@@ShaithMaster first time I went clubbing was with my uncle,cousin, sister and his 'secretary'. I was 15 at the time and he even let us drink alcohol for the first time. Only bad part was getting hit on by adult males. We vowed to never spill the beans to my parents. I miss my cool uncle.
All these men are credited for starting hip-hop Whenever there is recognition it's men that is credited no one has ever mentioned Sylvia and she started it all
Respect her hustle, vision and her genius, but Sylvia Robinson didn't start it all since the rapping clearly existed before she came along. What she did pioneer was rap's commodification, realizing that it could be recorded and sold on a grand scale (not just the occasional neighborhood mixtape) just like any other type of music. Unfortunately though, according to several artists who were on her label, Sugar Hill Records, she and her husband seem to have followed the industry model of shady business practices. A Billboard article a few weeks ago gave more detail if you're interested in a fuller, non-drunk version of the history: billboard.com/articles/columns/hip-hop/8533108/sugar-hill-records-sylvia-robinson-hip-hop-godmother
That’s because she did not start at all she was an important figure in it she did not start it grandmaster flowers and several musicians in the 50s as well
She didnt start jack...as you see, these dudes were rapping BEFORE she went to the club.Hip hop is a culture Graf, b boying, popping and breakdancing and emceeing and dee jaying are the 5 elements. They all existed before this money grabbing witch came in the game.
She didn't start a damn thing...if anything she stole it from the kids who wanted to keep it underground, that's why when she approached the actual artists that were throwing these parties, they all said straight up, you can't put this on a record, we aren't interested, so she built the first hip hop boy band and commercialized the sound...all she did was speed up was already going to happen, white kids in Manhattan were going to the Bronx for these underground parties and vice versa, Flash would go do shows in Manhattan and chill with the likes of Blondie, Lou Reed and Iggy Pop just to name a few...break music(the original name) and punk music held hands and realized they had a lot in common...they didn't want to be commercialized and lose their souls...there was a connection there that brought 2 totally separate worlds together and it was beautiful...
An important historical tidbit here is that the term “hip-hop“ did not exist before rappers delight came out. The lyrics include the words hip-hop, hippity hop” and so when people came into the record stores to ask for that record, they said “heywhere is that hip hop record?” And that is what led to the whole genre being called hip-hop. I love that! EDIT: VH1 Documentary “AND You Don’t Stop: 30 Years of Hip Hop” was a 5-hour $2M documentary that first aired in 2004.
Rapper's Delight did for hip-hop/rap what Rock Around the Clock did for rock and roll; it wasn't the first, or best, but it brought the music to national and international audiences and changed pop music forever.
The actors acting under the voice overs are so brilliantly dead on. I just kept rewinding and watching. It must have taken forever to get it so perfect. Hilarious!!! 👍PS, Retta and Colton Dunn are national treasures!!
I wish this video explained how important Sylvia Robinson was she was one of the first black female guitarist and lead singer on the song Love is Strange featured in Dirty Dancing
Don't know if this is factual but i was there in the heart of Queens in late 70's early 80's and when this song hit the airways and it was incredible. Even though it was not as hard as what we were used to on our street corners and in the park it was in the radio and that was good enough. Love this rendition!!!
Run DMC used to tell their version of Rappers Delight and how it inspired them, changed their lives, and how that inspiration helped start def jam records.
@kamariamv..I was in the Army. We were on a TDY assignment at West Point. We use to party in this club outside the base. Many years ago, but I still remember it. Good Times.
@@sweezcheez Caz gave Hank the rhymes. His own words in a interview then his story changed. Listen to Caz at 2:45 in this clip ua-cam.com/video/cL5AFPJhxyE/v-deo.html
If you seen the "Get down" then you would know this is Cadillacs Mama fat anne, but she took them for that record, left them with a dead cat in a bag. Was that jaleel White 5:05 anything but S.erkel huh.
Yeah that was him. I had to double back. The man is getting his bag! Have you seen him on "Historical Roasts" on Netflix? He was in two roasts,and he killed it!
She was more of a con-woman than an entrepreneur. She did not pay her "black" artists or compensate them properly. She also didn't pay her taxes and went bankrupt in 1985. It took a "man" (Russel Simmons) to come along and do it the "legal" and "right" way before it was done right. Sylvia is not a hero. She was a thug just like her husband.
The most important part was how it came to be called hip hop. People wanted to buy the album, but didn't know the name so they'd ask for ,"that hip hop song" .. The first few lines say "Hip hop ..." ...
Uhhh . ... . no. No disrepect intended. That might have been a local hit, but I don't recall it ever being played here in Philly, while "Rapper's Delight" was EVERYWHERE!
@@Skeezer66- both songs were originated in New York City area and 92 WKTU in NYC was the radio station at that time playing both songs, but by a month later Rapper's Delight was all over the place and King Tim the III was practically forgotten.
I was 12 when Rapper's Delight came out (1977) and I remember roller-skating to it, dancing to it, and hearing out on the radio. But all this time I never knew about Sylvia Robinson or that "Good Times" by Chic was the background music!
I remember "Regan's Rap" was a promotion for Ronald Regan. Probably the first RADIO played rap song. Alot of rap was underground still.. slowly gaining momentum
LoL Loved this. While Sylvia was instrumental in bringing hip-hop/rap to the mainstream, she and the Sugar Hill gang were not the first to record a rap song. But they may be the first to rap over another artist's music ("Good Times" by Chic). Check out these rap or rap-like songs... And This Is Love (1973) by Gladys Knight and the Pips Love Jones (1973) by The Brighter Side of Darkness Sport (1973) by Lightnin' Rod Underdog (1967) by Sly & the Family Stone Black Is So Beautiful (1972) by Gary Byrd GARY BYRD - Soul Travelin' (The G.B.E.) parts 1 & 2 (1972) by Gary Byrd Experience King Tim III (1979) - The Fatback Band Get Rid of Him (1964) by Dionne Warwick -rap at intro and outro
Great episode, thanks for giving props to Sylvia Robinson for her role in the birth of hip-hop as we know it! Oh, and who else just wants a big ol' HUG from Retta?
Awe man those were the BEST of times. Old school rap is the best rap ever. I used to have such a crush on Kurtis Blow. I love anything about 80's rap era.
The term "Hip Hop" as a title did not come about until later on. I would say more like the mid-80's believe it, or not. At least in NYC. Lived it! Had friends who wrapped, and who were break dancers. The term we used back in the day was just "Rap". Seriously, people did not say "Hip Hop". The other thing, Beat Box came later on as well. There were a few people who did Beat Box, but it really became a thing with a group called The Fat Boys, and later with Doug E. Fresh, and Biz Markie. Have to be very careful how people tell our stories, because in the process they rewrite our history.
I’m 17 and from the Passaic,paterson,Clifton triangle area in jersey and my grandma and great grandma worked at White Castle and we’re great with all of them and I got the honor of meeting them
Damn so Hip Hop had rappers saying Hip Hop is not Hip Hop since the Beginning of Hip Hop 🤣🤣🤣🤣 goes to show people just get mad when it’s not them who is in the limelight
When I was 15 I was allowed to go to the club but the adults were there in their own section. There was never a shooting ever, because they kept an eye on us and allowed us to have our freedom. We should be doing the same for our kids.
Long version of Papa was a Rolling Stone comes in at just short of 12 minutes. If you plan it right - A meal, a smoke, a dump, order a round of drinks.
Sidenote: SugarHill is the area around 145th Street and Amsterdam Avenue in Harlem, a few blocks north of Vinegar Hill which is down by 137th and Amsterdam (by City College). It wasn't an "artist community", just a small neighborhood.
So the moral of the story. Parents go out clubbing with your kids.
It's a black thing apparently. My ex's dad used to go to the club with us and it was incredibly uncomfortable for me lol.
@@ShaithMaster first time I went clubbing was with my uncle,cousin, sister and his 'secretary'. I was 15 at the time and he even let us drink alcohol for the first time. Only bad part was getting hit on by adult males. We vowed to never spill the beans to my parents. I miss my cool uncle.
Block Party in reality
Moral: Black Women are Amazing.
LOL
All these men are credited for starting hip-hop Whenever there is recognition it's men that is credited no one has ever mentioned Sylvia and she started it all
Telika Howard this needs to be a pinned comment
Respect her hustle, vision and her genius, but Sylvia Robinson didn't start it all since the rapping clearly existed before she came along. What she did pioneer was rap's commodification, realizing that it could be recorded and sold on a grand scale (not just the occasional neighborhood mixtape) just like any other type of music. Unfortunately though, according to several artists who were on her label, Sugar Hill Records, she and her husband seem to have followed the industry model of shady business practices. A Billboard article a few weeks ago gave more detail if you're interested in a fuller, non-drunk version of the history:
billboard.com/articles/columns/hip-hop/8533108/sugar-hill-records-sylvia-robinson-hip-hop-godmother
That’s because she did not start at all she was an important figure in it she did not start it grandmaster flowers and several musicians in the 50s as well
She didnt start jack...as you see, these dudes were rapping BEFORE she went to the club.Hip hop is a culture Graf, b boying, popping and breakdancing and emceeing and dee jaying are the 5 elements. They all existed before this money grabbing witch came in the game.
She didn't start a damn thing...if anything she stole it from the kids who wanted to keep it underground, that's why when she approached the actual artists that were throwing these parties, they all said straight up, you can't put this on a record, we aren't interested, so she built the first hip hop boy band and commercialized the sound...all she did was speed up was already going to happen, white kids in Manhattan were going to the Bronx for these underground parties and vice versa, Flash would go do shows in Manhattan and chill with the likes of Blondie, Lou Reed and Iggy Pop just to name a few...break music(the original name) and punk music held hands and realized they had a lot in common...they didn't want to be commercialized and lose their souls...there was a connection there that brought 2 totally separate worlds together and it was beautiful...
An important historical tidbit here is that the term “hip-hop“ did not exist before rappers delight came out. The lyrics include the words hip-hop, hippity hop” and so when people came into the record stores to ask for that record, they said “heywhere is that hip hop record?” And that is what led to the whole genre being called hip-hop. I love that!
EDIT: VH1 Documentary “AND You Don’t Stop: 30 Years of Hip Hop” was a 5-hour $2M documentary that first aired in 2004.
thats not it,youre wrong,,i can elaborate if needed
VilifiedVapez please do
It's more based of the sound of a parade/soldiers marching.
It was hip hop long before Sugarhill. Herc and Coke LaRock coined it
spleerfloof dxpe
Two of my favorite vastly underutilized and undderrated black actors in one drunk history? Yas queen.
Retta is a GODDESS
run that by me again in english
And they are both so hilarious!!!!!!
@@adamnoturfuknbusiness2367 ?? can you not read?
Two icons tbh
Urkel, Retta, and the high animal control guy narrating😭what did we do to deserve this masterpiece
His name is Brett.
1000% yes!
And Urkel.
“FYI, I’m a f**kn monster man”🤣😂🤣
Rapper's Delight did for hip-hop/rap what Rock Around the Clock did for rock and roll; it wasn't the first, or best, but it brought the music to national and international audiences and changed pop music forever.
So basically she was the original Puff Daddy
Except not annoying, lol!
Except she paid people
@@bethanychatman9531 that man has ruined so many lives lol
@@bethanychatman9531 no she didn't. She ripped off hella artists.
Puff Mommy
The Parks Department and half of the Animal Control unit. That's wassup.
Hector Hernandez unfortunately the other half, Harris Wittels, died of an overdose shortly after Parks wrapped the series finale.
RIP Harris Wittel :/ So fucking tragic
Shawn McLaughlin You really had me thinking the real guy died. I forgot his name was harris in the show. Nevermind...
Aldiggty no it was both like office, used real names
@@aldiggty the real guy died
Third
"I don't know if this makes any sense, but I'm drunk, so I don't care." 😆
Retta rocked this episode, she is a great actress. This episode was everything, funny, clever and a much needed throwback in HipHop history.
Anybody else thought the guy on the couch look like uncle Phil?
Erkle was pissed that it wasn't rap. He was in the back of the room pissed
EXACTLY like uncle Phil
Hell yes haha
Yea, i was looking for this comment lol
Looks like the guy from superstore
I spy Jaleel White
No shit? I missed him. Where was he?
@@Fresh_Biscuits Grandmaster Caz!
2:35
@@adsr3870 lol i dont know how i missed that! Thank you
Came here for this
What the actual... Urkel?! That you?!
Jaleel White. He has a name
You all wrong! That's Sonic the Hedgehog!
@@ElPayasoMalo honestly i relate to this lmfaoo i didn't grow up with Family Matters but you know i had that old Sonic SatAM on DVD when i was a kid
Omg he's all grown up! I wouldn't have even noticed it was him.
C. Wildeman i read this with Samuel L Jackson’s voice
Need a movie about this.
Yes
Absolutely!
If you watched The Get Down on Netflix they somewhat address the hate the song got.
The get down is literally this entire part of history, but Sylvia is a bad guy in the show
Matthew in a lot of ways she is the bad guy
The actors acting under the voice overs are so brilliantly dead on. I just kept rewinding and watching. It must have taken forever to get it so perfect. Hilarious!!! 👍PS, Retta and Colton Dunn are national treasures!!
I just realized that was Jahleel White as "Grandmaster Caz"
He played Martin Luther King jr. In the first interracial kiss on star trek's drunk history episode
I love the non-copyright-infringing version of Good Times at 4:16 haha shoutout to the music director
One of the BEST Drunk History performances ever!!! 🤣🤣🤣
Rhetta created hip hop? legit.
I wish this video explained how important Sylvia Robinson was she was one of the first black female guitarist and lead singer on the song Love is Strange featured in Dirty Dancing
That has nothing to do with Rappers Delight and there are female blues artists that pre-date her as far as female guitarists.
It’s so weird how black music was so overlooked you could steal something that had already been published and already put out lmao
Yeah racism is weird isnt it
Was? This is still happening
kissit012 in what world is black music overlooked today
kissit012 it was never NOT happening
Carrot Cake the ENTIRE world!
Story of how Hip-Hop was made into a product.
#exactly
When a culture gets commercialized
docfabz Exactly what they did with Rock & Roll.
Never heard this before...a woman started this!
Yes a woman started it them tell you what there want u to know
A Black Woman!
Actually, the story is much more than this and the story is also a lot wrong so keep that in mind that this is a television show a comedy show at that
And folk, blues, jazz, soul, country...
Started the commercialization?
is it weird to think that colton looks likes James Avery
?
Dude thank you I thought the same thing
I thought so too!! I think it’s the bald Head tho
Finally... God. That's what i couldn't put my finger on
I was thinking that, too.
My first thought, he looks like Uncle Phil!
That moment you realize commercial hip hop wasn’t based in the “keepin it real” ethos from its inception.
Btw, this is amazing.
“I have to pee”, got me laughing 😂
Wait for the end there...”I’m good”. 😂 🤣🤣
Don't know if this is factual but i was there in the heart of Queens in late 70's early 80's and when this song hit the airways and it was incredible. Even though it was not as hard as what we were used to on our street corners and in the park it was in the radio and that was good enough. Love this rendition!!!
ExposedRoot what part of Queens were you in?
The bridge is over
Run DMC used to tell their version of Rappers Delight and how it inspired them, changed their lives, and how that inspiration helped start def jam records.
I'm old enough to clearly remember this blowing up.
Can I get in the Hot Tub?Yeeoooowwww!
Where was the first place you heard the song?
@@kmariamv I was in the Marines at the time, they would play it at E-clubs. (On base nightclubs)
@kamariamv..I was in the Army. We were on a TDY assignment at West Point. We use to party in this club outside the base. Many years ago, but I still remember it. Good Times.
I was waiting to see if dude knew Hank didn't write his rhymes on Rappers Delight...
Respect
2:09 the sheer unbelievable disbelief 😂😂
The way Grandmaster Caz tells it...sounds more like hank jacked his rhymes.
Yep. Herc will tell the same story
@@sweezcheez Caz gave Hank the rhymes. His own words in a interview then his story changed. Listen to Caz at 2:45 in this clip
ua-cam.com/video/cL5AFPJhxyE/v-deo.html
Retta’s face at 2:06 I’m sobbing lmao
Why he look like uncle Phil?
Veronica Tolbert bruh he do 😂
Man I was staring at the screen thinking he came back to life 😭
I was confused like damn uncle Phil son look just like him twins lol
I tried to beatbox during the video. I absolutely cannot do it and I'm glad no one saw me discover that.
I lov3 the face she makes when Big Bank Hank is rapping in the pizza parlor.
His voice cracks me up so much, and the actors trying to personify it is pure gold
XD that drunken beatbox lesson was so pure
Ah, pawnee's finest animal control
If you seen the "Get down" then you would know this is Cadillacs Mama fat anne, but she took them for that record, left them with a dead cat in a bag.
Was that jaleel White 5:05 anything but S.erkel huh.
Yeah that was him. I had to double back. The man is getting his bag! Have you seen him on "Historical Roasts" on Netflix? He was in two roasts,and he killed it!
Damn the early mcs had some serious integrity all saying no like that
I was 13 when "Rapper's Delight" came out and like all my friends, I knew every. single. word.
Sylvia Robinson had the vision. What a genius & entrepreneur to bring what she heard & bring it to the masses. Definitely the GODMOTHER OF HIP HOP-
She was more of a con-woman than an entrepreneur. She did not pay her "black" artists or compensate them properly. She also didn't pay her taxes and went bankrupt in 1985. It took a "man" (Russel Simmons) to come along and do it the "legal" and "right" way before it was done right. Sylvia is not a hero. She was a thug just like her husband.
Herc used to have the baddest parties in the boogie down....we heard it all....great times.
The giggle at 3:36 took me out 🤣
Very cool story. To this day--Still know every word in that rhyme
god I love Retta
This story and cast tho, it’s like Christmas came early! 🤗
i love how this story acknowledges that Big Bank Hank took Grandmaster Caz's rhymes on short notice
The most important part was how it came to be called hip hop. People wanted to buy the album, but didn't know the name so they'd ask for ,"that hip hop song" .. The first few lines say "Hip hop ..." ...
This was one of the better narrated Drunk Historys. 10/10 on the dialogue. Well-scripted, drunk Colton. Bravo.
Retta has to be in more Drunk History videos! :)
Well this answers my question if he was really in a wheelchair or not 😂
Kytana Broadnax he was also the stoner animal control guy in Parks and Rec
Does anyone remember that Fatback's "King Tim the III" was being played on the radio weeks before "Rapper's Delight" was introduced on to air waves?
Uhhh . ... . no. No disrepect intended. That might have been a local hit, but I don't recall it ever being played here in Philly, while "Rapper's Delight" was EVERYWHERE!
@@Skeezer66- both songs were originated in New York City area and 92 WKTU in NYC was the radio station at that time playing both songs, but by a month later Rapper's Delight was all over the place and King Tim the III was practically forgotten.
I was 12 when Rapper's Delight came out (1977) and I remember roller-skating to it, dancing to it, and hearing out on the radio. But all this time I never knew about Sylvia Robinson or that "Good Times" by Chic was the background music!
Daaamn, we should have been friends! In 77 I was a 12 year old roller skating fiend, shouting along with the lyrics!
Chic "Good times" came out in the summer of 79, Rappers Delight came out in the Fall of 79. Not 77.
I love these lil stories. lol .😂
Stefan Urquelle was really Grandmaster Caz, all this time
I remember "Regan's Rap" was a promotion for Ronald Regan. Probably the first RADIO played rap song. Alot of rap was underground still.. slowly gaining momentum
Grandmaster kaz was like did I do that 😂
LoL Loved this. While Sylvia was instrumental in bringing hip-hop/rap to the mainstream, she and the Sugar Hill gang were not the first to record a rap song. But they may be the first to rap over another artist's music ("Good Times" by Chic). Check out these rap or rap-like songs...
And This Is Love (1973) by Gladys Knight and the Pips
Love Jones (1973) by The Brighter Side of Darkness
Sport (1973) by Lightnin' Rod
Underdog (1967) by Sly & the Family Stone
Black Is So Beautiful (1972) by Gary Byrd
GARY BYRD - Soul Travelin' (The G.B.E.) parts 1 & 2 (1972) by Gary Byrd Experience
King Tim III (1979) - The Fatback Band
Get Rid of Him (1964) by Dionne Warwick -rap at intro and outro
🤯🤯🤯
Omg he’s so freaking cute and I absolutely adore Retta!
P.S. I can’t wait for more Super Store & Good Girls!
Actually, Joey Robinson had a 'fro about the size of the rock of Gibraltar.
With one eye squinting
"I'm good."
Great episode, thanks for giving props to Sylvia Robinson for her role in the birth of hip-hop as we know it! Oh, and who else just wants a big ol' HUG from Retta?
Lol love this actor, he s like you want me to do a drunk history, ima get turnt the F up!
Awe man those were the BEST of times. Old school rap is the best rap ever. I used to have such a crush on Kurtis Blow. I love anything about 80's rap era.
That song open my ears wide. Then ever since then, I was in love with hip hop. I wouldn't let my friends sing over this song, til this day.❤💋
They did a great job with the colour grading
😂😂😂 I swear I love drunk history.
I had the pleasure of meeting a few of these guys at a blackjack table in Reno years ago. They were so nice ❤️
0:13 That's "Big Sheila" Robinson. 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂
The term "Hip Hop" as a title did not come about until later on. I would say more like the mid-80's believe it, or not. At least in NYC. Lived it! Had friends who wrapped, and who were break dancers. The term we used back in the day was just "Rap". Seriously, people did not say "Hip Hop".
The other thing, Beat Box came later on as well. There were a few people who did Beat Box, but it really became a thing with a group called The Fat Boys, and later with Doug E. Fresh, and Biz Markie.
Have to be very careful how people tell our stories, because in the process they rewrite our history.
I’m 17 and from the Passaic,paterson,Clifton triangle area in jersey and my grandma and great grandma worked at White Castle and we’re great with all of them and I got the honor of meeting them
2:00 Pure GOLD!!
Shiiittt! Shit. Shit. Shit. Derek "beat boxing" was all I never knew I needed! I can't stop...ahahaaa laughing!!!
...this dude's 909 snare is on point. Damn.
It wasn’t Kool Herc, it was Luv Bug Starski!!!!
Damn so Hip Hop had rappers saying Hip Hop is not Hip Hop since the Beginning of Hip Hop 🤣🤣🤣🤣 goes to show people just get mad when it’s not them who is in the limelight
Word, I was just listening to this the other day. Classic 🎧
Her family had a reality show. She was a genius though
He looks like a younger version of Uncle Phil from the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.😅
Uncle Phil in fresh prince remake 20 years from now
I love this song and I had no idea Jaleel could time travel. Urkle couldn't do that 😹
Retta seems like a joy to be around
Did anybody else think that Grandmaster Cash looks like Jaleel White or was that actually Jaleel White
Jaleel White makin another awesome appearance on Drunk History!
His legs work 🤯🤯🤯
Only Big Ban Hank didn't write Wonder Mike, and Master Gee wrote their rhymes. Now let me go listen to "rapper's delight"
I remember buying that album and playing it over and over and over again. My dad hated it
When I was 15 I was allowed to go to the club but the adults were there in their own section. There was never a shooting ever, because they kept an eye on us and allowed us to have our freedom. We should be doing the same for our kids.
This is the song dj’s put on while on their smoke break.
Long version of Papa was a Rolling Stone comes in at just short of 12 minutes. If you plan it right - A meal, a smoke, a dump, order a round of drinks.
1:09 “no matter what” why does this sound like master chief
Uncle Phil is a trip narrating this story.
More POC history please
The lack of Superstore fans in this comment section is criminal. This is Garrett
I was looking for more recognition!! He's been killing it on Superstore for years now. smh
Thank you for this little known but great piece of history
Thank y’all for mentioning that Colton Dunn looks like Uncle Phil 😒 now I can’t unsee it
Sidenote: SugarHill is the area around 145th Street and Amsterdam Avenue in Harlem, a few blocks north of Vinegar Hill which is down by 137th and Amsterdam (by City College). It wasn't an "artist community", just a small neighborhood.