prepare and submit a term paper on History of Hip Hop Music Genre. Your paper should be a minimum of 2000 words in length.
You will prepare and submit a term paper on History of Hip Hop Music Genre. Your paper should be a minimum of 2000 words in length. Musically though, the term hip-hop is used to define a form of music that is: … comprised mainly of emceeing and deejaying. The other two components that complete the four elements of hip-hop are graffiti and break-dancing. As hip-hop evolves into big business, the four elements (emceeing, deejaying, graffiti, and break dancing) are constantly being merged with others like clothing trends, slang, and general mindset (Adaso, Henry “A Brief History of Hip-Hop and Rap”).
The earliest known beginning of the hip-hop music craze can be found in the 1940 annals of music history. This was the year when Thomas Wong, also known as Tom the Great began to use a booming sound system that turned out to please his audience while playing American records in an effort to widen his crowd base over the local bands. DJ music began to gain its foothold during this time, culminating in the historical “Soundclash” between Coxsone Dodds “Downbeat” and Duke Reids “Trojan” in what would later become known as DJ Battling.
As America began to change as a population, welcoming immigrants and their own cultures and traditions into the mix, the sound of American music also began to change. The most notable sound change came in 1962 when James Brown recorded “Live at the Apollo” where his drummer, Clayton Fillyau pioneered the breakbeat sound (Adaso, Henry “The History of Hip Hop”).
African – Americans have always been noted for their highly creative music styles. Even as workers in the slave fields, they managed to compose their own music using a unique rhythm and rhyme that no other people could imitate. So it did not come as any wonder when in 1965, Muhammad Ali, who was born as Cassius Clay, became the first-ever black man to recite a rhyme in public. His rhyme went this way: A closer analysis of the word rhyme and rhythm of delivery in the poem.