Feb
09

The Orgins Of Rap And Hip Hop Music

By admin

The origin of hip-hop can be traced back as far as the ancient tribes in Africa. Rap has been compared with the chants, drumbeats and foot-stomping African tribes performed before wars, the births of babies, and the deaths of kings and elders. Historians have reached further back than the accepted origins of hip-hop. It was born as we know it today in the Bronx, cradled and nurtured by the youth in the low-income areas of New York City.

Fast-forward from the tribes of Africa to the ghettos of Kingston, Jamaica in the late sixties. The impoverished of Kingston gathered together in groups to form DJ conglomerates. They spun roots and culture records and communicated with the audience over the music. At the time, the DJ’s comments weren’t as important as the quality of the sound system and its ability to get the crowd moving. Kool Herc grew up in this community before he moved to the Bronx.

During the late sixties, reggae wasn’t popular with New Yorkers. As a DJ, Kool Herc spun rhythm and blues records to please his party crowd. But, he had to add his personal touch. During the breaks, Herc began to speak to his audience as he had learned to do in Jamaica. He called out, the audience responded, and then he pumped the volume back up on the record. This call and response technique was nothing new to this community who’d been reared in Baptist and Methodist churches where call and response was a technique used by the speakers to get the congregation involved. Historians compare it to the call and response performed by Jazz musicians and was very much a part of the culture of Jazz music during the renaissance in Harlem.

Herc’s DJ style caught on. His party’s grew in popularity. He began to buy multiple copies of the same albums. When he performed his duties as a DJ, he extended the breaks by using multiple copies of the same records. He chatted, as it is called in dancehall, with his audience for longer and longer periods.

Others copied Herc’s style. Soon a friendly battle ensued between New York DJs. They all learned the technique of using break beats. Herc stepped up the game by giving shout-outs to people who were in attendance at the parties and coming up with his signature call and response. Other DJs responded by rhyming with their words when they spoke to the audience. More and more DJs used two and four line rhymes and anecdotes to get their audiences involved and hyped at these parties.

One day, Herc passed the microphone over to two of his friends. He took care of the turn table and allowed his buddies to keep the crowd hyped with chants, rhymes and anecdotes while he extended the breaks of different songs indefinitely. This was the birth of rap as we know it.

Hip-hop has evolved from the days of the basement showdowns to big business in the music industry. In the seventies and eighties, the pioneers and innovators of the rap record was the DJ. He was the guy who used his turntable to create fresh sounds with old records. Then, he became the guy who mixed these familiar breaks with synthesizers to produce completely new beats. Not much has changed in that aspect of hip-hop. The guy who creates the beat is still the heart of the track. Now, we call him the producer. Even though some DJs work as producers as well as DJs (quite a few start out as DJs before they become producers), today’s title “DJ” doesn’t carry the same connotative meaning it did in the eighties. Today’s hip-hop producer performs the same tasks as the eighty’s DJ.

Kurt Howard
http://www.articlesbase.com/art-and-entertainment-articles/the-orgins-of-rap-and-hip-hop-music-91440.html

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3 Comments

1

what is a mandolin, define mandolin how is the instament played, what is its orgins in music and culture?

2

Hi! Well, a mandolin is a pear-shaped stringed instrument, similar to a lute, only a lute has a longer neck and smaller body.
The mandolin is played like a guitar, but probably plucked more
and the origin of the mandolin is USUALLY in folk music (folk pop, folk rock, etc) and has been used in progressive rock and classic rock and a fusion of the three genres.

(E.g., R.E.M.’s "Losing My Religion" has a mandolin in the background playing and at the beginning, all through the song, if you listen real GOOD; Bruce Hornsby practically dedicates a song to the mandolin called "Mandolin Rain", and you can also hear a mandolin there. Aly and AJ’s "Rush" and "No One" also include a mandolin in the background of their joints).
References :
And here’s some links:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandolin

Example of mandolin in the background:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ko1X_jcVvn8 ("No One")

I <3 the MANDOLIN, btw ;)

3

The early origins are Italian; original Italian mandolins have a large bowl-shaped back. They are 8-stringed instruments, tuned in four pairs (courses). The four courses of a mandolin are tuned the same as the four strings on a mandolin. Mandolins resemble violins in some ways (similar scale length, f-shaped holes, carved top and back). Primary differences are that they are fretted, and the fretboard, while sometimes subtly radiused, is essentially flat.

Mandolins are available in "sizes" that parallel the violin family – that is, there are mandolas (same tuning as violas) and mandocellos. I’ve never seen a mandobass, but I’d guess someone has built one at some point. There are also "octave mandolins," which have a tonal range similar to a mandocello, but which are tuned exactly an octave below a mandolin rather than to cello tuning.

In the 1920’s, mandolin orchestras utilizing the whole family of mandolins were popular.

Beginning in the 1940’s, mandolins became popular in bluegrass music (which itself was new in the ’40’s), popularized by Bill Monroe. To this day, bluegrass is the primary outlet for mandolin playing in the USA.

For more information on all things mando, see http://www.mandolincafe.com.
References :

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