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DJ Kool Herc, Hip Hop Pioneer

Jun 21, 2014 @ 4:00pm


Curators/Sponsors: In partnership with Make Music New York

BMHC honors Hip Hip pioneer DJ Kool Herc. The events is followed by a Jamaican Jam by the legendary DJ Kool Herc and a concert in his honor featuring BMHC Lab & Louis Niné Boulevard Rebel Diaz, Grandmaster Caz, Bocafloja, Circa ’95, YC the Cynic, Grand Wizzard Theodore, and Sadat X.
Clive Campbell emigrated to the Bronx from Kingston, Jamaica with his parents and later became known as DJ Kool Herc. He emulated the sound system parties and included MCs to speak over the music he played on his turntables in the same way the toasters did in Jamaica. In 1973 Kool Herc held an event for his sister, Cindy, a back-to-school party at the rec room in their building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue. It was here that a musical revolution began when DJ Kool Herc adapted his style to funk and soul. He developed a method for keeping the music going at the breaks in the records. Because these breaks were short, he extended them by jumping the needle (where the term “hip hop” came from). This created one long break (the breakbeat) for the b-boys to show off their skills. Herc also brought the Jamaican style of calling out names of the dancers, a rhythmical patter that became known as “rapping.” Kool Herc, his partner, Coke LaRock and their dancers became known as Kool Herc and the Herculoids. The Jamaican influence has remained in hip hop, from Run DMC collaborating with the dancehall star Yellowman in the 1980s, to Black Star’s 1998 Definition, where Mos Def “brings a dancehall indebted style to his flow.”

Bronx Living Legend - DJ Kool Herc Part I from Bronx Music Heritage Center on Vimeo.

Bronx Living Legend - DJ Kool Herc Part II from Bronx Music Heritage Center on Vimeo.