Hip Hop History

Words: 1540
Pages: 7

The History of Hip Hop The first time I heard hip hop was when I was in 6th grade. I was grounded, sitting in my room with my little portable radio sitting on my window sill, and I was listening to (at the time) my favorite station, KSHE 95 and I hit a block of commercials and all of my other favorite stations were on breaks too, so I started scanning, and I hit 100.3, they were in the middle of their throw back block, that’s when I heard the all too familiar intro to the Notorious B.I.G.’s Juicy. Ever since then, I have been swept up by the new wave of hip hop artists. I listened to earlier music, but never understood the evolution of styles which went from simple rhymes to complex rhyme schemes and lyrical content, this made me ask the …show more content…
Revolutionary artists include Notorious B.I.G., Tupac Shakur, Nas, Snoop Dogg, Nas, A Tribe Called Quest, and Outkast. The first truly revolutionary album of the golden age was A Tribe Called Quest’s “The Low End Theory” it combined very bass heavy beats which for the most part, were not sampled, with complex storytelling and rhyme scheme. In 1993 the Wu Tang Clan’s “Enter the Wu Tang: 36 Chambers” is released and comes to much critical acclaim because of their combinations of unique sampling styles in songs like “Wu Tang Clan Ain’t Nuthing Ta F’ Wit”, “Wu-Tang: 7th Chamber”, and “Bring Da Ruckus” by sampling various Kung Fu movies(Diggs, Robert F.). Wu Tang also used multiple members that interchanged throughout the songs which revolutionized featuring artists in hip hop. 1994 sees the release of the Notorious B.I.G.’s “Ready To Die” This album, although upkeeping the previous gangsta subject matter, it comes with a much softer and laid back approach which laid the groundwork for future styles in hip hop today, also released in 1994, Outkast’s Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik (yes, it’s all one word) which was huge in putting southern hip hop on the map ("Independent Lens. HIP-HOP TIMELINE"). In 1996, The Fugees release The Score which preached messages of African American education, and protested …show more content…
"THE SOCIAL SIGNIFICANCE OF RAP & HIP-HOP CULTURE." The Ethics of Development in a Global Environment, N.p., n.d. Web. 21 Feb. 2017.

Boyer, Holly, and Aimee Graham. "Hip Hop In The United States." Reference & User Services Quarterly 55.3 (2016): 215-218. Academic Search Elite. Web. 16 Feb. 2017.

Wheeler, Darby, "Hip Hop Evolution Ep. 1" Dir. Netflix 2016, Documentary
Wheeler, Darby, "Hip Hop Evolution Ep. 3" Dir. Netflix 2016, Documentary

Wheeler, Darby, "Hip Hop Evolution Ep. 4" Dir. Netflix 2016, Documentary

DJ Felli Fel. "The Top 10 Highest Selling Hip-Hop Albums of all Time." Power 106. N.p., 09 Mar. 2017. Web. 09 Mar. 2017.

"Independent Lens. HIP-HOP TIMELINE." PBS. Public Broadcasting Service, n.d. Web. 23 Feb. 2017.

Perkins, William Eric. "Rap Attack: An Introduction."www.temple.edu.” Temple University, n.d. Web. 7 May 2017.

Diggs, Robert F., and Chris Norris. The Wu-Tang manual. New York: Riverhead , 2005. Print.

Gresko, Brian. "The Revenge of 'Speakerboxxx': How Big Boi Flipped the OutKast Script." The Atlantic. Atlantic Media Company, 16 Jan. 2013. Web. 5 May