San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Jamaican roots

Hip-hop has grown from basement parties to ‘the most dominant form of Black music — and pretty much all music — in the world’

- BY GEORGE VARGA

What parts of contempora­ry culture have been most impacted by hip-hop, which this month celebrates its 50th anniversar­y and in 2017 surpassed rock as the most popular and widely consumed music in the United States?

Here’s a better question: What parts of contempora­ry culture haven’t been impacted by hip-hop? Its reach extends not just to music — from rap-metal and bro-country to the Broadway-and-beyond smash “Hamilton” — but also to visual art, dance, fashion,

TV, movies, technology, literature, politics, education, Madison Avenue marketing campaigns and American and global culture at large.

“I’ve performed in 116 countries around the world since the 1980s — and it’s because hip-hop took me there,” said rapper and 2013 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee Chuck D, the leader of the pioneering group Public Enemy.

“Hip-hop has become the most dominant form of Black music — and pretty much all music — in the world,” said Emmy-, Grammy-, Oscar- and Tony Award-winning singer-songwriter John Legend, whose early collaborat­ors included then-budding hip-hop phenoms Lauryn Hill and Kanye West.

Former Oingo Boingo rock singer Danny Elfman, whose film scores have earned him four Oscar nomination­s, offered a centurylea­ping analogy.

“The profound influence of hip-hop is equivalent to the profound influence that jazz had in the 1930s and ’40s with people like Duke Ellington,” Elfman said. “Both are incredibly innovative art forms that have influenced many people and will continue to do so for many years to come.”

Bronx basement to Harvard

That influence also stretches from elementary schools to the halls of education.

In 2012, the University of Arizona became the first four-year college to offer a minor in hip-hop. That was a decade after Harvard University opened its Hiphop Archive & Research Institute. The number of annual symposiums focused on the music and its culture has grown exponentia­lly in this century.

“If we want to look at American excellence, we have to look at hip-hop culture as part of the output of American excellence,” said award-winning spoken word artist Marc Bamuthi Joseph. The Kennedy Center’s artistic director of cultural strategy and vice president of social impact in Washington, D.C., Joseph was elected into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences last year.

“Hip-hop was born in August 1973 in New York, and I was born in November 1975 in New York, so I don’t know life without hip-hop,” Joseph continued. “Hip-hop was a lens for me on romance and love, and also on global political struggle and other difficult issues.

“Through the music and the propagator­s of the music, I learned about the apartheid struggles in South Africa and diasporic strategies. Hip-hop has been truly powerful for me and many others, not just culturally but academical­ly.”

The Kennedy Center is just one of the nation’s cultural centers to embrace hip-hop in a big way. Like Harvard, the center seems a world apart from the music’s humble beginnings.

This month’s 50th anniversar­y of hip-hop is being pegged to a now-fabled party held in a Bronx basement rec room on Aug. 11, 1973. That was when Clive Campbell — a then-teenage Jamaican immigrant, soon to be known as DJ Kool Herc — played two copies of the same vinyl record.

He did so on side-by-side turntables, moving back and forth, from one record to the other. By mixing and fading between them, and focusing on snappy drum fills, he created the percussive, dancefrien­dly instrument­al interludes — known as “breaks” — between the verses of the songs he was spinning.

Herc’s shouted words of encouragem­ent to his dancing listeners, whom he referred to as breakboys and break-girls (or b-boys and b-girls, for short), added to the excitement of the moment. It also helped lay the foundation for what soon became known as rapping.

Herc’s Jamaican heritage played a key role in introducin­g the template for hip-hop in this country. Credit for this goes to such reggae-bred Jamaican-music traditions as mobile sound systems, microphone battles between DJS and speaking — known as “toasting” in Jamaica and emceeing in the U.S. — over the records being played.

Those records — initially classics by James Brown, The Incredible Bongo Band and the Canadian rock group Babe Ruth — served as another template for hip-hop, which salutes a dizzying array of genres by sampling and recombinin­g them in new ways.

NBA superstar Julius “Dr. J” Erving (background) poses with the hip-hop group The Fat Boys at a news conference in 1987 to promote Erving’s new VHS tape “Dr. J’s Basketball Stuff.”

Herc will perform Friday at New York’s Yankee Stadium as part of a massive Hip-hop 50 Live concert. The 32-act bill mixes such old-school favorites as Run DMC, Kurtis Blow, Roxanne Shante and The Sugarhill Gang with Snoop Dogg, Common, Wiz Khalifa and A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie.

Rapping itself originated hundreds of years ago with the West African tradition of the griot, the oral historians who wrote and performed songs to document in music the past and present of their people. That tradition, which continues to this day, was extended in the late 1960s and early 1970s by such pioneering rap artists as The Last Poets in New York and The Watts Prophets in Los Angeles.

“We’re all products of that continuum, whether we recognize it or not,” acclaimed rapper and actor Mos Def told The San Diego Union-tribune in 2002.

“Do I want to use that tradition as a guide, and to improve on it in a useful way that doesn’t molest the tradition? Sure . ... Scholars, critics and academics understand the connection between (griots), the blues and jazz and hip-hop; young people — ghetto people, poor people — should know it, too. It shouldn’t be informatio­n that’s classified for the high academic or cultural strata. If something’s good, why keep it a secret?”

Silver anniversar­y

The celebratio­n of the 50th anniversar­y of hip-hop got off to an early start at last year’s Super Bowl halftime show. The lineup included Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Mary J. Blige, 50 Cent, Eminem and Compton native Kendrick Lamar, who in 2018 became the first hip-hop artist to win a Pulitzer Prize for music.

Lamar’s 2017 album — the all-uppercase “DAMN.” — earned a Pulitzer Prize, the first hip-hop album win the prestigiou­s honor.

The Pulitzer voting committee hailed “DAMN.” as “a virtuosic song collection unified by its vernacular authentici­ty and rhythmic dynamism that offers affecting vignettes capturing the complexity of modern African-american life.”

Lamar’s victory came on the heels of playwright and actor Lin Manuel-miranda’s 2015 hip-hop musical “Hamilton.” The Pulitzer judges hailed it as “a landmark American musical about the gifted and self-destructiv­e founding father whose story becomes both contempora­ry and irresistib­le.”

The silver anniversar­y of hiphop officially got under way this February at the Grammy Awards. There, drummer and Oscar-winning documentar­y filmmaker Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson — the leader of The Roots, the house band on TV’S “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” — curated a 50th anniversar­y hip-hop tribute.

Clocking in at 14 minutes, it featured nearly three-dozen performers, including Grandmaste­r Flash, Salt-n-pepa, LL Cool J, Queen Latifah, Lil Baby and La Jolla resident Swizz Beatz, who is the husband of singer Alicia Keys.

The Grammy salute was a prelude to many other anniversar­y events across the country and around the world. These range from the Brooklyn Library’s current Jay-z exhibit to The Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of African American History and Culture’s second annual Hip-hop Block Party, which takes place Friday in Washington, D.C.

“Hip-hop is a culture and a lifestyle, and it is always timely,” said Public Enemy’s Chuck D, whose real name is Carlton Douglas Ridenhour.

Now 63, Chuck D this year launched a “culture app” for people 35 and older called Bring the

Noise. It is named after the galvanizin­g opening song on Public Enemy’s second album, 1988’s “It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.”

The group’s next album, “Fear of a Black Planet,” concluded with the even more galvanizin­g “Fight the Power,” which served as the opening song for the Spike Lee’s Oscar-nominated 1989 film “Do the Right Thing.”

“Hip-hop was a revolution­ary music when it first came out, which is something it has in common with reggae,” said singer-songwriter Ziggy Marley, the oldest son of the late Bob Marley. “Artists like Public Enemy, KRS-ONE and Kendrick Lamar have powerful messages.”

Indeed, Lamar’s 2015 song “Alright” served as a pivotal social protest anthem at numerous Black Lives Matter marches. “Alright” was denounced, on the air, by Fox TV’S Geraldo Rivera, who slammed the song’s revolution­ary zeal and sometimes grim lyrics but completely overlooked its ultimately uplifting message of hope.

Global impact

Speaking of television, Public Enemy’s Chuck D did not describe rapping and hip-hop in 1989 as “CNN for Black people,” although he is often credited for doing so. What he did say is: “Rap is Black America’s TV station. It gives a whole perspectiv­e of what exists and what Black life is all about.”

His observatio­n came one year after the the debut of “Yo! MTV Raps.” The show, which aired for two hours each weekday from 1988 to 1993, quickly became the most-watched program on MTV.

It introduced hip-hop to millions of White male suburban American teenagers, who soon constitute­d the largest segment of the hip-hopbuying public for records, clothing, posters and more.

The success of “Yo! MTV Raps” prompted MTV to air the shows in dozens of countries around the world. This in turn enabled hip-hop and contempora­ry Black American culture to make an indelible impact.

“When you go to other countries, they pay more attention to the roots and history of hip-hop than they do in the U.S. Kids in Europe know things about hip-hop in the 1980s that I had forgotten about,” said Cypress Hill rapper and Cuban native Sen Dog. His group celebrated its 30 anniversar­y with a July 25 concert with the San Diego Symphony, which last year shared the stage here at concerts with hip-hop stars Common and Nas.

Like rock music before it, hip-hop was largely created by Black American artists as a vital means of expression that can reflect — and transcend — its time and place.

Like rock, hip-hop celebrates excess and largerthan-life imagery, the larger the better, as well as more intimate and personal aspects of everyday life. It can be inspiratio­nal and aspiration­al, serious and lightheart­ed.

Hip-hop can also be banal and trite, much like rock music. Like rock, hiphop has provided a key platform for disenfranc­hised young people who otherwise had little or no voice — and little or no options to be seen and heard.

Like rock, hip-hop has fueled considerab­le controvers­y for being profane and sexist, dangerous and threatenin­g, and for inciting rebellious and sometimes even violent behavior.

And like rock — which celebrated its own 50th anniversar­y in 2001 — hiphop has endured and been so embraced by the mainstream that it has become part of the very establishm­ent it once threatened.

“Hip-hop has become foundation­al,” said John Legend. “That’s something to really celebrate.”

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 ?? WILBUR FUNCHES AP ??
WILBUR FUNCHES AP
 ?? AMY HARRIS AP ?? Kendrick Lamar performs at Coachella. His 2017 album “DAMN.” won the Pulitzer Prize.
AMY HARRIS AP Kendrick Lamar performs at Coachella. His 2017 album “DAMN.” won the Pulitzer Prize.
 ?? REED SAXON AP ?? In 1999, Lauryn Hill became the first rapper to win the Grammy Award for Album of the Year.
REED SAXON AP In 1999, Lauryn Hill became the first rapper to win the Grammy Award for Album of the Year.
 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI AP ?? Lin-manuel Miranda and the cast of “Hamilton” perform at the Tony Awards.
EVAN AGOSTINI AP Lin-manuel Miranda and the cast of “Hamilton” perform at the Tony Awards.

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