiaraliz they just don’t know
Proud white New York Rican 🇵🇷🇵🇷🇺🇲🇺🇲
Proud black Nuyorican ✊🏾🇵🇷
RIP🙏🏾Roberto Clemente✊🏾🇵🇷
@@BoricuaNycthe goat 🐐 clemente
Facts
Just in case you didn't know 🇵🇷