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Trapped in a Culture, Afrika Bambaataa and the Zulu Nation, Part 29 of 44, Lord Jamar 

Leila Wills
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When was knowledge born in Hip Hop? In Part One of his interview, Lord Jamar discusses how important the Zulu Nation was in Brand Nubian’s beginning, misogyny in hip hop, and how a closeted homosexual would not want to be outed. Did prison sex affect life on the outside?
More on the lawsuit against Afrika Bambaataa and the Zulu Nation here: www.metropolisnewspaper.com/a...
Bronx-Lance Taylor took on the name Afrika Bambaataa and started a hip-hop awareness group. But former members say the Universal Zulu Nation was a violent gang that disintegrated into a cult with Bambaataa as the god-head. In 2016, several men came forward with disturbing tales of what they say took place from the 1970s into the 1990s. Although Peace, Unity, Love, and Having Fun was the motto of the Zulu Nation, Bambaataa fashioned the organization’s doctrine after Malachi York’s Nuwabian Nation, the Nation of Islam, the Moorish Science Temple, and the 5% Nation.
“Today, the Zulu Nation counts hip-hop royalty like Nas, Lil Wayne, and Big Boi as affiliates, in addition to younger rappers like Joey Bada$ and Freddie Gibbs. Acclaimed TV series The Get Down-not to mention countless documentaries and a recent showcase at Cornell University-credit Bambaataa with uniting a divided neighborhood, offering a way out of gang life, and helping to launch a movement that would place African American art forms at the center of global popular culture.” wrote Dave Wedge, Vice Magazine.
Since the story broke, hip hop has yet to come to terms with the importance of this subject.
In this series, original interview footage is being shown to the public for the first time, encouraging a broader conversation and deep dive into what may have taken place.
This channel brings investigative content for those who want to live beyond the surface.
You can support this work by donating below...thank you so much. 🙏🏽💖🙏🏽
$CashApp $leilamedia
PayPal.me/leilawills
Venmo.com/u/LeilaWills
Let's stay connected!
LeilaWills11
Twitter: @leilawills_
Instagram: @leila_wills
My newspaper is here - metropolisnewspaper.com
#AfrikaBambaataa #ZuluNation #HipHop

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1 сен 2021

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Комментарии : 173   
@imnotakillabutdontpushme4125
@imnotakillabutdontpushme4125 2 года назад
I love Lord Jamar and his interviews. He is honest regardless of how people feel about his opinion.
@jonathancowley1758
@jonathancowley1758 2 года назад
This aint a interview this a history lesson
@charleslennonbaker
@charleslennonbaker 2 года назад
This is the best interview conducted with LrD J as a subject, I have seen. He's tempered in his beliefs but cognizant of what he has been accused of in the past. I send kudos to both him and you for giving a foundation of early hip-hop, without 'segwaying' into tangents. Every interview you have conducted (in chronological order) shows an increasing ability to delve into a rather horrific subject matter without losing perspective. Your technique should be taught in every journalism course as well as every investigative [police] course from this point forward.
@qsmokn9014
@qsmokn9014 2 года назад
I Concur As Well!!!
@leonaroberts8648
@leonaroberts8648 2 года назад
Facts....
@cashcardo3975
@cashcardo3975 2 года назад
Well said family
@DACOLDEST-3
@DACOLDEST-3 2 года назад
These interviews will go down in history! Great job Leila🏆🥇
@TheUnitedRoninNetwoR4ks
@TheUnitedRoninNetwoR4ks 2 года назад
I KNEW he couldn't help to say YANADAMEEN after settling in! 🤣 #YanadameenGodcast
@jasonwolfe3252
@jasonwolfe3252 2 года назад
Growing up in the 80s and 90s before the LGBTQ movement. I remember there being openly g@y males and even trans living in the black community without harassment or really being bothered like they were in other communities. Specifically Irish and Italian neighborhoods where I remember hearing stories of them routinely being beaten up but somehow black males are painted as being more "homophobic" than other groups. They do this while also promoting the image of effeminate black males and trying to make them the face of LGBTQ. Smh . We need to do a better job of controlling our image. No other group let's the media dictate their image the same way they do the black male's.
@jamaalpearsall246
@jamaalpearsall246 2 года назад
I was born in 87 but when I look back at old videos and photos it definitely looks like the lgbtq was widely expected in our community. Like disco and old soul train. I just knew something was off about wtf they keeps tryna push
@geezlouise5547
@geezlouise5547 Год назад
Thank you for talking to a brother who is well versed and setting the record straight with facts !! Putting in perspective that hip hop brigades and teachings were not all clumped up in one. Peace to the God
@-east-coast-florist
@-east-coast-florist 2 года назад
AND ANOTHER DOPE INTERVIEW MZ.LEILA.. WISH IT WENT LONGER..& THATS ON MOST OF THESE INTERVIEW'S..U COULD GO ON & ON.. ✌&💗..✊ LORD JAMAR FADES EM ALL..!! A GOAT..!!
@itsjenni-ginmf9262
@itsjenni-ginmf9262 2 года назад
I miss watching his interviews always insightful, eloquently well spoken and a pleasure to entertain👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
@forevershampoo
@forevershampoo 2 года назад
Check out his show yanadamean godcast
@madmaxpirate
@madmaxpirate 2 года назад
@@forevershampoo I watch the podcast, but I understand what she saying.
@inspectorfunk
@inspectorfunk 2 года назад
He was canceled because he said only 500k Jewish people died during the holocaust or something like that
@itsjenni-ginmf9262
@itsjenni-ginmf9262 2 года назад
Who canceled Lord Jamar and when?????? I subscribe to his podcast, I still support him & his movement and if he did say that SO WHAT!🤨 @heytoday
@someguyjohn6599
@someguyjohn6599 2 года назад
Great Interview. Salute to Lord Jamar for giving Wisdom.
@psychonaraproductions1144
@psychonaraproductions1144 2 года назад
Something to mention about Bam's connections with electronic music. Afrika Bambaataa has periodically proclaimed himself to be the "Father of the Electro-Funk" and has used this to try to boost his clout. However, the term "electro" was already being used to describe groups like Kraftwerk & Yellow Magic Orchestra (whom Bam admitted to imitating) as far back as the 1970's. New York producer Man Parrish in the 2015 documentary "808" also mentioned that most 80's rap records retrospectively branded as "Electro" now, including his own 1982 single "Hip Hop be Bop", were just referred to generically as "hip hop" records in New York at the time, just as much of early rap & hip hop DJ'ing was closely connected to Disco as well, as was explored in the 2016 Founding Fathers documentary. In the late Dan Sicko's book "Techno Rebels", considered by many to be one of THE definitive texts on the history of techno music, a popular story is also related regarding Detroit pioneer Juan Atkins, aka Model 500, being in NYC trying to distribute his band Cybotron's 1982 single "Cosmic Cars/Alleys of Your Mind" and only hearing Planet Rock for the first time as he was about to leave. Everyone knows Cosmic Cars came out first. Upon his return to Michigan, Atkins & Cybotron produced the 1983 track "Clear" for their first studio album as a kind of subtle diss against Planet Rock, and for many early Detroit electro & techno pioneers, Clear was their electro-funk hit of choice. Very few, if any, of the early techno & electro dj's in Michigan, or even early House music dj's in Illinois, who were mostly of African-American & Latin descent and who embraced this new experimental brand of electronic funk/disco, would have cited Bam as their artistic "father". Their musical heroes included many acts, from Kraftwerk to Mandre to Herbie Hancock & others, and many genres from jazz to funk to disco & early synth. Bam was always just another competitor within this broader 70's/80's trend.
@roninuhuru6038
@roninuhuru6038 2 года назад
Thank you for dropping that gem. Peace!
@hlacy581
@hlacy581 2 года назад
Wow, 3 paragraphs
@hlacy581
@hlacy581 2 года назад
Wow, 3 paragraphs
@psychonaraproductions1144
@psychonaraproductions1144 2 года назад
@Krazy Ass Lady Take your pills.
@butterflylovenj7300
@butterflylovenj7300 2 года назад
Excellent interview!!! Keep them coming!! I loved Brand Nubian, DITC crew, and Just Ice was one of the first rappers I heard talk about knowledge of self. I was exposed to the 5 percent nation thanks to my late uncle. 🙏🏾🙏🏾
@kanyegang2810
@kanyegang2810 2 года назад
Growing up in the Midwest, and gangs being big on religion/religious the Vice Lord's road under the 5, and some of the 5% knowledge is apart of The Vice Lords knowledge
@UncleYahshuah
@UncleYahshuah 2 года назад
They then lost their damn mind!!!! The Gods bought knowledge of self to hip hop!!! . Rakim.. Brand nubian.. Poor righteous teachers.. king sun.. Lakim shabazz!! List goes on and on.. King aziatic is big daddy kane! We bought knowlesge of self to the game and the streets!!! Peace to the Gods and earths!!
@allahwise7272
@allahwise7272 2 года назад
Even before the emcees,the Kool Herc era ..the Gods were present
@UncleYahshuah
@UncleYahshuah 2 года назад
@@allahwise7272 Actual Fact!!!!
@ray1411
@ray1411 2 года назад
@@allahwise7272 That’s true. If you watch old footage of old Hip Hop jams, you’ll see a lot of koofi hats.
@ronpaizley9349
@ronpaizley9349 2 года назад
It was definite "supreme team" radio show that really meshed the 2 "hiphop" and "the gods and earths" the show come after "Mr Majics"
@jonathancowley1758
@jonathancowley1758 2 года назад
Lotta people dont remember Lord Jamar had locks for the longest
@themightyfp
@themightyfp 2 года назад
This was dope and Jamar has been consistent with his recollection throughout the years
@mrcommunity992
@mrcommunity992 2 года назад
Great interview! Peace to Brother Jamar!!!
@siccavicca
@siccavicca 2 года назад
Kraftwerk song Planet Rock was based on is “Trans Europe Express”. pure knowledge for HIPHOP music history..please keep em coming
@SeenHeard
@SeenHeard 2 года назад
Both that and numbers and captain skyy Super sperm. it was a classic jazzy jay mix before it was a record. He'd spin it live on zulu beats on the same station as the Supreme Team. Its said he spun it downtown too but I aint see that myself.
@peaceriver1793
@peaceriver1793 2 года назад
I remember the clubs that played different music in different rooms! Fun times.
@colbyjackimprints1699
@colbyjackimprints1699 2 года назад
Damn...ain't nobody ever articulate and breakdown HIPHOP..as the culture like this..not even the D.O.G.... Knowledge reign supreme over nearly everyone
@ray1411
@ray1411 2 года назад
I love Lord Jamar for setting the record straight on the myth of homophobia in Hip Hop. I remember making the mistake of going to Hip Hop shows on gay nights. That shit threw me off. I swear I didn’t know until I got inside. Either way, we never bothered gay guys. They did their thing and we did our thing-no harm, no foul. That was the origin of the Sausagefest. I couldn’t stand when a lot of underground Hip Hop accepted the lack of female attendance. I think that’s what made me stop attending Hip Hop concerts.
@bakhembrutalknowledge
@bakhembrutalknowledge 2 года назад
Exactly. The politicized LGBT movement insists they're a persecuted demographic, but this proves otherwise. It would appear that LGBT politics is actually taking advantage of acceptance and tolerance by straight people to impose their will on society. Thanks for the insight. ✌🏿
@ATLKing404
@ATLKing404 2 года назад
it ain't a myth fool.
@ray1411
@ray1411 2 года назад
@@ATLKing404 How isn’t a myth? Please explain.
@ElijahCapoRanxz19239
@ElijahCapoRanxz19239 2 года назад
Good ass interview it’s the little details got me visualizing the scene and the cuts on the records makes you think how hip hop really sounded in it’s raw form.
@jerrodlumpkin7132
@jerrodlumpkin7132 2 года назад
Great interview and video
@thomasmulie322
@thomasmulie322 2 года назад
Afrika Bambooty
@lsreborn
@lsreborn 2 года назад
Bamdusky
@BlazeOfGlory742
@BlazeOfGlory742 2 года назад
I’m a Lord Jamar guy.
@kofikwatamanifraudculteduc6841
@kofikwatamanifraudculteduc6841 2 года назад
Thank you for sharing. I loved Brand Nubian and definitely remember TLa Rock It's Yours. I remember jams in the parks especially after family barbeques in the park on 4th of July weekend. We were ready with our cassettes to record hip hop on Friday and Saturday nights to remember the lyrics. I was young, and heard and looked up to the names mentioned. A lot is coming forth for us to reckon with. Fortunately I was too young to go to the clubs.
@lashondacorderakawizdomwitaz
@lashondacorderakawizdomwitaz 2 года назад
Real talk concerning the 5 percent being the positive and enlightening element of hip hop!
@dixgun
@dixgun 2 года назад
Great interview. This gets into the complexity and sometimes contradictory history.
@taylorskidmore2760
@taylorskidmore2760 2 года назад
It's so important to document these early days of hip hop and get these legends and pioneers on record, this is excellent work thank you
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
Thank you so much. And, I don't pretend to be all-knowing when it comes to hip hop...I just have questions.
@DC-xp4bl
@DC-xp4bl 2 года назад
Peace to the Gods and Earths.
@xolimahlasela7804
@xolimahlasela7804 2 года назад
I see LrD J,I click so fast Great interview Mz Leila 🙋‍♀️new subscriber her
@blackpegasus1807
@blackpegasus1807 2 года назад
Ultimate Force is the group Diamond D. was in. They recorded at Jazzy Jay's Strong City studio.
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
And there's my edit lol....thanks!
@daltonhanleyjr4142
@daltonhanleyjr4142 2 года назад
Yep. On Allerton Ave in the Bronx
@kevinscott59
@kevinscott59 2 года назад
@@LeilaWills Ultimate Force. Master Rob and Diamond D. Fat Joe debuted on their 1988 album.
@abeautifulmind9591
@abeautifulmind9591 2 года назад
Peace and love everyone!! ❤ 🥰🥰
@allviralaccessmedia3664
@allviralaccessmedia3664 2 года назад
Great interview
@darkvalue505
@darkvalue505 2 года назад
Great to see that Lord Jamar talking about 1980s era of hip hop. The transition from sound and fashion.
@sedivinejustice
@sedivinejustice 10 месяцев назад
Peace to the God Body Lord Jamar. Great interview Queen Leila Wills, keep up the good work. Thanks for mentioning us, the Worlds Famous Supreme Team Show-WHBI 105.9 FM SeDivine the Master Mind and Just Allah the Super Star. True HipHop is forever.
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 10 месяцев назад
Peace to the True & Living. Respect to the Supreme Team. Thank you so much for checking it out. I'm grateful to Lord Jamar for granting the interview.
@chaun229
@chaun229 2 года назад
Great interview family - Marchaun
@QueXopa79
@QueXopa79 2 года назад
Lord will forever be consistent
@sanderkonto297
@sanderkonto297 2 года назад
Yeah.. he thinks the earth is flat
@eleven16clothing2
@eleven16clothing2 2 года назад
God you always educate.Peace.
@forevershampoo
@forevershampoo 2 года назад
Ain’t nobody tryna hear no fassi boy business like that 💀
@MarwansMindOverMatterTV
@MarwansMindOverMatterTV 2 года назад
Solid brotha right there, but you saw him up close, so you’d know better than I would. 👍🏽
@fastpaced4861
@fastpaced4861 20 дней назад
thank you Leila.
@prfu1222
@prfu1222 2 года назад
'Planet Rock' was a I am going to Brighton 6 or Coney Island. It was heavily played. It was good for the breakers. Because it had that break in it. Hip Hop or rap was The Fearless Four, The Crash Crew, Treacherous Three, Furious Five, Busy Bee, Etc.
@bakhembrutalknowledge
@bakhembrutalknowledge 2 года назад
Breaking is an essential element of real hip hop.
@prfu1222
@prfu1222 2 года назад
@@bakhembrutalknowledge That is a fact. And since I was there from the beginning I saw it all unfold.
@cesarbaca5297
@cesarbaca5297 Год назад
No Jamar, I've watched Bam Dj right in front of me. Bam can mix cut and scratch. Actually as old as Bam is I was surprised the first time I saw him rok. Bam killed it word is bond.
@trackmastersdj
@trackmastersdj 2 года назад
Great interview 👍
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
Thank you so much!
@AJ-sb8qk
@AJ-sb8qk Год назад
17:47 HEEEEEYYYYYY THIS WHAT I'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@marylandguy301
@marylandguy301 2 года назад
I think on some scale its being naïve depending on how old he was at the time but like he said he never seen them live before. Our first time seeing rap/hip hop. Our first show we went to. How could we know what we were seeing if it was our first time seeing it?
@stevinjnobaptiste1707
@stevinjnobaptiste1707 2 года назад
yowww Lord Jamar low key hilarious lol respectfully.
@Kvnbesa
@Kvnbesa 2 года назад
Bro. J and a.b. Like heyyy poppin on Thursdays
@SeenHeard
@SeenHeard 2 года назад
Knowledge is the very foundation of expression. What peace based activity took place in the nyc parks before the cohesion of Hip Hop? 5% Ciphers. The 5% influenced the dance (b-boy stance, hand gestures), fashion, emceeing the graffiti, and music througgh a few non hip hop groups contributing to the classic breakbeats.
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
Yes, I have another audio to release of Lord Jamar on that
@nocturnalron69
@nocturnalron69 2 года назад
First time hearing of K.O.S. was from the Brand Nubian albums. Was never into it but always loved Brand Nubian.
@timmydiamonds
@timmydiamonds 2 года назад
09:22 Lord Jamar caught a flashback lol
@ray1411
@ray1411 2 года назад
Lord Jamar is talking about Mars when he mentions the club with multiple floors.
@josht.3320
@josht.3320 2 года назад
Great interview. I bet a lot of the record executives and disco folks started to infiltrate their way into hip hop culture since it was so taboo
@mikeloe666
@mikeloe666 2 года назад
🎯... Shout out to WHBI.
@bitdigital8052
@bitdigital8052 2 года назад
Peace. Hip hop = jazz, soul, electro, disco, funk, rock etc… The melting pot of music
@GreatMaddee415
@GreatMaddee415 2 года назад
Good entertainment right here🍿🍿
@RHYSDIOR
@RHYSDIOR 2 года назад
The caption to this video is mad wild
@ricgunzstreetfashion2480
@ricgunzstreetfashion2480 2 года назад
Break dancers have decades of legends also just like rap, Graf, DJ-ing. Oh yea but ball busters put it on Zulu ass. Even at roxy beat street audition and break dance contest. BB’s wit da red beads put fire to Zulu
@BlazeOfGlory742
@BlazeOfGlory742 2 года назад
Peace to the gods.
@flxir8370
@flxir8370 2 года назад
peace to the 5% nation
@tluanga31
@tluanga31 2 года назад
Nice interview...by the way i do suggest ask to ask him a little bit about eminem
@premeium8832
@premeium8832 2 года назад
Keep up the good work I want more BLACK people in hip hop media!!! This is our damn genre
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
These people are coming for my neck as if I have no right to ask questions! Thank YOU!
@coachrobinson9958
@coachrobinson9958 2 года назад
One of Hip-hop's true oracles! 😂
@fredicagoillanoise1309
@fredicagoillanoise1309 2 года назад
Diamond D's group on Strong City was Ultimate Force.
@blacklifeapparel1125
@blacklifeapparel1125 2 года назад
See this how Chuck D should've corralated the history with Bam and the Zulu's. Jamar knows Bronx culture being from New Rochelle, just a step away from the BX...his interview made more sense, even though i believe u aired it before.
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
I have never aired Lord Jamar's interview and Chuck's interview is totally different. His interview went over people's heads because everyone is zeroed in on Bambaataa and the ZN but we have to understand how our people got to a place where a predator could have such easy pickings. Also, I had plans for that part of the film. Chuck's interview was scholarly and outstanding and there is a Part 2.
@ray1411
@ray1411 2 года назад
@@LeilaWills I love Chuck Ds interview. I think he needs to learn a little more on NYC borough history, though. Like, he keeps on suggesting Brooklyn was mostly Caribbeans, when they didn’t really take over until the early 90s. He probably feels that way because, as a youth on Long Island, he only visited the safe areas of Brooklyn where Caribbeans work and hold functions.
@deepstate3358
@deepstate3358 2 года назад
@@ray1411 how old are you?
@hlacy581
@hlacy581 2 года назад
Jamar said he knows bee-stinger, I bet he knows more about Bam
@ungoyone
@ungoyone 2 года назад
Best interview I've seen of Lord Jamar. No BS, no overplaying emotions, just calm information on the history. But I guess I could be naive, *kkkkkk*.
@drdread9896
@drdread9896 2 года назад
The God!!!!!
@rubberbandclan1017
@rubberbandclan1017 2 года назад
Great work they all knew and said nothing!!
@shuaibfranklin8134
@shuaibfranklin8134 2 года назад
Knew what
@GreatMaddee415
@GreatMaddee415 2 года назад
He said I was in jail I had to do 🤣🤣👀💨 did you 😱🤨🤨😳🤯🤣🤣🤣🤣
@nofacade100
@nofacade100 2 года назад
I had to Google what a breakbeat was lol. Thanks for the educational segment
@tyranbagork5480
@tyranbagork5480 2 года назад
The name of Diamond D's group was the Psycho Nueratics
@TheFoundationhiphop
@TheFoundationhiphop 2 года назад
It was the Ultimate Force before that...
@tyranbagork5480
@tyranbagork5480 2 года назад
@@TheFoundationhiphop o ok so the Psycho neurotics were who he did his first album with.
@TheFoundationhiphop
@TheFoundationhiphop 2 года назад
@@tyranbagork5480 When Brand Nubian was hanging around Strong City Records Diamond D was running with Jazzy Jay. Jazzy Jay put out a compilation called Cold Chillin In The Studio. Diamond D is with The Ultimate Force on a song called I'm Not Playing.
@tyranbagork5480
@tyranbagork5480 2 года назад
@Krazy Ass Lady Krazy Ass Lady...I'm blacker than black. Born and raised in Harlem. Hiphop historian I'm 51 yrs old . I've been listen since 79' all the way until now. But I feel you...I hate that too
@imnotakillabutdontpushme4125
@imnotakillabutdontpushme4125 2 года назад
22:44 😂😂
@rumham3070
@rumham3070 2 года назад
I was scrolling through RU-vid and had to stop when I saw this thumbnail. I thought Lord Jamar did another Vlad interview all of a sudden.
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
Oh man lol...
@siccavicca
@siccavicca 2 года назад
Much Love for my big brother Dj Jazzy Jay ..the group he forgot “ultimate Force”..IM NOT PLAYING!!,!,
@LeilaWills
@LeilaWills 2 года назад
Thanks!
@eribric5556
@eribric5556 2 года назад
@theocritus7215
@theocritus7215 2 года назад
Makes me feel better knowing LJ here ain’t listening to Montero with us 🥂💅
@randywatson1296
@randywatson1296 2 года назад
Jamar been keeping a buck for years.
@knighthawkt.k.4648
@knighthawkt.k.4648 2 года назад
Sunn said the Village People 😂😂
@Playaflydre
@Playaflydre 2 года назад
LJ when he get somewhat in thought or thinks of something good. He suck that tooth tough lol
@wicket1blue
@wicket1blue 2 года назад
When You Want Lyrics Come See Me !
@michaelrivera7227
@michaelrivera7227 2 года назад
TC Passed away years ago
@chaunceychappelle2173
@chaunceychappelle2173 2 года назад
Planet Rock was a break dancing song, not necessarily hip-hop. At least it brought out the big boxes to lay out in SC back in the day. Locking, popping, sliding... nobody had a mic in their hand until it was time to rap.
@amarstreetfunk
@amarstreetfunk 2 года назад
Break dancing is BIG part of hip hop and planet rock is pure hip hop.song and planet rock represent hip hop culture.Not today shit guns drog and sex
@bakhembrutalknowledge
@bakhembrutalknowledge 2 года назад
Break dancing is an essential element of real hip hop. A lot of hip hop music was breakdance songs and not necessarily raps.
@44mother
@44mother 2 года назад
We need to be respectful of each person being interviewed. All of these guys had some input which qualified them for the interview. Being young during that tine, there were homosexuals but they were not talked about and it wasn't in the forefront like it is now. We have to remember many black artists had made music about futuristic things and wore futuristic clothing. However, when I look back, now, I can see the connection in the way they dressed. If you look at the way bambaataa, his whole crew, on stage singing planet rock, their outfits were similar to some of Sylvester's(openly gay male singer in 80s)outfits, with the long cape that covered their bodies and their huge thighs would sometimes be exposed as they performed. Earth Wind and Fire wore the stretch pants and tight outfuts, too. Our mindset wasnt geared towards identifying gay people. You knew they existed and that's it. So to accuse Lord J about being sus is ridiculous. You may not understand unless you were young at that time. Regardless, I loved his interview and yes, it is one of the best, for me.
@largegod77
@largegod77 2 года назад
That style of dress came from Parliament funkadelic… not Sylvester… This has been stated plenty of times
@44mother
@44mother 2 года назад
@@largegod77 I DID NOT SAY BAMBATTA'S STYLE OF DRESS CAME FROM SYLVESTER. IF YOU READ CORRECTLY, I SAID THE OUTFITS WERE SIMILAR. Instead of trying to correct me, lets have some type of intellectual conversations instead of trying to tear each other down.
@largegod77
@largegod77 2 года назад
@@44mother u n ya feelings.. wasn’t no tearing down n what I said … I was straight 2 da point .. nothing intellectual about that or what u said ..
@44mother
@44mother 2 года назад
@@largegod77 with a name such as yours you seem real typical and condescending. I bet you want s full fledged argument, but NO. I will no longer entertain you. 🙄
@largegod77
@largegod77 2 года назад
@@44mother u still n ya feelings I see .. I said nothing that was argumentative...u just wanna be right
@SK-kp2qq
@SK-kp2qq 2 года назад
HASSAN CAMPBELL WAS A GUEST, IN THE HOUSE OF ZULU!! comment of the week no 🧢
@BothTeamsPlayedHard
@BothTeamsPlayedHard 2 года назад
Lord J caught a lot of buzz for his opinion that white people are “guests in the house of HipHop” I wonder if he feels the same way about LGBTQ- are they also guests? Great interview, again… so solid.
@largegod77
@largegod77 2 года назад
He definitely feels that way & he feels they have no place n hip hop …
@smokeem5893
@smokeem5893 2 года назад
White people are guests in hiphop, they don't understand the culture. They are also guest in Soul music and reggae music.
@imnotakillabutdontpushme4125
@imnotakillabutdontpushme4125 2 года назад
He did and I’m so happy he stood on his square.
@BothTeamsPlayedHard
@BothTeamsPlayedHard 2 года назад
I guess he might be able to say “being openly lgbtq” means you’re a guest because it’s clear that gays have been involved in HipHop since jump. They’ve just kept it on the low…
@bakhembrutalknowledge
@bakhembrutalknowledge 2 года назад
@Brain Check Dumbest comment ever. That's like saying, because he had mass appeal, Michael Jordan is not Black, but universal. GTFOH
@tonespacespace
@tonespacespace 2 года назад
Diamond D's group..were they The Psychotic Neurotics?
@MrWARBUCKS24
@MrWARBUCKS24 2 года назад
The group was Ultimate Force Diamond D was the dj I can't remember the MC name
@rbiznezz2
@rbiznezz2 2 года назад
@@MrWARBUCKS24 Master Rob
@walterjenkins4536
@walterjenkins4536 2 года назад
Lolol ""Hmmm that's debatable "" lolol classic
@RebelWithoutABoss
@RebelWithoutABoss 2 года назад
Hip Hop was partially birthed from disco, I saw the way those old rappers and b boys and djs used to dress. There were so many more gay hip hop families out around the same time as Zulu Nation and likely before. Plus the worst part of Zulu nation is the alleged child abuse.
@ronpaizley9349
@ronpaizley9349 2 года назад
Gettin tired of the dis respect of "parliment funkadelic" by today standards of dress especially when they created the future of black and pop music and kraftwerk was always a part of hiphops/breakbeat era (like said the DJ's were picking music and "breaks" from all types of different genre's back then) "trans eroupe express" "we are the robots" "man machine" then numbers**** they were just as "tribal" sounding as "apache" type records but more electronic sounding & mos def were part of that late 70s early 80s hiphop sound // theres the comic book aspect and the afro futurism to what Bam was tryin represent in the music I still can defend that part of it / I'm pretty sure he didn't molest anyone with his stage clothes on.. P. S. even as lil kid when the village people came on tv "I was like something aint righ about this" 🤣 lol ok but like jamal.said that was show biz ...
@WilsonAutoworks
@WilsonAutoworks 2 года назад
@16:00 jamar with the zestiest shit I ever heard in my life 😳😳
@Playaflydre
@Playaflydre 2 года назад
Zig Zag Zig
@frankwhite7109
@frankwhite7109 2 года назад
Bong Bong
@bossblaque864
@bossblaque864 2 года назад
Oh the homophobia is thick in these parts! Lord Jamar is may be knowledgeable, his bay bashing makes him difficult to listen to. Very difficult.
@ricgunzstreetfashion2480
@ricgunzstreetfashion2480 2 года назад
Yes but also street knowledge
@hoseahanslip9190
@hoseahanslip9190 2 года назад
Hip-Hop's Village People
@Degree117
@Degree117 2 года назад
Bronx creation...vs...GodBody...Bullshit
@Degree117
@Degree117 2 года назад
He knows what knowledge iz
@scarceshika
@scarceshika 2 года назад
zulu wtf is that?
@hlacy581
@hlacy581 2 года назад
A rap cult, filled with homosexuality amongst boys
@hlacy581
@hlacy581 2 года назад
A rap cult, filled with homosexuality amongst boys
@northfork7201
@northfork7201 2 года назад
I don't agree with none of these teachings of self, it's a distraction of confusion....
@Nikkyeshiva83
@Nikkyeshiva83 2 года назад
Jamar kinda arrogant and mostly ignorant. Lots of the musicians in hip hop love Kraftwerk.
@kevinscott59
@kevinscott59 2 года назад
Jamar is problematic but his least problematic comments were regarding Kraftwerk. He said the numbers break was dope but it didn't align with the more gritty funk,disco,rock and obscure soul breaks that characterized hip hop's earliest sound on the tapes that circulated NYC. I understood what he was saying. But yeah.Kraftwerk were incredible.
@donjon9784
@donjon9784 2 года назад
Off the subject.. lord Jamar has hater vibes to me
@shuaibfranklin8134
@shuaibfranklin8134 2 года назад
Well you have negative weirdo vibes because if it’s off the topic why bring up something negative if this is a positive interview you probably like negativity if if positive things are going on and you wanna bring up negative trains of thought
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