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Grandmaster Flash at the Ingenuity Festival

Grandmaster Flash at the Ingenuity Festival

Many DJs had "crews" or personnel consisting of DJs/MCs and sometimes dancers. For example, DJ Kool Herc's crew was known as The Herculords. Among its crew members were MCs Clark Kent, Jay Cee, and the first lady of the crew, Pebblee-Poo. Afrika Bambaataa's (who will be discussed shortly) crew, Soulsonic Force, consisted of MCs Cowboy (not Cowboy of the Furious Five), Mr. Biggs, and Queen Kenya. Other crews included the Cheeba Crew, Fantastic 5 MCs, the Mercedes Ladies, and the Malachi Crew. However, Grandmaster Flash's MCs, dubbed Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, revolutionized rhyming to the rhythm of the beat by trading off rhyming couplets (similar to trading fours among jazz musicians). Their style of rapping to the beat is the model for crews with two or more MCs. The group's 1982 recording " The Message" is by far their signature song.

Afrika Bambaataa (born Bambaataa Kahim Aasim on April 17, 1957) is the most enigmatic of these three founding fathers of the culture. His most significant artistic contribution to the development of the culture was his aesthetic commitment to exploring rare sounds and interpolating them into the creative fabric of hip-hop music. Bambaataa was born in America, but his parents were from Jamaica and Barbados. Bambaataa is one of the originators of breakbeat DJing. Through his co-opting of the street gang the Black Spades into the music and culture-oriented Universal Zulu Nation, he has helped spread hip-hop culture throughout the world.

Bambaataa, a member of the notorious Black Spades gang in the Bronx, opted to occupy himself with DJing rather than violence by performing at neighborhood clubs and block parties. Known as the "Master of Records" because of his uncanny way of finding beats from various musical genres, he also envisioned hip-hop as a deterrent to gang violence by starting a nonviolent organization called the Youth Organization at his place of residence, the Bronx River Projects, in 1973. He eventually renamed it the Zulu Nation. The Zulu Nation consisted primarily of Black and Latino youths and offered them the prospect of competing creatively against each other rather than through violent means. As Bambaataa recalled, 'people were into breakdancing, DJing, rapping, and graffiti. They would battle against each other in a nonviolent way, like rapper against rapper rather than knife against knife' (quoted in Keyes 2002, 48).

Afrika Bambaataa

Afrika Bambaataa

Rakim

The golden age was when people were starting to understand what hip-hop was and how to use it. I was lucky to come up then. Everybody wanted to be original and have substance; it was somewhat conscious...There was an integrity that people respected.

Quincy Jones

I guess hip-hop has been closer to the pulse of the streets than any music we've had in a long time. It's sociology as well as music, which is in keeping with the tradition of Black music in America.