Many people have been saying Hip Hop started in Bronxdale Houses/Rosedale Park since the 1970's..... Nowadays we have the opportunity to let the world know.
@@BoricuaNyc Whipper Whip Born: November 29, 1962 makes him 8 years old in 1970 🤣 Ruby D probably born about 1960 making about him about 10 years old in 1970 🤣 Strange they have been removed from WIKI to hide there ages I smell a 🐀. I guess because they both told the truth on the Lord Jamar channel that they did not create but they contributed wow.
the end was sad imo, them old heads are passing away left and right. Michael Wayne you gotta step it up to get the remaining survives of the Black Spades story about hip hops birth out to the masses brother , i beg you to reach out to Tariq Nashed asap, he said he wants to do a hip hop origin doc, GET THEY STORIES OUT TO THE WORLD MR WAYNE WHILE THEY ARE STILL ALIVE TO TELL IT BRUH! FBA from Texas By way of Kansas checking in yet again!
@@BoricuaNyclet me say this, Puerto Ricans have always been the brothers of black Americans but they somehow allowed west Indians aka Jamaicans inflicted harm on our union. Let me say this, Jamaicans have always been trifling people before they even left the island
Hip Hop was indeed created by Foundational Black American Freedmen ■Djaying ■MCing/Rapping ■Break Dancing ■Graffiti-■Fashion & Culture The BoogyDown Bronx
Im puerto rican born raised brooklyn and bronx in the 60s. im old school head. we are from the universal zulu nation chapters all around nyc and universal. We all use to follow zulu nation bam. Threw events rep the culture for years under Zulu nation and now outta nowhere we are not hip hop lol we been going hard 40 years for hip hop. Look up universal zulu after black spades. Not our fault bam got banned from zulu but we repped for years. Where were you? If you speak to any real hip hop underground heads we all know hip hop culture was created by blacks every element. We know our hip hop history in the zulu nation. Look us up. We are blacks and puerto ricans. I never heard of anyone say latinos created hip hop lol wtf i only saw fat joe. He does not speak for nyricans like us. Fat joe is mainstream. We rep real hip hop not mainstream pop they try to call hip hop. Been throwing hip hop awareness events for 30 years to raise awarness all for the culture. What have you heads done for hip hop and for the people besides complaing.
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 Whipper Whip Born: November 29, 1962 makes him 8 years old in 1970 🤣 Ruby D probably born about 1960 making about him about 10 years old in 1970 🤣 Strange they have been removed from WIKI to hide there ages I smell a 🐀. I guess because they both told the truth on the Lord Jamar channel that they did not create but they contributed wow.
Yes H🎙P ⭐️ H💽P is a NYBLK teen culture Using its Tools from everywhere when it came to its dance music Street and Slang fasion at hand. Respect 👊 From Perú 🇵🇪 Latin South America
They may have started jams in the park in the Bronx...but Brooklyn Deejays been doing that for years. Kool DJ Dee learned his craft from the Brooklyn Deejays and brought it to the Bronx.
100% FBA Whipper Whip Born: November 29, 1962 makes him 8 years old in 1970 🤣 Ruby D probably born about 1960 making about him about 10 years old in 1970 🤣 Strange they have been removed from WIKI to hide there ages I smell a 🐀. I guess because they both told the truth on the Lord Jamar channel that they did not create but they contributed wow.
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 Whipper Whip Born: November 29, 1962 makes him 8 years old in 1970 🤣 Ruby D probably born about 1960 making about him about 10 years old in 1970 🤣 Strange they have been removed from WIKI to hide there ages I smell a 🐀. I guess because they both told the truth on the Lord Jamar channel that they did not create but they contributed wow. Keep up the good work Wayne
That's because they didn't. The shared culture, of The Bronx, gave us Hip-Hop. It didn't start in ATL, or Detroit, right? It started here. NYC. Amongst afro descendants, of all backgrounds. End of story.
@@randee4550 I'm not going to entertain your ignorance. Wasnt shit shared we created it everyone else copied it then tried to act like they invented it. Only idiots act like people started rapping in the 70s when FBA been doing that before it had a name but you tether or 🦝 along sir.
@@randee4550 Bronx used black american music and black american art form and called it hip hop. The rapping and dancing are black america and music is black america. There is no spainish music or Jamaican music ever use to make hip hop, if you take away jazz, funk, disco and rythem/blues (all them black america), you have no hip hop.
AMERICA U are hearing the truth from the real creaters of Hip Hop from the Damn Bronx. Like Green Eye Genie said respects too all the stars of Hip Hop we are not taking anything away from u but we were before u I will say no more .
Thank you for your time and information please get in contact with Tariq Nasheed in RU-vid channel he's going to do a documentary on FBA hip hop I'm from California shout out to you thank you
How was DJ Dee affording that Macintosh amp back then? Those amps were crazy expensive and these guys had to be teenagers. That’s the part that doesn’t make sense. But big up DJ Dee, Disco King Mario and and all these pioneers for putting bricks in the foundation of this culture. Changed my life.
@@kaykayjohnson9427 that’s my point. I’m not even suggesting how out of reach a McIntosh amp would have been for someone poor. This brand makes toys for upper middle class and wealthy audiophiles. It would have been $1,200 in 1973 which is over $8,000 in 2022 when adjusted for inflation
Yo bro. I know you're gonna be at the Disco King Mario memorial at Rosedale Park. Can you please record some of it and post the video cause I didn't get to see much of anything from last year
Very very interesting. I always knew it was never originated by West indian culture (because NY was always in its own bubble for decades) But i never knew the full on details of who and what 100%. Im from Brooklyn so i always heard stories from my Uncle and older cousins who partied a lot in the Bronx in a lot of underground hip hop spots. but never knew the full on history. It was a bit scattered so this was educational. THE YOUTH into hiphop need to really listen to this shit for real
Watch out for those Jamaicans because they hate on black Americans. Yes! Hip-hop is 100 percent foundational black American and started in New but the origins has it's roots in the south; I'm talking the music part only. However, you have the responsibility to protect black American culture and music right there in New York city.
This Hip Hop 50 years celebration is some B.S…Clearly it started out in the park before Cool Herc’s parties but they don’t want to give us Black Americans our credit! This year should really be Hip Hop 53 or 52 at the latest, but that takes away from the false narrative.
Big Up for this from the U.K! As D.S.T once said in his record, "Bronx is the home of Hip Hop". " Has been avoided and exploited". That track growing up as a 13 year had a large impact on me and is the reason I listen to Old Skool Hip Hop everytime in my spare time and is the only Genre I have ever stayed true too!
Michael or anyone else, I’d like to know what songs was favored by the 1st division Black Spade B Boys. Is there a playlist or something? I’m speaking of songs we don’t know about, not the popular songs like: The Mexican, It’s just begun, Apache. What other songs was there besides these songs in the early stage? Thanks in advance. Peace.
James Brown soul power/spade power..... Ripple sure is funky...James Brown talking loud saying nothing... the marvelettes don't mess with bill/don't f**** with the spades... @Sky Daddy ... the 1 div spades use to change the chorus for their own chorus..with many funk., soul and disco songs
Bongo Rock was the big favorite before the flip side Apache it was a beaker's favorite. But when groups like the funk 4 started rapping Apache became the dominate side plus its easier to mix and rap to. Also "Cymande - Bra is another early song before they started really cutting records.
I see all this as circular reasoning. Let me give an example. If I look up who invented the first car am I not gonna find numerous example of proto cars before the first “official” car? Hip hop emerged during that time frame for a reason that’s when it happened - that’s why herc n them get credited. Another thing is a lot of these dudes were disco djs and it’s already known that they didn’t want nothing to do with the “hip hop” heads. Also how can we believe there testimonies years later why didn’t they say something 50 years ago?
Miguel Forfiva... you said "WHY DIDN’T THEY SAY SOMETHING 50 YEARS AGO?"...we have been saying this for decades...you never heard it because there was NO INTERNET!! the world was taught hip hop history by krs one or the 1 or 2 pioneers who became celebrities... but so many ppl who was around back then never became celebrities!!...The streets the hood been saying this for decades ... now our voices can be heard
You don't hear any so-called fathers of hip-hop saying these are not the facts. Why? Because they know they are. Hip Hop started in the Bronx (Bronx Dale Houses) and the surrounding communities. People who came thru loved the energy. They touch it home and entroduce it to their community and became stars. The same way it has gone around the world.
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 why is grandmaster Theodore said in a documentary he never heard anything like what herc was doing? He’s foundational what motive does he have to lie? Your voices were heard because you are the ones that gave those guys credit in the 1st place. It’s not like Jamaicans are a big part of the populace.
@Miguel Forfiva...right ...and Theodore also said that Kool Herc DID NOT START HIP HOP!! So if Theodore said he never heard anything like Kool Herc.. that's cool!! that's Theodores experience with Kool Herc "merry go round" ... its no problem with Herc taking our culture to another level... that's Kool hercs contribution!! all we're saying is there were other pioneers adding their flavour also ... and some of those other pioneers contributions came before Kool Herc...
4:38 if the amplifier Mc Intosh MC2300 still works and is in great condition, it’s will be even more expensive now. I’ve seen prices up to 25K. If in great condition that is.
If you want to concider gang culture Hip Hop Then we in Hartford began in 1968 Well The Blk Americans From Hartford Blk Panthers And The Ghetto Brothers 1971🇵🇷
Spirituals, Ragtime, Jazz, Country, Gospel, Bluegrass, Folk, Rock n Roll, Doo-Wop, Soul, Funk, Disco, Punk, House and of course Rap and Hip Hop---all enjoy well documented African American roots coupled with undeniable Black American influence---whether directly or indirectly.. Latinos -- Puerto Ricans particularly -- please explain how you co-created or co-invented yet another installment in the legacy of Black Musical expression known as Rap and Hip Hop, yet didn't co-create or co-invent any of the elements or ingredients of the 14 or so African American music forms that preceeded it? Or why you were nowhere to be found and absent during the creative and inventive foundation outlining the forms of African American musical expression, brilliance and greatness throughout, or even prior to the previous 14 or so African American music forms that are mentioned above? Yet then, all of a sudden--and out of nowhere, lying latinos and jamaicans slither along and falsely claim latinos and/or puerto ricans and jamaicans co-created and co-invented Rap and Hip Hop 50/50 half n half (which is the evidence-free and utter nonsense being peddled by Dr. Derrick Colon, radical latino, Fat Joe and numerous other un-informed and envious latinos---which are claims that latinos never mentioned, verbalized or asserted during its inception in the early 1970's)---latinos claims of "50/50--half & half co-creation and co-invention just don't add up---it makes no sense and are increasingly coming under heavy scrutiny which is leading to these claims being easily debunked--widespread. Nice try though latinos, puerto ricans and jamaicans. Make it make sense Latinos
But like I said b4 Hip Hop is a Blk ny Culture Why? The language Is blk Street Slang The fasion is blk ny soul swag The dances Black and the music Being dance to Is blk soul .
Now you want to say a head spun that was done By Some country down south blk soul and tap dancing the start...... No Why? Becouse it was something everyone was trying to get down with. And all the elements were not inefect. Those dances did not get Around in those days If they did. Then it would have been sceen on Soul train which was out of Chicago. With it dancers from Ny Chi La
I all most forgot how much fun it was I had to say hold up all the memory came back it was amazing amazing time I was every we're and new every one baby Spade for real
Puerto Ricans🇵🇷that looked black and were there since 1970-Whipper Whip and Ruby Dee. All Puerto Ricans🇵🇷don’t look like Fat Joe or J-Lo We have Roberto Clemente, Alpo Martinez and LaLa Anthony ✊🏾🇵🇷looking black-Ricans🇵🇷✊🏾✊🏽
Whipper Whip Born: November 29, 1962 makes him 8 years old in 1970 🤣 Ruby D probably born about 1960 making about him about 10 years old in 1970 🤣 Strange they have been removed from WIKI to hide there ages I smell a 🐀. I guess because they both told the truth on the Lord Jamar channel that they did not create but they contributed wow.
Whipper Whip and Ruby Dee ain't Blackamerican, but they do have Afrikan-descendancy in their blood. Basically, they look Black...because they are. Again, they're not of the Blackamerican ethnic group, but Afrika is in their DNA.
When it comes to Break dancing if you were to travél anywhere in the world. They will say Rock Steady Crew NYC Breakers Which are mostley New York Ricans. Majority rules right..... Maybee its not their culture but they made it world known.
@markogarcia7578 our documentation are THE PEOPLE!! we got people to verify Mario... Cholly Rock Zulu King is on video saying Mario was had his own b.boy crew!
No one had tvs in them 70s to see what down south Was doing on the country side Tap dancing And swipes Foor moves A head spin A superman Yes it was done But nyricians did not get it from them..... Now that theres Internet That wants to change history. I say No way. But how ever Soul train did have to do with Alot of the culture And so did Welcome Back Katter show series out of Bklyn when it comes to graff And just being Kool.....
What music was Mario spining Was it Break Beats And when he was spining Was There Breaking going on the dance floor. Receipts Is needed for The masses to believe. You kno how it is. Anyone can say anything. But what counts is Receipts..... No diss Facts KBlow said it 8Million storys
@markogarcia7578 Mario played all kinds of music...various...our receipts are the peoples testimony...yes there was breakbeats also.... Cholly Rock Zulu King is on video saying Mario was had his own b.boy crew!
Why doesn't anyone interview Ralphy CASANOVA AKA KING uprock He tells a different story For The New York Ricans...... Born in the SBx Raised in Bk From gangs to Hip hop craft. 61 yrs of age now
One can only SPEAK of what they experienced while being there. Ny is Huge Meng Shit travels fast. but if you was that duhde that did that all City thing Dealing Or Djaying Out to Bx bk Qnz Manhat then You can truley really say you knew the happs. Once again 1971
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 A lot of information that needs to be in order cause it's becoming a mountain and people coming to the channel late will only be confused, it's so much good info and would be amazing to have it in a documentary form to make the narrative make even more sense
@@balle733 That's why i don't do research with people. if it wasn't recorded people can fake whatever they want that why in my channel i only deal with recorded events.
Seems to be two origin stories. One on the westside that started in community centers, schools and clubs and another on the east side that started in the parks and 😊 projects…
True story I came up with under these brothers I was a little younger than them but I was always around outside no cap all these guys I no them seen them all the time all these guys.
PEACE to the bro running this channel, let's build king for the People, the Black History, and the **100% factual Truth. Not trying to knock ur Build, but I like to add some correction on ur hip hop History, when it comes to who started 1st wearing the very popular hip hop (fashion statement) signature (UNIFORM). The same (uniform) that was a hip hop (icon fashion style) that lasted +20 years before the skinny jean look came on the scene. The (uniform)-(THE HOODIE, BASEBALL CAP, BAGGY JEANS, etc. with the Open TIMBERLAND BOOTS or new balances), Not Today, but this was the iconic +20 year trademark fashion style in hip hop (early to mid '80s unto the next +20 years until hip hop made its permanent change from that particular (80s crack era hip hop look), now internationally known and copied to it's current look with the skinny jeans, bright colors, dresses, etc. Now u say u created it, the (ICONIC UNIFORM with the Tims), but what year did u do this, and what was ur inspiration for creating this (famous hip hop style)?? Thx
PEACE to the bro running this channel, let's build king for the People, the Black History, and the 100% factual Truth. Not trying to knock ur Build, but I like to add some correction on ur hip hop History, when it comes to who started 1st wearing the very popular hip hop (fashion statement) signature (UNIFORM). The same (uniform) that was a hip hop (icon fashion style) that lasted +20 years before the skinny jean look came on the scene. The (uniform)-(THE HOODIE, BASEBALL CAP, BAGGY JEANS, etc. with the Open TIMBERLAND BOOTS or new balances), Not Today, but this was the iconic +20 year trademark fashion style in hip hop (early to mid '80s unto the next +20 years until hip hop made its permanent change from that particular (80s crack era hip hop look), now internationally known and copied to it's current look with the skinny jeans, bright colors, dresses, etc. Now u say u created it, the (ICONIC UNIFORM with the Tims), but what year did u do this, and what was ur inspiration for creating this (famous hip hop style)?? Thx
Hip hop Started in Rosedale Park 74 Black Spades Members Dj Kool D & The Mixologist Tyrone . In Early 70s a large influx of Carribbeans brought Soundsystems and playing Disco in Queens Jamaica , Brooklyn .
@@melanatedwarrior3530 Explain the name of these Soundsystems describe equipment the Selector the Oppa ....live session we're they recorded the Battles the Mcs , Singers .....You never had that you had Blues Dance , Jazz Clubs , Go Go clubs Street Parties but no big Soundsystems That came from the Carribean and street parties came from the Deep South .
@@davidcummings5984 How you gonna tell me about my culture?? Isn't Jamaica damn near a 3rd world island full of abject poverty🤔. Y'all barely had electricity, But y'all gave us the idea of sound systems in Hip Hop🤣
@@BoricuaNyc Meanwhile every time we tell the truth about your kind ,You start babbling about " Black on black" crime. Talk about projecting, Typical rican smh