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Tariq Nasheed Dismantles Revisionist Hip Hop History | Podcast 

The Company Man
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Aight Analysts, I had a wide ranging conversation with Tariq Nasheed. The cultural historian and documentarian released a fantastic documentary called "Microphone Check: Hip Hop's Hidden History" which covers the true origins of each element of Hip Hop. The film interviews several founders including Grandmaster Caz, DJ Hollywood, Busy Bee, Sha-Rock, Corn Bread, and dives deep into the early days and origins of the culture that captured the world. Spoiler alert: I'm interviewed in the film as well.
This conversation tackles Fat Joe's assertion that Puerto Ricans were 50/50 in Hip Hop's creation story, how Drake vs Kendrick Lamar resonated with Foundational Black Americans, debating President Barack Obamas legacy in regards to FBAs, being considered "divisive," and the hilarious story about how an incarcerated youth named Corn Bread created modern graffiti.
Visit microphonecheck.com/ to view Hip Hop's Hidden History.
Also, thank you to everyone who's donated to the linktree or Cashapp to help forward the mission of the channel. It's all happening.
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ABOUT TCM:
Life Through The Lens of Hip Hop.
Justin Hunte is a music and culture critic and curator. During his career he served as Director of Content & Strategic Marketing for EMPIRE as well as Editor-in-Chief of HipHopDX. Hunte is the architect behind DX's video platform and creator of popular series, DXBreakdown. Along with championing Ambrosia For Head's video strategy, Hunte is also a weekly contributor to Shade45's All Out Show on SiriusXM and has been featured on Revolt TV’s “Revolt Live," Cheddar's "Cheddar Music," as well as in Billboard magazine.
In 2017 Justin Hunte moderated the Recording Academy's panel on The Health Of Hip Hop which featured Dr. Reef Karim, psychiatrist and human behavior expert; Shanti Das, urban music executive and founder of Silence the Shame; GRAMMY nominees Vic Mensa and Charlie Wilson, and five-time GRAMMY winner Lalah Hathaway. Later that year, he participated in a debate at the prestigious Oxford Union on whether Kanye West is more relevant than William Shakespeare.
Hunte has been the centerpiece of digital campaigns for Lexus, Honda, Brisk, and Simple Mobile and has hosted concerts and panels nationwide.
A graduate of Wofford College, Hunte spent 5 years working in investment banking at Banc Of America/Merrill Lynch and has covered music, politics, and culture for numerous publications.
He is currently based in Los Angeles, California. Follow @TheCompanyMan on all socials.
#JustinHunte #TheCompanyMan

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5 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 2 тыс.   
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
Aight Analysts, I had a wide ranging conversation with Tariq Nasheed. The cultural historian and documentarian released a fantastic documentary called "Microphone Check: Hip Hop's Hidden History" which covers the true origins of each element of Hip Hop. The film interviews several founders including Grandmaster Caz, DJ Hollywood, Busy Bee, Sha-Rock, Corn Bread, and dives deep into the early days and origins of the culture that captured the world. Spoiler alert: I'm interviewed in the film as well. This conversation tackles Fat Joe's assertion that Puerto Ricans were 50/50 in Hip Hop's creation story, how Drake vs Kendrick Lamar resonated with Foundational Black Americans, debating President Barack Obamas legacy in regards to FBAs, being considered "divisive," and the hilarious story about how an incarcerated youth named Corn Bread created modern graffiti. Visit microphonecheck.com/ to view Hip Hop's Hidden History. Also, thank you to everyone who's donated to the linktree or Cashapp to help forward the mission of the channel. It's all happening. LinkTree: linktr.ee/thecompanyman
@kinglumpkins8831
@kinglumpkins8831 Месяц назад
Very good information and a great interview by THC too. Didn't come here for an opportunity we are the opportunity #bars
@yousmellfunny7418
@yousmellfunny7418 Месяц назад
😂😂😂 Mississippi birthed music in America and rapping started there! You all need to give Mississippi there flowers and give respect to your ancestors. Then the music jumped a crossed the river into Louisiana and Jazz other genres were born!!!! So you lying azz people who want to erase Mississippi and Louisiana out of history for birthing the music in America you have another thing coming!
@juwonikemoses2045
@juwonikemoses2045 Месяц назад
If you're platforming Tariq Nasheed, it's time to unsubscribe. It's a shame. I had been watching since the HipHopDX days
@melanatedwarrior3530
@melanatedwarrior3530 Месяц назад
@@juwonikemoses2045 Truth hurts🤭
@truehistory261
@truehistory261 Месяц назад
​@juwonikemoses2045 get to the button fast 😂😂😂
@sleepyccs
@sleepyccs Месяц назад
To all the people in the comments that don't like Tariq. 👉🏾stay mad. Hip Hop was created by Black Americans.
@LorenzDominique
@LorenzDominique Месяц назад
Silly
@nuttabutter1963
@nuttabutter1963 Месяц назад
My question to you is did you live in the bronx in the 70s,
@kennethjackson1771
@kennethjackson1771 Месяц назад
​@nuttabutter1963 I from Brooklyn 62 years young and the only thing Puerto Ricans created was Rice & Beans.They called what we were doing jungle music.
@jaleelthompson927
@jaleelthompson927 Месяц назад
Or you can be like me, not like Tariq and think some of his conclusions to our history are misguided. But enjoy history and black American heritage so new untold stories are always welcomed. Message and messenger kind of thing 🤷🏾‍♂️
@mmj1340
@mmj1340 Месяц назад
@@nuttabutter1963It didn’t start in the Bronx or the 70’s. So what’s your point?🤣
@captivesojourner
@captivesojourner Месяц назад
As a black Caribbean who grew up around alot of racist white LIETINOS im extremely proud of FBAs standing on business and owning yall shit.
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
THANK YOU!
@bigh9884
@bigh9884 Месяц назад
Say it loud, I'm black and I'm proud.
@lord-vast
@lord-vast Месяц назад
💯💯💯
@RulaOfMe
@RulaOfMe Месяц назад
Moor?..
@rickyjames4228
@rickyjames4228 Месяц назад
To rite I agree UK in the house
@empire7179
@empire7179 Месяц назад
I'm 65 years old from Marcy, Tompkins and Sumner Projects in Brooklyn. At the beginning of Hip-hop, there were Hispanics people in the neighborhood but they did not participate in our Parties or when we had Music in the Streets. They were heavily into Salsa, "Not James Brown". Now out of the 3 Projects I just named I can name 2 Hispanic guys that used to hang out with us. One was from Marcy and the other one was from Tompkins. It wasn't 50/50 then and it never was 50/50.. Not even now.. Look at Terror Squad., there's only one Black artist and that was Remy Ma.. Plus Big Pun brought her in, Not Fat Joe so I don't get what he's talking about??? If it was 50/50 someone please named the Hispanic rap artist's that was out at the beginning? I'll Wait.. I mean there's no hate it's just reality. Jamaican was and still is mainly in Flatbush Brooklyn and in the 70s there wasn't really that many Jamaican families there so how was we influenced by them??
@mannybruce8950
@mannybruce8950 Месяц назад
Thank you 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 . The movie " Rubble Kings " showed how heavy in the 70s gang culture along racial lines were . Black people were moving away from the street gangs and got into creating Hip Hop before the Puerto Ricans started to give up the gang culture . I remember the Hip Hop park jams in south Brooklyn and the Puerto Rican street gangs like the " Savage Skulls " and the " Crazy Homocides " would come around and most times it would break out in fights between the Black attendees and the PR gangs . The gangs might of not been having the big gang wars with each other like in the past but they still were going around f*cking with people , and the PR gangs liked f*cking with Black people . They were holding onto that gang sh*t up until the Black urban street styles started making them look like old played out glue sniffing dusty bums .
@lroyjetsonson5060
@lroyjetsonson5060 Месяц назад
I remember an old magazine interview with Remy, and she is part Spanish. In another old Magazine interview, Armageddon said he was just light skinned Black and wasn't Spanish at all.
@otterdonnelly9959
@otterdonnelly9959 Месяц назад
Umm why are we focusing on Brooklyn? Jamaicans and Hispanics were more mixed in together in the Bronx earlier anyways.
@tawandamaat0013
@tawandamaat0013 Месяц назад
I was born on 1962, still to these days Latinos/Hispanics and Jamaican are Caribbeans nationalities which all Caribbeans music sound the same even Afro Beats music sounding the same in every song that’s out, and it’s still only a couple of Hip Hop rappers who’s Latinos/Hispanics or Jamaicans/Caribbean which is Cardi B and Nicki Minaj It is so many Freedmen/Foundation Black Americans Hip Hop MC, Rapper’s that it will take a few hours to type in the names !!!!!!!!!!!!! The question is when is the Latinos/Hispanics, Puerto Ricans and Jamaicans/Caribbeans going to make a Hip Hop documentary so the world can hear and see something they’re claiming on the totally Hip Hop culture !!!!!!!!!!!!
@PRINCENITTITHAGOD
@PRINCENITTITHAGOD Месяц назад
That's right brother I was there back then in Queens Bridge projects and we had some PR's but they were doing their own thing They gravitated more to Disco then later Hip Hop I went to a high school in Manhattan called Printing H.S. (now called Graphic Communications and Arts) and down the block from Park West High Printing High was mostly Harlem and the Bronx and some of my classmates and friends grew up with alot of these guys like Charlie Chase n Cold Crush practicing In his apartment I got all my party tapes of Harlem World jams and Conventions from school
@hakeemakbar1575
@hakeemakbar1575 Месяц назад
It’s amazing how the people “with no culture “always have people trying to copy theirs. Here’s a little side note, the modern drums that everyone use was made by an FBA named DD Chandlier who’s parents were born during slavery and he’s from New Orleans. Every genre of music in America we created.
@mrwhite77781
@mrwhite77781 Месяц назад
The first shall be last and the last shall be first we special people survived the most brutal chattel slavery the most high love us all these other races and different ethnic blacks don't have to like us we just need to love and unite within black Americans
@apexone5502
@apexone5502 Месяц назад
Thank you for pointing that out. It was one of our own who created the drum set which ended up allowing us to further come up with genres that work best with certain drum patterns that you can't get from those separate drum ensembles that marching bands use. You get those modern drum patterns from drum sets only. Without the drum set, no one would've come up with the "On the One" concept that James Brown came up with because drum ensembles in a marching band always come up with polyrhythms that don't work in that steady rhythmic manner that works for Funk, Soul, Hip Hop, etc. With that being said, how in the world could any other group come up with our music when our music, rhythmically, is heavily based on an instrument one of our own had created?
@poorHackers
@poorHackers Месяц назад
RIGHT ON ❤️🖤💚🇺🇲
@mistamycall
@mistamycall Месяц назад
Some of those slaves had descendants from Africa right? Thus the African slaves passed on their traditions from generation to generation in the new land, right? Why does this so-called FBA generation not acknowledge that? A seed blown away by the wind, growing 40 000 KM away from it`s roots, doesn't change it's roots, right? I'm i tripping? FBA are ashamed of their African roots, because White Supremacy told them to do so. What a shame ... smh
@coollock5912
@coollock5912 Месяц назад
@hakeemakbar1575 Well said!!!
@52blocksfederation83
@52blocksfederation83 Месяц назад
I was in a mostly Puerto Rican gang called the Savage Skulls is the 70s. My PR friends were not into “Nigga or Jungle Music”. That’s what they called it. Some of my friends had to sneak to do it and they weren’t at the parties. Fat Joe needs to apologize.
@busterdouglasiii3838
@busterdouglasiii3838 Месяц назад
@@dfwherbie8814Hold on. I’m FBA. Are you saying this man is lying about telling his truth. Unbelievable.
@Nastydealerr
@Nastydealerr Месяц назад
​@@dfwherbie8814you are a guest in our culture speaking have several seats 🤡 hahaha
@TSLW
@TSLW Месяц назад
That man is telling the truth, I'm from the same 70's era and I am also familiar with the gang he was with. not as a member but as them being in my neighborhood perimeter in the south Bronx, he's not lying, I never heard it termed back then as nigga music but I did hear it termed as jungle music.
@LOOKINTHRUMY3RDEYE
@LOOKINTHRUMY3RDEYE Месяц назад
I'm Puerto Rican and been around since the 70s and you are full of it..I was part of a crew and we had Morenos with us all day long ...of course you come from the racist biker gang demographic everyone has their group of racists
@classicbullyprincesscarla1079
@classicbullyprincesscarla1079 Месяц назад
More and more of people that was there stories are coming out. Thanks for your story sir
@nizzotheartist
@nizzotheartist Месяц назад
I’m so thankful that somebody was willing to stand for foundational black Americans
@d.cent1326
@d.cent1326 Месяц назад
What exactly is a “foundational black American”?
@user-xd2zc7lg2t
@user-xd2zc7lg2t Месяц назад
A foundational black American is a black American supremacist . Cool herc Jamaican .biggie . Buster . Caribbean blacks bought the sound systems to the bronx with the Mic mc toasting. The dub means the b side instrumental Jamaicans were rapping on the dub version from the 60s . We invented the version with discursion that was precurser to sampling as Jamaican artists recorded different raps over the same song. Biggie a hip hop giant Jamaican parents . Sit down foundational black American With your he said she said anecdotes.
@og3081
@og3081 25 дней назад
@@user-xd2zc7lg2tLYING “TETHER STOP !” LMAO 😭
@FBA-ld6tj
@FBA-ld6tj 20 дней назад
@@user-xd2zc7lg2t Kool herc mixed and extended soul & funk beats both FBA genre's so herc brought nothing from Jamaica and biggie was born here fully assimilated into FBA culture rhyming and rapping in our style slang and cadence
@FBA-ld6tj
@FBA-ld6tj 20 дней назад
@@user-xd2zc7lg2t FBA's rhyming and rap style comes from the dozens and that's the style biggie busta and Caribbean blacks in hip hop assimilated too we know our FBA history and we know ur and y'all not us 😂
@Antmoore1997
@Antmoore1997 Месяц назад
Tariq needs his PROPS. I am from Harlem in the 80s (shoutout to Dr. Clarke) and have always been about KNOWLEDGE of OUR people. Starting w Hidden Colors, Tariq has continually put OUR people in the correct context.
@rotweilerscholar1181
@rotweilerscholar1181 Месяц назад
As a 55 year old Bronxite with direct ties to Ground Zero, DJ Mario and the Castle Hill-Soundview Community, I'm impressed at the sources he used for validity. He also has a great attention to detail that can only come from a labor of love. Salute my Brother Tariq!!
@Mya_water
@Mya_water Месяц назад
Oh please. What took yall 50 years to talk about this????????
@wambokodavid7109
@wambokodavid7109 Месяц назад
​@@Mya_water😂😂😂coz they capping thats why 😂
@Mya_water
@Mya_water Месяц назад
@@wambokodavid7109 It’s not adding up fr
@AnimalAlmighty
@AnimalAlmighty Месяц назад
@@wambokodavid7109Capping about what? 🤔
@Codedialect
@Codedialect Месяц назад
We’re delineating & preserving the culture 💯
@Black-Pill-7411
@Black-Pill-7411 Месяц назад
Delineation is only going on in these you tube streets
@AnimalAlmighty
@AnimalAlmighty Месяц назад
🫡💯
@MrBdavis99
@MrBdavis99 Месяц назад
I'm glad to see that black Americans are coming out to stop the intentional co-opting of Hip-hop by other groups. FBA 🇺🇲
@icanseaclearnow
@icanseaclearnow Месяц назад
FBA doesn’t make sense. Is there a framework of vision on how that can actually be used in disaggregating the American Black diaspora.
@MrBdavis99
@MrBdavis99 Месяц назад
@@icanseaclearnow It makes perfect sense in light of the fact that some in the diaspora have already used their culture to delineate themselves from black Americans. Now that black folks in this country are claiming our culture, all of a sudden it's a problem. Make that make sense!
@lamanulyung4580
@lamanulyung4580 Месяц назад
@@icanseaclearnowstop in musty person u pathetic 💯
@cornelldavis6703
@cornelldavis6703 Месяц назад
@@icanseaclearnowpower is exclusionary!! Kick rocks!!!
@brucearmstead364
@brucearmstead364 Месяц назад
I second that, kick rocks😂
@Unimpressed360
@Unimpressed360 Месяц назад
Brownsville BKLYN. Born 1969. When hip hop got popular with US, Hispanics acted like WE were corny. Once they saw WE didn’t give a damn what they thought, cause WE were loving it……even THIER women, THEN they got on board.
@randee4550
@randee4550 Месяц назад
Bro. Brownsville is still the most backward part of NYC. Cablevision even refused to furnish that area, with cable lines, because NOBODY there couldn't even afford it! This is a true story!!!
@AnimalAlmighty
@AnimalAlmighty Месяц назад
of course. they always copy.
@randee4550
@randee4550 Месяц назад
@@AnimalAlmighty who's "they"?
@LOOKINTHRUMY3RDEYE
@LOOKINTHRUMY3RDEYE Месяц назад
Well KRS -1 says otherwise and I was there..I'm the OG...and while of course the old school Puerto Ricas were not rocking hip-hop, their kids were ie my generation, we were going against our parents wishes and pursuing hip hop with our friends. Puerto Rican is an ethnicity NOT a race...WE are BLACK! ​
@LOOKINTHRUMY3RDEYE
@LOOKINTHRUMY3RDEYE Месяц назад
Brooklyn dudes can have a seat cuz it started in the BRONX I could care less what a Brooklyn dude says cuz he wasn't there in the BRONX
@nwkla_
@nwkla_ Месяц назад
It’s about time the pioneers get their credit 💯💯💯 Great documentary
@wambokodavid7109
@wambokodavid7109 Месяц назад
You're acting like no one knows hiphop is black original.what are u afraid of???
@abdur-raheems8648
@abdur-raheems8648 Месяц назад
I remember going to Jamaican clubs in Oakland CA in the late 80s and 90s and saying damn there is a Jamaican version of every song from my childhood. Lol, there is no way hip hop came from them, now they influenced British 80s music for sure.
@Nastydealerr
@Nastydealerr Месяц назад
Lmao facts you ain't lying my g, I'm Trinidadian born I'm 33 now and you absolutely right coming up we hear it all every remixed you can hear of american blacks music b1👊🏿😂.
@7771croy
@7771croy Месяц назад
"Jamaican clubs in Oakland, CA" is your source. Lol, you can't make this 'ish up.
@abdur-raheems8648
@abdur-raheems8648 Месяц назад
@@7771croy You clown, I didn't say it was bad that they made versions of 70s soul music and they did, however back then Black Americans was not making remakes of Jamaican artists and that's a fact. Whenever someone says, You cant make this shit up and there not coming with facts too back up that statement they have already lost the argument. Hip Hop didn't come from Jamaica but they did influenced British music from the late 70s and 80s.
@ponderosafuture
@ponderosafuture Месяц назад
Let’s hear your sources ?
@7771croy
@7771croy Месяц назад
@@ponderosafuture Do you know DJ Kool Herc is and is role in the founding of the genre? What about U-Roy, are you familiar with his music at all? ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-guhdPYnq-gc.html
@markbatson3958
@markbatson3958 Месяц назад
Congrats on this great interview Justin. We need more like this. Tariq’s breakdown of the beginnings of our beloved Hip Hop music and culture are essential learning from this point forward in all textbook conversations of how, when and why Hip Hip started.
@CynKylinn-Marie
@CynKylinn-Marie Месяц назад
Hey I’m the girl from the video about the Kendrick Lamar and Drake beef! I appreciate the conversation had from it
@inspiredbynatureinspiredby5586
@inspiredbynatureinspiredby5586 Месяц назад
Black Americans and Americans as a whole are tired of the arrogant disrespect(including sabotaging) and so we're not taking it anymore. A lot of foreign people tend to get comfortable then begin to act exactly like where they come from. ie. tribalist, hostile, passive aggressive, act dumb, and etc. Why do you think there has been such a backlash throughout the entire West including USA, Canada, Scandinavian Nordic countries, UK, Australia, Europe, and etc. when it comes to immigration. Why do you think Europe has moved more Conservative when it comes to immigration. And, those weren't questions but a realization of the negative effects of bringing in new people(legal and illegal). Wise Federal Governments invest heavily into their own native population and citizens first. Even as generous as those Scandinavian Nordic countries they are basically closed their borders because of recent immigrants not assimilating, are hostile, and think they are entitled to the same Rights and Freedoms that they didn't even create or fight for🇺🇸
@jayjohnson7708
@jayjohnson7708 Месяц назад
Thanks for showing love to the FBA family. What platform did you make that video? This one said part 2 I'm tryna see both parts
@w1lsons482
@w1lsons482 Месяц назад
🫡✊🏽💪🏾🇺🇸
@HypnoticHollywood
@HypnoticHollywood Месяц назад
Black American women are the freest and most prosperous black women to ever live and you pretending that you're "going through" something in America today is a slap in the face of black ancestors who actually lived through oppression.
@mommadeb2433
@mommadeb2433 Месяц назад
Yes we are all that. So, we made a lane for all black immigrants to come to our country and share the same freedoms and prosperity of our hard work. But now these ones we helped are HOSTILE to use even to the point of mistreating our elders in medical facilities! Im ready for them to be DEPORTED!​@HypnoticHollywood
@Mr.CireSoprano
@Mr.CireSoprano Месяц назад
Latino Brothers and Sisters DID NOT help create Hip Hop at all. THIS IS NOT A QUESTION. The Puerto Ricans in The Bronx at that time ostracized the very few who CHOSE TO EMBRACE THAT PART OF FOUNDATIONAL BLACK AMERICAN CULTURE.. I remember they were actually racist against Foundational Black Americans and Darker skinned Puerto Ricans. They had their own jams in the park and never played any breaks or funk or soul. ONLY SALSA ... NOTHING ELSE. Even though they're my people too. I GOTTA TELL THE FACTS❗
@christopherstephens1129
@christopherstephens1129 Месяц назад
Salsa is Jazz also the dance form is swinging.
@RulaOfMe
@RulaOfMe Месяц назад
I remember when the world was protesting against hiphop and us black original Americans stood our ground and kept pushing it to the public🤦🏾‍♂️
@ray1411
@ray1411 Месяц назад
@@christopherstephens1129 What's your point? Why try to equate everything to black American culture? Stand on your own merit
@christopherstephens1129
@christopherstephens1129 Месяц назад
@@ray1411 The fact is Salsa comes from Jazz it is not equating it is the truth.
@pavavision4695
@pavavision4695 Месяц назад
You can only talk about those in the Bronx....what about Brooklyn ??? Did you go 2 the jams in Brooklyn....??? Dynasty Rockers, Together We Chill, Rock The House, Mastermind Rockers all 🇵🇷 Party Crews that Rock Dance to Jimmy Castor, James Brown, Funk & Boogaloo Beats by Puerto Rican & Black Latino DJs from Brooklyn that was doing the same thing the Bronx was doing from 70s-80s 💯 Gangs from the Bronx were invited to these jams Savage Skulls, Savage Nomads & Ching A Lings & they would jam with BKLYN PUERTO ROCKS. 💯 In Brooklyn their were many Black Latinos & Caribbean 🇨🇺 🇩🇴 🇵🇦 🇯🇲 🇹🇹 🇬🇾 Different vibes Different Musix & Dancing in Brooklyn 💯 Hip Hop is the name the Bronx gave to that style of music since every boro was doing the same thing even Queens had their own Style of Rap Music 💯 Blacks Were not called Foundational Black American in the 70s they called themselves Afro-Americans 💯 they dislike the Term Negro/Black & embrace their African Roots...💯 Latinos used the term Negro alot even called white latino Negro because of Hair color...not skin color.... even Black Latino aknowledge this. & Black americans hated on Black Latinos because they were with Latinas... Blacks Americanz never Saw a white Latina & a Black Latino married & having kids...That was common among the Latino Community while Blacks never had this type of experience since they grew up racially disconnected & main reason why their was alot of frictions. If it wasnt for Latinos & Caribbean Folks Hip Hop wouldnt be ever it is....💯
@b.o.1951
@b.o.1951 Месяц назад
This is exactly why I love this channel. Non biased opinions based on factual information and evidence. Much appreciated
@mannybruce8950
@mannybruce8950 Месяц назад
Thank you 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 . The movie " Rubble Kings " shows how divisive along racial lines with the street gangs in the 70s . Black people had dropped the gang culture before the Puerto Ricans finally gave it up . Black people were having rap jams in the parks and at Block parties when the Puerto Ricans were still walking around in their gang colors in the 70's . It was Black people who came out with the early 70s street styles like the gabardine dress pants with the stitching or the split along the side of the pants , the Mock neck sweaters and rocking the silver or gold medallion chain , the Cord Field coats , and the Lee jeans suit . The Puerto Ricans were slow on rocking the street styles .
@tawandamaat0013
@tawandamaat0013 Месяц назад
I was born on 1962 and can learn something, thank you for the information on DD Chandelier the inventor of the Modern Drum Set !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@andreray2784
@andreray2784 Месяц назад
This guy is definitely biased with this non-FBA politicians nonsense. I like his take on hip hop, but he should stick to that. Not politics!! He sounds way too ultra ethnocentric to me.
@melanatedwarrior3530
@melanatedwarrior3530 Месяц назад
@@andreray2784 What's your background 🤔
@andreray2784
@andreray2784 Месяц назад
@@melanatedwarrior3530 I am African American. What's your background?
@dannytukes8713
@dannytukes8713 Месяц назад
There is something special about us, something beautiful, something unique, something out of the ordinary, something devine 😮FBA are a very beautiful ethnicity. There culture dominate the world 🌎 Long Live FBA-Foundation Blaq Americans. Danny Tukes FVSC
@amirkiam3833
@amirkiam3833 Месяц назад
It’s the same with the Latino fraternities and sororities, now they copied black frats and sors with stepping and strolling and the Greek letter jackets like we have. They copy everything we do.
@TekniCaliSpeakin
@TekniCaliSpeakin Месяц назад
Nothing wrong with that tho. Just don't say you founded it
@deedee_southerngirl
@deedee_southerngirl Месяц назад
​@@TekniCaliSpeakin One of them told me that stepping, strolling and calling were "FOUNDATIONAL" to their heritage. So, the co-opt was in the mix.
@denisebycapricorn
@denisebycapricorn Месяц назад
​@@TekniCaliSpeakin Yes it is. Black & White frats are night & day because of CULTURE. Stop stealing other ppls culture.
@jonassmith2378
@jonassmith2378 Месяц назад
@@user-fm8gp5rk7i 🤣
@inspiredbynatureinspiredby5586
@inspiredbynatureinspiredby5586 Месяц назад
​@@TekniCaliSpeakinThe same people who cry when those Spainards don't even claim you and treat Latinos horribly even though Latinos try to claim Spain as their Motherland. The Irony💔
@cnutt1.the-soloist
@cnutt1.the-soloist Месяц назад
That’s Right!… Biggie Smalls said it, “remember the Rappin Duke, Duh ha, Duh ha… you didn’t think Hip-Hop, would take it this far”
@FBA_AllTHEWAY
@FBA_AllTHEWAY Месяц назад
✊🏾🇺🇸Great interview. This guy did a great job asking questions and not interrupting his guest. This is how to do an interview!👍🏾
@Paidwellington
@Paidwellington Месяц назад
Wow. This was a wonderful interview. I've yet to see Microphone Check but every review assures me of the positive impact it's having in the community. Tariq hit the nail on the head when noting how all our accomplishments are attributed to outside sources, but our dysfunctions are internal manifestations from slavery. Great job Justin. New subscriber.
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
Thank you 🙏🏿
@fredricksmith8760
@fredricksmith8760 Месяц назад
What Non FBA's don't understand, Hip-hop is all about paying homage to the records we grew up on at the Bar B Q and Family reunions. Or being played on Sundays while Momma cleaning the house. It's all about celebrating BLACK AMERICAN CULTURE. That's what HIP-HOP IS. It has nothing to do with Caribbean culture because that wasn't in our house holds growing up.
@ev8318
@ev8318 Месяц назад
No it wasn't! It was all about getting together and having fun, smoking herb, drinking liquor, getting high and screwing. All that embellishing BS was for the media.
@melanatedwarrior3530
@melanatedwarrior3530 Месяц назад
@@ev8318 You and your ppl wasn't even there, so how would you know🤔
@ev8318
@ev8318 Месяц назад
No it wasn't. It was all about having fun. There were no embellishment.
@ev8318
@ev8318 Месяц назад
@@melanatedwarrior3530 Here's blk and hispanics together in 1966 google title HiramMaristany “Group of Young Men on 111th Street”
@yessir8805
@yessir8805 Месяц назад
They ain't going know about that because they didn't have no music before hip hop. They have no culture
@stevens7525
@stevens7525 Месяц назад
They know they didnt co-create shit. Thats why they tried to rewrite history and claim Trixie and Disco King Mario as Ricans, until that shit got debunked lmao
@coachdev8873
@coachdev8873 Месяц назад
I am from Trinidad and Tobago and i been listening to rap as a child in the early 90's i was caught up into Jamaicans creating hip hop but as listen to people like Mr Tariq i have gotten the knowledge that FBA created the hip hop .
@Mya_water
@Mya_water Месяц назад
It’s not as simple as he is trying to make it
@reckless1216
@reckless1216 Месяц назад
@@Mya_waterwhat music did your parents listen to when they were kids back home?
@Mya_water
@Mya_water Месяц назад
@@reckless1216 My dad's side is in the music industry. I grew up hearing all types
@reckless1216
@reckless1216 Месяц назад
@@Mya_water where are your parents from. If not USA no need to respond
@Mya_water
@Mya_water Месяц назад
@@reckless1216 What relevance is that?
@TheeRebel
@TheeRebel Месяц назад
This video need to be liked shared and favorited...
@libraryofpapel
@libraryofpapel Месяц назад
Great interview. Creation v.s. influence is so different.
@eh-ym3ws
@eh-ym3ws Месяц назад
Wow.. I loved this interview. The interviewer was able to dispel all of the different points people have been making about the creators of Hip Hop and the many allegations against Tariq Nasheed. I really enjoyed this interview. Respect to both of these brothers coming to the table having a intelligent, candid and respectful conversation. BTW you have a new subscriber. Keep up the great work.
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
Thank you!
@AmateurAnalyst013
@AmateurAnalyst013 Месяц назад
These are the interviews/in depth conversations we need. There is so much knowledge and history that isn't music related in Hip-hop that bleeds into every piece of American culture; and it nowhere near unpacked enough. This video is much appreciated and even more needed. Talks like this are why I subscribed. 🫡🫡
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
Thank you!
@AmateurAnalyst013
@AmateurAnalyst013 Месяц назад
@@TheCompanyManThank you
@I_AM_Legend_007
@I_AM_Legend_007 Месяц назад
Pigmeat Markham is from SC and Blowfly is from GA
@SoLowDolo
@SoLowDolo Месяц назад
Rapping started in the south like most FBA genres.
@FBA_AllTHEWAY
@FBA_AllTHEWAY Месяц назад
A fun Fact: a street was named after Pigmeat Markham in Durham, North Carolina where he was born.✊🏾🇺🇸🔥🔥
@Horsemanrise
@Horsemanrise Месяц назад
Thank you so very much setting the record straight😊
@christopherholmes6354
@christopherholmes6354 Месяц назад
This was so insightful. Im a 42yo Black, excuse me, FBA that is very up on history and perspective but wow how i needed this. I was born in '82 so i aint see hip hop before that nor hear it told in this manner. These nuances about FBA lineage and others is 1 million % true, unless its negative.I feel so blessed to have come across this video. STREAM THIS SHXT MAN! I need to see this and so does my 15yo son. Man WE ALL DO...FR Thx to both of y'all ✊🏾
@IAmAlmightyGod
@IAmAlmightyGod Месяц назад
I really appreciated and enjoyed this interview and the guest.
@fredricksmith8760
@fredricksmith8760 Месяц назад
LET'S GO!!! You get MAJOR POINTS FOR THIS INTERVIEW!!
@IdeaStudioBKK
@IdeaStudioBKK Месяц назад
This was dope. I love these deeper conversations.
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
Thanks brother!
@Ace_Keeper_
@Ace_Keeper_ Месяц назад
Tariq once again brought truth to power, what a great tandem, allowed Tariq to dispelled all of the myths especially the LIE-tinos 50/5O bs. Interviewer did a great job asking the right question and keeping it interesting, new subscriber
@daleharris4953
@daleharris4953 Месяц назад
Two of my favs linked up 💪🏾
@UCNTZ
@UCNTZ Месяц назад
Really interesting interview, will be watching this movie tonight!
@bootneyleefarnsworth7307
@bootneyleefarnsworth7307 Месяц назад
Rap is one of the most popular genres in the world, but unfortunately its history has never been properly documented. Native Black Americans have rapped in music since the post emancipation era. However most books, articles and documentaries insinuate or outright claim that the genre is something new that started in New York with the Hip-Hop youth movement.
@Ayinde65
@Ayinde65 Месяц назад
Don't you think that Black people "rapped" over African drums, calypso, Cuban son, Brazillian sambas, blues and jazz? Jamaican toasting emerged out of the mobile sound systems and they talked over pre-recorded music. This was something totally different.
@bootneyleefarnsworth7307
@bootneyleefarnsworth7307 Месяц назад
@Ayinde65 You're off-topic, Rap is an exclusively Native Black American creation and what's being spoken of is the fact that the genre hasn't been properly documented.
@myronbriggs1018
@myronbriggs1018 Месяц назад
Brother I just published a book about Harlem 1977/78. It includes an essay about the origins of hip hop including photographs that I took. It's a true story about a teenager who took a train from California to NYC during the heyday of hip hop. The Dr Colons and other critics love to dismisses us for not being there, but I was.
@malaikamckee-culpepper261
@malaikamckee-culpepper261 Месяц назад
Man, you can't drop source without a connection!!! Please, for the love of your scholarship, could you please provide an ISBN number or a link to your website so we can buy it? Thanks!
@I_AM_Legend_007
@I_AM_Legend_007 Месяц назад
FBAs were there. It’s our culture… no matter where your from
@AnimalAlmighty
@AnimalAlmighty Месяц назад
^ facts
@ml_kayAli
@ml_kayAli Месяц назад
Juvenile's "Huh" New Orleans porch rhymes. Signifying & playing the dozens throughout the entire song✊🏿💪🏿👏🏿👋🏿✊🏿
@Ayinde65
@Ayinde65 Месяц назад
You do know that New Orleans culture has roots in the Caribbean don't you?
@ml_kayAli
@ml_kayAli Месяц назад
@Ayinde65 I DO KNOW that signifying and playing the dozens while rhyming is 100% foundational black american culture. Send me a link of your earliest comedic rhymers...I'll wait. Wherever you're from, you just made a fool out of your people in this conversation🤦🏿‍♂️
@reckless1216
@reckless1216 Месяц назад
@@ml_kayAli😂 it’s time to tell them like it is. My family is from the south no Caribbean influences at all
@ml_kayAli
@ml_kayAli Месяц назад
@@reckless1216 I don't think they understand who we are✊🏿🤷🏿‍♂️
@BorisColley
@BorisColley Месяц назад
just hearing the rapid huh's in that song hit like bullets with each bar
@barbaram.7651
@barbaram.7651 Месяц назад
This was a great interview, spot on.
@johnwilliams4325
@johnwilliams4325 Месяц назад
Thank you brother Mr. Tariq Nasheed for your consent work of information for foundation Black American.🎉🎉🎉
@drummajor101
@drummajor101 Месяц назад
I've been waiting on this interview
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
What’d you think?
@Cbriggs502
@Cbriggs502 Месяц назад
​@@TheCompanyMan🔥🔥🔥
@middletonwilliams7608
@middletonwilliams7608 Месяц назад
Absolutely amazing this interview deserves a standing ovation we appreciate The Company Man for sharing your platform to shine light on this historic moment in time and family pay attention to all the so called Hip Hop media platforms who haven't invited Tariq on to speak and promote this film, they haven't even so much as mentioned the documentary AT ALL. I'm talking about The Breakfast Club, Ebro, Drink Champs, Million Dollars Worth Of Game, Joe Budden etc. in the words of Katt Williams "In 2024 all truths will be exposed"
@michaelhemphill8575
@michaelhemphill8575 Месяц назад
This is why..."I don't fu*k with .. charlemagne the"Fraud"....or the rest of " them"!!
@mightylaser0000
@mightylaser0000 Месяц назад
Shout out to Justin for bringing Tariq on & talking about this film a lot of reputable HipHop journalist and radio stations have outright avoided this project, probably due to industry politics but no one can argue against scholarship and empirical research HipHip is a Ethnic Black American Genre!
@slide5039
@slide5039 Месяц назад
This!
@AlphonseWeebay
@AlphonseWeebay Месяц назад
Weren’t no Tito Puente playin in the hood 😂
@pauldiaz9063
@pauldiaz9063 Месяц назад
I don't know about that because Jimmy Castor himself used Tito's music to get to the breakdown. If you don't know what that is then you're not from here.
@devinicole1278
@devinicole1278 Месяц назад
it wasnt long enough, i loved it
@SoLowDolo
@SoLowDolo Месяц назад
Much respect for this interview
@StevenEdward0
@StevenEdward0 Месяц назад
🔥 conversation thank you company man & Tariq for this. Much respect for this needed dialogue.
@Tamisha710
@Tamisha710 Месяц назад
I can't wait to see Tariq's hip hop documentary. Tariq has been talking about doing this film for a minute and, as usual, he executed.
@tory9403
@tory9403 Месяц назад
Great Interview!!💯
@RobJusticethelegend
@RobJusticethelegend Месяц назад
Didn’t see this one comin😂 Very dope blog!
@Codedialect
@Codedialect Месяц назад
This was a great interview. The interviewer asked all the right questions ✅
@lorantmena6373
@lorantmena6373 Месяц назад
Dope! The collab I didn’t know I needed 🔥🙏🏾
@iam607
@iam607 Месяц назад
This is some good info! I gotta check this movie
@mmj1340
@mmj1340 Месяц назад
Hell yea!! Don’t miss it!!💪🏿🔥💯
@bfolse00
@bfolse00 Месяц назад
Great interview!! Much respect 🙏🏾
@saonedixon5476
@saonedixon5476 Месяц назад
Great discussion and interview once again brother Tariq 💪💯
@tonydeese2607
@tonydeese2607 Месяц назад
Fire interview, this guy is a great interviewer and journalist 🫡
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
🙏🏿
@justtroy95
@justtroy95 Месяц назад
Thank you! Cause fat Joe been trying to Latin-wash the genre for like 3 yrs now.
@josephjohnson2387
@josephjohnson2387 Месяц назад
Lmaooooo, LATIN WASH 😂😂😂😂
@12w0
@12w0 Месяц назад
he dont speak for everyone tho.
@l.a.fromjersey3240
@l.a.fromjersey3240 Месяц назад
I can’t even see how it can be argued. Especially being the creators of so much music. These people haven’t done enough to be compared in no way whatsoever. We even went 50/50 on salsa with the Afro Cubans
@democratsrepublicansbothan7973
@democratsrepublicansbothan7973 Месяц назад
Tariq a living legend and one of the greats for FBA
@ogungunclub
@ogungunclub Месяц назад
Tariq is a god send
@kdooley41
@kdooley41 Месяц назад
Yes he is.. we are so lucky to have him!!
@timmyreg
@timmyreg Месяц назад
Put him in a debate with an elder pro white man, and he falls to pieces, i.e., Jared Taylor.
@kaleefsplaylists2876
@kaleefsplaylists2876 Месяц назад
Great interview!!!
@Loui_D
@Loui_D Месяц назад
Respect our fucking culture period 😑 and we are checking anyone not of the culture/lineage saying otherwise
@ShawneyySlime
@ShawneyySlime 27 дней назад
The conversation is, is this FBA culture or NYC culture. Most NYC people would say it’s NYC culture.
@DuncanPinderhughe
@DuncanPinderhughe Месяц назад
Like it or not, Puerto Ricans and mexicans just werent around black people like that back in the days; just like they arent today. theres always a few stragglers that are around, but theyve never been around black people to the point where they would influence anything within black america. keep in mind this was fresh off the civil rights act being passed. so the racism against most poc was still thick. still, there was no STRONG unity amongst poc back then. most of these groups have historically created their own little enclaves, which were separate from black america. everyone tackled the issue in their own little way. I have audio of MLK having to request spanish people to come out to his rallies for civil rights - mainly because many of them werent out there, and instead just sat back and took abuse. they had chicano movements and things like that. but for the most part, they were more so trying to join white america, as opposed to fight back vs a group that didnt want to unify with them. the group that tackled racism to the point where change was produced was black americans. and asians, 1st/2nd generation africans, Caribbean, mexicans etc benefitted from that fight. hence the reason u saw the population numbers for all the aforementioned group shoot thru the roof after 1965. anyways.... its impossible to claim u help create something with a group that the majority of the people from your culture have historically kept their distance from. it doesnt make sense
@sleepyccs
@sleepyccs Месяц назад
Yep. Many of those groups were legally white in the deep South, Texas, Oklahoma and California, etc. They all served in white military units and attended "whites only" colleges and universities. The leaders of their main advocacy organizations opposed the Civil Rights movement.
@strykebladepsypher1149
@strykebladepsypher1149 Месяц назад
Tariq Nasheed breaks it down so simply that it doesn't leave any room for anybody else's bullshit. Intelligent bravo!
@dhorubaPRIME
@dhorubaPRIME Месяц назад
This video is amazing!
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
🙏🏿
@ReedMySole
@ReedMySole Месяц назад
Justin you on fireeeeee right now lol. Im inspired,
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
Thank you brother! It’s all happening 🙏🏿
@tomthumb6101
@tomthumb6101 Месяц назад
this why i rock wit tariq he thoroughly speak to issues that i want dealt with (voting for obama twice never got us anywhere)
@adammarsh956
@adammarsh956 Месяц назад
Thank you guys, this was such an important video it's always important to revist the origins ever so often to make sure things don't get revised incorrectly keep the facts pure for the culture 🙏
@professorskye
@professorskye Месяц назад
Super interesting and challenging video. I haven't had a chance to see the documentary yet but I wonder how the conclusions here would account for the amazing work done by Joseph Ewoodzie Jr. in his book "Break Beats in the Bronx."
@TSLW
@TSLW Месяц назад
R.I.P. DISCO KING MARIO
@abdulrahim2540
@abdulrahim2540 Месяц назад
I’m glad he mentioned The Fatback because I remember them before I heard the Sugar Hill Gang but it was the jam back in the day.
@Mr1and14orth
@Mr1and14orth Месяц назад
This was a great interview, I don't have a blue ray player but I can't wait to see the film.
@FBAeffortlessly
@FBAeffortlessly Месяц назад
Speaking truth to power ✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾Staying on business 👊🏾 #FBA
@RudolphManor
@RudolphManor Месяц назад
Hip Hop Sucks These Days! Old School Is The Best School. 💯
@bigh9884
@bigh9884 Месяц назад
Chubby Checker and Fats Domino were the pioneer of what we call today " Rock and Roll" but Elvis is considered the king of " Rock and Roll".
@tawandamaat0013
@tawandamaat0013 Месяц назад
The question is when is the Latinos/Hispanics, Puerto Ricans, Jamaicans/Caribbeans and other non-Foundation Black Americans will make an Hip Hop documentary to prove to the world the claim of their creators, founders, and pioneers of the total culture of Hip Hop !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@52blocksfederation83
@52blocksfederation83 Месяц назад
They need pioneers…lol
@SoLowDolo
@SoLowDolo Месяц назад
It would be full of lies
@FBA-ld6tj
@FBA-ld6tj Месяц назад
@@SoLowDolo Exactly
@uptownbladebrown
@uptownbladebrown Месяц назад
Its coming and its going to be full of lies that already been debunked all over youtube
@BrandonHaymon
@BrandonHaymon Месяц назад
Who hope they do. I need a good laugh 😂
@omlndz
@omlndz Месяц назад
I appreciate the perspective, getting the history right is important especially if we want to learn from it. As a Puerto Rican, i gotta speak on the Conquistador comment though cuz it makes it seem like Puerto Ricans in the Bronx at that time had the resources to be colonizers. On top of reflecting about race we also gotta talk socio-economics, there's a reason people live in the same neighborhoods. The Puerto Ricans were there in the first place because their homeland was and is suffering the effects of colonialism. There's a lot of history there and I think it's a stretch to compare people trying to escape poverty and lack of self determination to Conquistadors from Spain who came with the intention of taking all the gold. Also, there's a history of racism within Puerto Rican culture.. we're genetically a mix of Spanish, African and Indigenous. Obviously the Spanish were structurally racist against the Africans and Indigenous, and some of that has stayed in the culture, no doubt. But there's also an African lineage that has been preserved within specific communities and the culture as a whole, and these groups have always had close connections with Black America especially in the struggles against racism and neocolonialism, moreso than with other Caribbean peoples because of the relationship between PR and USA. So maybe some dudes are rewriting the history to feel more inclusion in the culture, but I don't see how they can be described as colonizers.
@kkandmjvideogamer2332
@kkandmjvideogamer2332 Месяц назад
Most Black Americans do not know PR's. PR's are mostly in NYC - and most PR's still identify as White (race). So, that's probably why. Like Fat Joe is a WHITE man.
@artondekz
@artondekz Месяц назад
Love it 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥✊🏽
@DjjkrisRTC
@DjjkrisRTC Месяц назад
Question is…will this documentary be displayed in the hip hop museum because it seems to me that it should be. This isn’t about a racial divide, it’s about the facts that always get misinterpreted as time goes on. That’s why we need to be thankful that the ones who created this are still around to shed the light👍🏾
@claudenobles779
@claudenobles779 24 дня назад
Justin H. your questions are very focused and intelligent ... you are part of this ... much appreciated
@SaniBravo
@SaniBravo Месяц назад
As FBA’s we’ll work multiple jobs it just has to make sense. I run two businesses because they earn enough to make working 6 days a week worth it!
@WILFRED69X
@WILFRED69X Месяц назад
55:10 Many people got caught in a trap. Because it was started by black people. Give us our flowers. But when the Puerto Ricans from New York got a hold of break dancing. They took the torch and ran with it. And took break dancing to another level. The same thing with the burner or wild style graffiti helped raise the bar very high in power moves and spins. So they played a big part in the 3 elements of hip hop and mastered it. Big props, though, to Tariq nasheed for giving the creators of hip hop their props, that is long over do much respect, that they deserve their recognition 👏🏿
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
They did incredible things with breaking and graffiti
@WILFRED69X
@WILFRED69X Месяц назад
@@TheCompanyMan Yes sir
@nutmegtrev1951
@nutmegtrev1951 12 дней назад
What's up Just its Trev, salute bro great episode
@claudenobles779
@claudenobles779 Месяц назад
great conversation
@youngalidagr8
@youngalidagr8 Месяц назад
This is so dope
@kerosssene
@kerosssene Месяц назад
Great interview Hip-Hop wise! As a Black American (Louisiana and Floridian lineage) I’m sympathetic to the FBA movement I just hate the political conclusions. Our self determination is irreconcilable with greater American society and we can’t work within their systems to get that self determination. We should look to thinkers like David Walker (of Walker’s Appeal), Harry Haywood, and other revolutionary Nationalists in the future.
@pearlpearl3806
@pearlpearl3806 Месяц назад
Thank goodness for Tariq he's a real one 👏🏽👏🏽
@TekniCaliSpeakin
@TekniCaliSpeakin Месяц назад
I saw a video that discussed the homogenization of European culture into white culture. And how a rich a varied heritage of distinct cultures was distilled down into, for lack of a better word, mayonnaise. Protecting African American culture should not be seen as offensive to anyone. African Americans were forceably removed from participating in most facets of American industry. Entertainment was the only place we were allowed to contribute to society for centuries. So it should not be a surprise that African Americans dominate in this arena. This very dominance is a double edged sword, since pop culture is largely based on black culture other ethnicities and even worse corps can coopt our culture and sell it back to us.
@marcus.g.4273
@marcus.g.4273 Месяц назад
Foundational BLK American (FBA) culture and excellence. We are delineating. It's not African American culture, it is specifically Foundational BLK American (FBA) culture.
@surgeneral108
@surgeneral108 Месяц назад
I'm glad somebody courageously stepped up to set the record straight, others could have - but they scared to deal the the massive whiny backlash that would follow. shalom
@boni_slinger
@boni_slinger Месяц назад
I've been rocking with you Justin, for well over a decade now and i have no issues with the message but your buddy Tariq has a lot to learn. I heard him on other platforms being downright abusive to other black peoples, using very derogatory language. I'm African but grew up hip hop. Nobody can tell me they co-created afrobeat with Fela so i completely get it. But you can teach him how to further the message correctly.
@mr.r4910
@mr.r4910 Месяц назад
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂DUDE Afrobeats is LITERALLY trash NO ONE really listens to that garbage😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@BrandonHaymon
@BrandonHaymon Месяц назад
Tether babble
@notsogood9449
@notsogood9449 Месяц назад
Hi Tether. LOL
@boni_slinger
@boni_slinger Месяц назад
​@notsogood9449 🤣everything and everyone is tethered to Africa dummy!..so for your first lesson go watch kendrick's visit to Ghana. Your second lesson is a summary of Justin's Oxford Union debate appearance. Now go be useful Brandon
@boni_slinger
@boni_slinger Месяц назад
​@mr.r4910 most black people on earth live in Africa. And that's their music. How can you respect yourself if you have no respect for others. Educate yourself.
@KirkJacksonalpha
@KirkJacksonalpha 7 дней назад
In 1978, I moved to Connecticut from California and had a friend from New York. I would hang out in the Bronx and attend Jungle Jams in the park. This was before King Tim III. was recorded. What I remember are black people with DJs and MCs. We went to Latino dances in hotel ballrooms, where Disco and Latin dance records were played.
@tracyb.173
@tracyb.173 2 дня назад
Thank you 👍
@Katkayz
@Katkayz 23 дня назад
Keep reminding people the truth about hiphop, keep it black and pure
@BluEx22329
@BluEx22329 Месяц назад
Nice!!
@JermaineClark-lw3ll
@JermaineClark-lw3ll Месяц назад
We appreciate you brother Tariq
@MentalPistol
@MentalPistol Месяц назад
Hunte, you asked good questions here my dude. A+ work
@TheCompanyMan
@TheCompanyMan Месяц назад
Thank you brother
@summerbreeze8890
@summerbreeze8890 Месяц назад
Mr. Nasheed is a true warrior historian and treasure to the FBA Culture. 🇺🇲🏆🇺🇲
@GTACJGrove
@GTACJGrove Месяц назад
What do you think about Lupe’s critique on Obama back in 2011? I would love to see you do a video about that in a longer video though. Because that is a historical moment in hip hop history and was the beginning of the industry turning their back on Lupe.
@devzeppilin
@devzeppilin Месяц назад
Lupe was right.
@GTACJGrove
@GTACJGrove Месяц назад
@@devzeppilin oh thanks 🙏
@lostintheark5728
@lostintheark5728 Месяц назад
​@@devzeppilin 💯
@lostintheark5728
@lostintheark5728 Месяц назад
​@@GTACJGroveWords I never say by Lupe, says a lot.
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