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Tag Archives: Afrika Bambaataa

Jam Master Jay

Given birth to in Brooklyn on January 21, 1965, Jason Mizell was raised playing bass, acoustic guitar, and drums in a variety of rings before discovering the turntables when he was 13, after his family members had moved to Hollis, Queens. He required quickly to turntablism, because of his musical …

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Z-3 MC’s

The Z-3 MC’s was among the many crews that bridged the gap between old-school electro and hip-hop through the mid-’80s. Their solitary “Triple Threat,” released by the wonder and Defeat label, is usually something of the lost classic from the period; thankfully, it had been unearthed by J. Saul Kane …

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Kool DJ Herc

Kool DJ Herc may be the originator of breakbeat DJing, the substance of hip-hop. By isolating and duplicating the “breaks,” or most danceable parts, of funk information by Mandrill, Wayne Brown, as well as the Jimmy Castor Number, Herc produced the prototype for modern-day hip-hop. Though others such as for …

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George Kranz

A German dance musician and manufacturer, George Kranz scored the Western european hit one “Din Daa Daa.” Kranz released a set of full-length albums during his profession, but the best someone to locate continues to be his 18-monitor compilation from 2000, Greatest of George Kranz: Din Daa Daa. Kranz provides …

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Afrika Bambaataa

A seminal Bronx DJ through the 1970s, Afrika Bambaataa ascended to godfather position with “World Rock and roll,” the 1982 hip-hop vintage that combined the beats of hip-hop with techno-pop futurism inspired by German pioneers Kraftwerk. Actually before he started documenting in 1980, Bambaataa was hip-hop’s most important DJ, an …

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Grandmaster Flash

DJ Grandmaster Display and his group the Furious Five were hip-hop’s ideal innovators, transcending the genre’s party-music roots to explore the entire range of its lyrical and sonic horizons. Display was created Joseph Saddler in Barbados on January 1, 1958; he started rotating records as teenager growing up within the …

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DJ Godfather

A DJ recognized equally for his capability to drop a couple of either electro, hip-hop, or booty, DJ Godfather eventually reached the idea in the later ’90s where he could integrate each one of these often clashing noises in to the same place, a quickly blended collage of bass-heavy beats. …

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C.C. Lemonhead

Alongside longtime creation partner Johnny “Jayski” McGowan, Nathaniel “C.C. Lemonhead” Orange created many of the ’90s most widely used booty/bass songs. Specifically, 95 South’s “Whoot, There IT REALLY IS,” the 69 Boyz’s “Tootsie Move,” Dis-N-Dat’s “Freak Me Baby,” as well as the Quad Town DJs’ “C’Mon N’ Trip It (The …

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Mr. Velcro Fastener

Echoing electro’s usual themes and fascinations, this Finnish task apply arch game titles such as for example ‘Real Robots Don’t Pass away’, ‘Blue Displays’ and ‘Vector Graphics’ and ‘Robots 4 Life’ with their android-friendly model music. Mr Velcro Fastener is truly a duo, Tatu Metsätähti (b. Finland) and Tatu Peltonen …

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Aleem

Made up of two brothers who is able to track their music business root base back again to the past due-’60s Greenwich Community scene (where they distributed a flat with Jimi Hendrix), the Aleems are most noted for forming Nia Reports in the first ’80s. The label became house to …

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