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Thread started 01/01/07 11:07pm

CinisterCee

KRS-One: Hip Hop is alive, James Brown is Christ

By Chris "Milan" Thomas
http://www.allhiphop.com/

For over a decade, KRS-One has campaigned that “I Am Hip-Hop” in part of his “Rap is something you do, Hip-Hop is something you live” mantra. With that conviction, The Teacha had to feel some kind of way when friend and associate Nas declared Hip-Hop’s death with his recent album title.

With his own latest album called Life, this lends itself to a symbolic discussion. Few would contest that KRS-One is a deep thinker. The MC, the man, and the icon discusses his opinions, comments on Hip-Hop’s lineage of respect, defends the South, and honors the late James Brown in a unique fashion. If Hip-Hop isn’t dead, it sure ain’t living right. That’s one thing Nas and KRS-One seem to agree on. Do you?

AllHipHop.com: The phrase “Hip-Hop is dead” has been in the vernacular for the last two months. It would be an incomplete conversation if we didn’t have your two cents on the issue.

KRS-One: [Laughing] I’ll give you a nickel!

AllHipHop.com: The resounding theme has been the death of Hip-Hop. Ghostface, earlier, he blamed Snap for its demise – and a lot of people agreed with him. Then Nas took it a step further, and made an album [Hip Hop is Dead], proclaiming the death of Hip-Hop. You’re someone who has been an inspiration to both of them, so what’s your opinion? Is Hip-Hop dead?

KRS-One: No, ‘cause you’re on the phone with Hip-Hop right now, so I would start there. Of course Hip-Hop cannot be dead. We’re looking at poetry, we’re looking at symbolism, we’re looking at vision even. I think Nas is warning us. I think one of the best ways to warn a culture is to shock it. I think Nas shocked Hip-Hop culture by declaring its death. By declaring its death, it means that it will live now. A lot of people don’t like the term “Hip-Hop is dead.” The people that I know, grassroots organizations, universities, and cats that’s livin’ the culture for real, they’re like, “Nah, this is crazy! This is actually the epitome of the apathy, complacency, and money-grabbin’, and bling bling, and pimpin’ – this is the height of it. Nas is pointing it out.

The actual song “Hip Hop is Dead” says “Go to the stations and murder the DJ,” That kind of sums it up. Really, Hip-Hop is dead ‘cause nobody is takin’ responsibility for it. DJs have lost their sense of responsibility to the culture. They’re just employees now. They’re not culture-bearers. Kool Herc, Afrika Bambaataa, Flash, Grand Wizard Theodore, Kid Capri, Brucie Bee – these are the priests of the culture – Red Alert, Chuck Chillout – they made us who we are, they broke my records. Chuck Chillout did not wanna sound like Marley Marl [and vice versa]. Both of ‘em didn’t wanna sound like Red Alert, and the three of ‘em didn’t wanna sound like Jazzy Jay.

Today, everybody wants to sound like Funkmaster Flex, simple and plain! Even West Coast and Southern DJs think they’re playin’ Dirty South, they’re not. They’re just playing what the program directors are telling them to play, which is what these record company conglomerates are paying for. If we could just look at the truth, we could see what Nas is talking about. The truth is – the Hip-Hop he knew, the Hip-Hop we knew – Latin Quarter Hip-Hop, Rooftop Hip-Hop, Roxy Hip-Hop, Disco Fever Hip-Hop, Danceteria Hip-Hop, The Palladium Hip-Hop, that Hip-Hop is dead. No doubt about it.

In his song, Nas says, [paraphrasing] we used to do this, now we do this – and let’s go to the stations and murder the DJs. That is not Hip-Hop dying, that’s Hip-Hop alive! A couple of weeks ago, Nas and I were doing the Nike [Air Force One Anniversary party], and they tried to get him to say “Go to the stations and wreck the DJ,” as opposed to “murder,” I convinced him to say “murda!” Don’t wreck the DJ, murda the DJ!

AllHipHop.com: But Kris, this is the early ‘90s class saying this. Could it be that the early ‘90s generation is just reluctant to pass the torch on to the new generation?

KRS-One: Nah! I would not even go there, good question though! Let’s just talk about cultural continuity. When Kool Herc started in 1973 – let’s say ’72, ‘cause I was there – Herc says ’73 – in 1973, when Kool Herc came out with the biggest sound system, and there was Pebbly Poo and Clark Kent and everybody that he was influencing, it was called “the next generation of Hip-Hop.” The next generation after Kool Herc was Afrika Bambaataa and Jazzy Jay. Even though Afrika existed during Kool Herc, he’d walk up to Herc and pay homage, and say, “I’m gonna do what you do.” So Herc passes the torch, and Bambaataa and Jazzy Jay get the torch, and Jay gave Herc the highest respect everytime he touched a turntable. Herc didn’t have to wait in line to get into a Jazzy Jay party. If Herc wanted on, in the middle of Jay’s set, he’d put the headphones on Herc’s head. When you say “the torch being passed,” the torch was being passed – right up until we got to [Sugarhill Gang’s] “Rapper’s Delight” in 1979. The torch got dropped on the floor. And when the flame was just about out, Russell Simmons picked up the torch and said, “All respect due to Kool Herc, Afrika Bamaataa, Red Alert, The L Brothers.” And Queens had its own crew – Run-DMC, they paid homage and respect to the guys that came before them. Russell Simmons and his Def Jam [Records] has not stopped paying homage to the true-school. He pays respect, he pays for hotels; Russell is a big supporter of people like Kool Herc, Busy B, Brucie B – and it’s not broadcasted everywhere, but Russell is a supporter of people who put him on. We all shared the torch.

When I came out in 1986, I came out battling MC Shan, Mr. Magic, and Marley Marl. Now, the torch wasn’t handed to me, I had to fight for it. I demanded it. I had to fight my way to the top. What does that mean? It meant if I want to be in this culture, I’ve got to prove my value to those who came before me. Otherwise, I’m breaking cultural continuity – the line of respect. My first record was “South Bronx,” and in “South Bronx,” I shouted everybody out in the history of Hip-Hop. I’m telling people where I came from and what line of respect you are listening to. It wasn’t like Bambaataa cared. He didn’t care about KRS-One in 1986, ‘cause he didn’t have to. He’s still above me. “When is the next Zulu reunion, Bam? You are my god, you are my lord and savior. I would not be doing what I’m doing if it wasn’t for you, Afrika Bambaataa, so let me stay in my place and in my line of respect.” I stayed there [until] 1989, when I put out the “Stop the Violence” movement, that’s when I got my respect. They gave me a big plaque, and a whole bunch of other stuff – which I have to this day. Not a platinum plaque, not a gold plaque, but Afrika Bambaataa reached in his pocket and paid at a trophy store somewhere to have this made for me. He said, “Here, I am passing the torch.”

[Today], the South gives respect. They treat Kool Herc as Jesus, they treat Afrika Bambaataa as Moses, they treat KRS-One as David. I lived in Atlanta for six or seven years, and I could do no wrong there. I could go to any radio station, TV station, club – door open. I go to New York, I gotta wait on a guestlist. I go to HOT97, I’m the voice of the station, you playin’ my drops, and I gotta wait downstairs for you cats to tell me when’s it cool --- get the f**k outta here! That s**t makes absolutely no sense! That’s why the South is now on top – because they stayed true to the culture. Will they continue? That’s a big question mark. Not to reach in the lid – ‘cause I know how AllHipHop.com can get [laughs], I ain’t f**kin’ with y’all – but that was the problem with Nelly. The streets level, not the KRS level – and it’s reflected in the Beef DVD.

So you ask, “Where’s the torch?” We’re still holding it! We’re waiting for the real cats to pass it to. But I must say, the torch is passed to the South. I love the South. For instance, Usher. Usher is Hip-Hop, straight up and down! Why would I say that, ‘cause in every single one of his videos, he’s poppin’ and lockin’ and breakin’. Missy Elliot, she got Rock Steady Crew in her video! That means she paid them, flew them out, and put ‘em up in a hotel for her million dollar video, and once again promoted them to the world. You think I care if she got Timbaland or Dr. Dre producing? Missy Elliot gets the ultimate respect. Jay-Z is Hip-Hop. In one line [on “Heart of the City”] he said he was taking back from n***as for what they did to the Cold Crush [Brothers]. In one line, he entered the Temple of Hip-Hop. That’s all we lookin’ for! I got a torch, Herc got a torch, Bam got a torch, Nas got a torch. Pick a torch that you want, and try to get us to give it to you. But if you think you gonna challenge us, and make us wait outside, you gonna steal our lyrics, you gonna act like we don’t exist, and takin’ over The Source magazine and XXL. I saw The “New” Source got “The Bible for Hip-Hop”, and you open the magazine and see nothin’ but b***hes and hoes, God is gonna strike these mothaf**kas dead! They’ll never put KRS-One on their cover, even though I was the first one on their cover – after Slick Rick, and paid for The Source to exist. I [taught the founders about] “Music, Culture, Politics” but you won’t put me on the cover? That’s cool, I don’t need the cover – our children do. God’ll strike you, not me. Mark these words. This is not a threat, this is a warning from a prophet in the culture!

AllHipHop.com: How will James Brown’s death affect Hip-Hop?

KRS-One: James Brown is the Grandfather of Hip-Hop, of course recognizing Kool Herc as the father. You’re talking to a 25 year theologian, and Christ is my s**t. Jesus is my s**t, that’s my n***a! [Laughs] This guy, James Brown, dying on Christmas is very symbolic. Dying on Christmas, we know God is looking at us! We established right here and now. According to Christian tradition, James Brown dying on Jesus’ birthday means that Hip-Hop starts today. If you ask me, I think we should start Hip-Hop over on every Christmas. James Brown dying on Christmas, Lord have mercy! We have the opportunity, right now, to take Christmas [to share a federal holiday for Hip-Hop]. We can use federal law to our advantage. James Brown dying on Christmas Day means that for us, we don’t have to celebrate Christmas no more, that’s over! That “White Christmas” bulls**t is over! Jesus wasn’t born on Christmas, we know that’s a lie now. Christmas has nothing to do with the birth of the Christ, much less gift-giving, commercialism, and consumerism. Now, Hip-Hop has a chance to reestablish what Christmas really about. Christmas is about the birth of the Christ within yourself. You celebrate Christmas and you don’t say, “Jesus is born on this day,” – the ancient reason is Christ is born in you! God is born in you for another year. James Brown passing on Christmas could mean the birth of Soul in you. He is the Godfather of Soul – not Pop, not R&B, not Rock, not Blues, not Jazz – Soul music!

We should print the lyrics of “Say It Loud (I’m Black and I’m Proud)” and we should say it every Christmas. [KRS recites lyrics] He summed up the entire Black struggle. James Brown dying on Christ’s birthday shows not only who he was – Christ returned – but that Hip-Hop has a chance, politically, to take a day. Let’s celebrate James Brown! Hip-Hoppers celebrate the birth of their Soul, the birth of their Christ, the birth of their nature. Every Christmas, we gonna play James Brown records. All that White Jesus stuff is over! Matter of fact, I’m gonna call James Brown “James Brown the Christ.” When you look at Jesus, look at James Brown. Why wouldn’t you? The first painting of Jesus – the White man with long flowing hair is not what Jesus looked like – we know this. But we accept the lie out of habit, and it’s destroying us. The Vatican knows this! The Vatican says Jesus could be any color, any faith. Why not James Brown? Hip-Hoppers could say “James the Christ.” Further, Lord have mercy, in The Bible James was the brother of Christ. Hip-Hop could do this so sweetly, and take a federal holiday for itself, establishing what Christmas really means.

There is nobody who is more influential to Hip-Hop than James Brown. Kool Herc said that James Brown was the A-1 b-boy, the first MC, the first DJ – ‘cause he had two drummers. The drummer was what the turntable was today. When one finished playing, the other’d start, and sometimes they’d play together! Tell me this man is not the Christ! Tell me this man is not is Hip-Hop, straight up! James Brown is our artistic father. We all sample from him. This is a day where we exchange gifts. The gift exchanged with us from James was our culture. He freely gave his music to our culture. To me, that brings tears to my eyes! That’s some god s**t. That’s the lord and savior. On December 25th, James Brown gives the gift of himself to his children. What’s the gift we should be givin’ back? We should be givin’ back his request. “These record companies stole from me, get it back.” Get it back, children. There should be a James Brown Soul Museum, not a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. James Brown.
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Reply #1 posted 01/02/07 12:12am

CinisterCee

I posted in a thread earlier in 2006 that "Hip Hop is basically the Church of James Brown". nod

Nice of KRS to come along and reinforce this. smile
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Reply #2 posted 01/02/07 3:39am

Rhondab

love this!
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Reply #3 posted 01/02/07 7:06am

vainandy

avatar

That was getting on my nerves last weekend listening to all those rappers talk about how James Brown was such an inspiration for shit hop. The only thing I see them having in common is that they sampled the hell out of his records, and most of the time they even slowed the records down when they did it.

James Brown was funky and had loads of rhythm. Ain't a damn thing funky about shit hop and it sure as hell ain't got no rhythm. If they want to truly honor James Brown and be like him, then they need to speed their fucking tempo up and get funky with the songs. If they can't do that, then they need to keep James Brown's name out of their mouths.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #4 posted 01/02/07 12:21pm

Miles

KRS-One can sure talk the talk, but I'm with him about JB being the main DNA of Hip-Hop (for better or worse),and he was effectively one of the first MCs, along with Last Poets, Ghetto Fighters and Gil Scott. But if JB is 'Christ', does that make George Clinton Peter, the fisherman, the favoured disciple? And what about Sly? biggrin

So far, I'd say most of James Brown's musical innovations have been more deeply explored in jazz fusion and electronica rather than hip-hop imo, mainly due to hip-hop's overly rigid, programmed beats, and the often slow, loping rhythms it has these days (not to mention the somewhat limited subject matter of the raps in general).

Hip-Hop's getting old. Look at history. New Orleans jazz lasted in it's original form for, like, 20 years, then Louis Armstrong took it to the next stage, be-bop in it's original form last 10 years at most. Funk, as invented by James Brown and his collegues got thrown in the P-Funk blender and lasted 15 years (1965-80-ish), before diversifying. Truly innovative rock lasted maybe 15 years (I'd say 1965-80) before being put in the museum, more or less.

Hip-Hop is 25 years old if you're going back just to Grandmaster Flash and the 'Wheels of Steel' and over 30 if Kool Herc is the touchstone. We need another James Brown. Only the Second Coming of the Godfather can save us!! smile

It is for future generations to develop, explore, deconstruct or abandon the music of James Brown in new sounds. Maybe Hip-Hop (as we know it) is a dead man walking ...
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Reply #5 posted 01/02/07 2:27pm

Scrapluv

avatar

vainandy said:

That was getting on my nerves last weekend listening to all those rappers talk about how James Brown was such an inspiration for shit hop. The only thing I see them having in common is that they sampled the hell out of his records, and most of the time they even slowed the records down when they did it.

James Brown was funky and had loads of rhythm. Ain't a damn thing funky about shit hop and it sure as hell ain't got no rhythm. If they want to truly honor James Brown and be like him, then they need to speed their fucking tempo up and get funky with the songs. If they can't do that, then they need to keep James Brown's name out of their mouths.


are you speaking of hip-hop culture in general or what passes for hip-hop today?
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Reply #6 posted 01/02/07 2:38pm

Miles

Miles said:[quote]KRS-One can sure talk the talk, but I'm with him about JB being the main DNA of Hip-Hop (for better or worse),and he was effectively one of the first MCs, along with Last Poets, Ghetto Fighters and Gil Scott. But if JB is 'Christ', does that make George Clinton Peter, the fisherman, the favoured disciple? And what about Sly? biggrin

Whoops!! I actually meant the Watts Prophets, not the Ghetto Fighters (some Jimi Hendrix hangers-on IIRC now). One group were rap pioneers, the other were not. duh
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Reply #7 posted 01/02/07 2:43pm

vainandy

avatar

Miles said:

KRS-One can sure talk the talk, but I'm with him about JB being the main DNA of Hip-Hop (for better or worse),and he was effectively one of the first MCs, along with Last Poets, Ghetto Fighters and Gil Scott. But if JB is 'Christ', does that make George Clinton Peter, the fisherman, the favoured disciple? And what about Sly? biggrin

So far, I'd say most of James Brown's musical innovations have been more deeply explored in jazz fusion and electronica rather than hip-hop imo, mainly due to hip-hop's overly rigid, programmed beats, and the often slow, loping rhythms it has these days (not to mention the somewhat limited subject matter of the raps in general).

Hip-Hop's getting old. Look at history. New Orleans jazz lasted in it's original form for, like, 20 years, then Louis Armstrong took it to the next stage, be-bop in it's original form last 10 years at most. Funk, as invented by James Brown and his collegues got thrown in the P-Funk blender and lasted 15 years (1965-80-ish), before diversifying. Truly innovative rock lasted maybe 15 years (I'd say 1965-80) before being put in the museum, more or less.

Hip-Hop is 25 years old if you're going back just to Grandmaster Flash and the 'Wheels of Steel' and over 30 if Kool Herc is the touchstone. We need another James Brown. Only the Second Coming of the Godfather can save us!! smile

It is for future generations to develop, explore, deconstruct or abandon the music of James Brown in new sounds. Maybe Hip-Hop (as we know it) is a dead man walking ...


Good post.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #8 posted 01/02/07 2:44pm

vainandy

avatar

Scrapluv said:

vainandy said:

That was getting on my nerves last weekend listening to all those rappers talk about how James Brown was such an inspiration for shit hop. The only thing I see them having in common is that they sampled the hell out of his records, and most of the time they even slowed the records down when they did it.

James Brown was funky and had loads of rhythm. Ain't a damn thing funky about shit hop and it sure as hell ain't got no rhythm. If they want to truly honor James Brown and be like him, then they need to speed their fucking tempo up and get funky with the songs. If they can't do that, then they need to keep James Brown's name out of their mouths.


are you speaking of hip-hop culture in general or what passes for hip-hop today?


I didn't say "hip hop", I said "shit hop". That would be the dull shit that has been made for the last 15 years.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #9 posted 01/02/07 3:15pm

CinisterCee

vainandy said:

most of the time they even slowed the records down when they did it.


whofarted You must be listening to "Papa Don't Take No Mess" at 78 rpm. disbelief
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Reply #10 posted 01/02/07 3:42pm

sosgemini

avatar

whofarted

i don't even know where to start.
Space for sale...
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Reply #11 posted 01/02/07 4:06pm

woogiebear

James Brown, George Clinton and Sly Stone are the "Father, Son & Holy Ghost" of Hip-Hop.....PLAIN AND SIMPLE!!!!!
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin
Maybe next year @ VH 1's "Hip Hop Honors", they can honor the "trinity"!!!!!
THEY SHOULD!!!!!
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin
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Reply #12 posted 01/02/07 4:09pm

2freaky4church
1

avatar

Hip Hop is Alive and it lives in ahhh, not Minneapolis..haha
All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #13 posted 01/02/07 4:39pm

TonyVanDam

avatar

CinisterCee said:

I posted in a thread earlier in 2006 that "Hip Hop is basically the Church of James Brown". nod

Nice of KRS to come along and reinforce this. smile


Mr. Cee, can you (or anyone for that matter) please explain to me how the f*** did Snap get blame for giving the first deathblow to hip-hop?!?
disbelief lol lol lol
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Reply #14 posted 01/02/07 4:40pm

TonyVanDam

avatar

And does THIS means that Big Mama Thorton is the Virgin Mary Of Hip-Hop? lol
[Edited 1/2/07 16:42pm]
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Reply #15 posted 01/02/07 4:47pm

TonyVanDam

avatar

Miles said:

KRS-One can sure talk the talk, but I'm with him about JB being the main DNA of Hip-Hop (for better or worse),and he was effectively one of the first MCs, along with Last Poets, Ghetto Fighters and Gil Scott. But if JB is 'Christ', does that make George Clinton Peter, the fisherman, the favoured disciple? And what about Sly? biggrin

So far, I'd say most of James Brown's musical innovations have been more deeply explored in jazz fusion and electronica rather than hip-hop imo, mainly due to hip-hop's overly rigid, programmed beats, and the often slow, loping rhythms it has these days (not to mention the somewhat limited subject matter of the raps in general).

Hip-Hop's getting old. Look at history. New Orleans jazz lasted in it's original form for, like, 20 years, then Louis Armstrong took it to the next stage, be-bop in it's original form last 10 years at most. Funk, as invented by James Brown and his collegues got thrown in the P-Funk blender and lasted 15 years (1965-80-ish), before diversifying. Truly innovative rock lasted maybe 15 years (I'd say 1965-80) before being put in the museum, more or less.

Hip-Hop is 25 years old if you're going back just to Grandmaster Flash and the 'Wheels of Steel' and over 30 if Kool Herc is the touchstone. We need another James Brown. Only the Second Coming of the Godfather can save us!! smile

It is for future generations to develop, explore, deconstruct or abandon the music of James Brown in new sounds. Maybe Hip-Hop (as we know it) is a dead man walking ...


clapping clapping clapping

By that statement, James Brown is also the REAL godfather of House, Electro, Breakbeats, Acid Jazz, Downtempo, and Techno (during the Juan Atkins/Derrick May/Kevin Sanderson era!) cool
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Reply #16 posted 01/02/07 9:12pm

LittleBLUECorv
ette

avatar

woogiebear said:

James Brown, George Clinton and Sly Stone are the "Father, Son & Holy Ghost" of Hip-Hop.....PLAIN AND SIMPLE!!!!!
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin
Maybe next year @ VH 1's "Hip Hop Honors", they can honor the "trinity"!!!!!
THEY SHOULD!!!!!
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin


Instead of them getting honored on the Hip-Hop show, VH1 should make a VH1 R&B Honors.
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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Reply #17 posted 01/02/07 10:06pm

CinisterCee

VH1 Funk Honors
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Reply #18 posted 01/03/07 9:24am

EmbattledWarri
or

TonyVanDam said:

Miles said:

KRS-One can sure talk the talk, but I'm with him about JB being the main DNA of Hip-Hop (for better or worse),and he was effectively one of the first MCs, along with Last Poets, Ghetto Fighters and Gil Scott. But if JB is 'Christ', does that make George Clinton Peter, the fisherman, the favoured disciple? And what about Sly? biggrin

So far, I'd say most of James Brown's musical innovations have been more deeply explored in jazz fusion and electronica rather than hip-hop imo, mainly due to hip-hop's overly rigid, programmed beats, and the often slow, loping rhythms it has these days (not to mention the somewhat limited subject matter of the raps in general).

Hip-Hop's getting old. Look at history. New Orleans jazz lasted in it's original form for, like, 20 years, then Louis Armstrong took it to the next stage, be-bop in it's original form last 10 years at most. Funk, as invented by James Brown and his collegues got thrown in the P-Funk blender and lasted 15 years (1965-80-ish), before diversifying. Truly innovative rock lasted maybe 15 years (I'd say 1965-80) before being put in the museum, more or less.

Hip-Hop is 25 years old if you're going back just to Grandmaster Flash and the 'Wheels of Steel' and over 30 if Kool Herc is the touchstone. We need another James Brown. Only the Second Coming of the Godfather can save us!! smile

It is for future generations to develop, explore, deconstruct or abandon the music of James Brown in new sounds. Maybe Hip-Hop (as we know it) is a dead man walking ...


clapping clapping clapping

By that statement, James Brown is also the REAL godfather of House, Electro, Breakbeats, Acid Jazz, Downtempo, and Techno (during the Juan Atkins/Derrick May/Kevin Sanderson era!) cool

so Miles davis is just the God Emperor of those genres as well then
I am a Rail Road, Track Abandoned
With the Sunset forgetting, i ever Happened
http://www.myspace.com/stolenmorning
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Reply #19 posted 01/03/07 12:43pm

woogiebear

LittleBLUECorvette said:

woogiebear said:

James Brown, George Clinton and Sly Stone are the "Father, Son & Holy Ghost" of Hip-Hop.....PLAIN AND SIMPLE!!!!!
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin
Maybe next year @ VH 1's "Hip Hop Honors", they can honor the "trinity"!!!!!
THEY SHOULD!!!!!
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin


Instead of them getting honored on the Hip-Hop show, VH1 should make a VH1 R&B Honors.


I'm sayin' Hip-Hop should honor THEM, because Hip-Hop was BASICALLY BUILT on their "breaks".....AGREE?????
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin
Besides, we ALREADY saw the Grammy "shambles" for Sly!!!!!
biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin biggrin
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Reply #20 posted 01/03/07 1:31pm

dreamfactory31
3

Thanx 4 posting this CC. krs-1 always speaks with such clarity and is always a refreshing voice in hip hop. U know. I dont think hip hop is dead yet. Its too powerful to be slayed so quickly. Its an artform that travels through its peaks and valleys. Sometimes we cant fully appreciate the glory of its summits unless we have waded in the mud. Long live hip hop.
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Reply #21 posted 01/03/07 2:16pm

CinisterCee

Miles said:

KRS-One can sure talk the talk, but I'm with him about JB being the main DNA of Hip-Hop (for better or worse),and he was effectively one of the first MCs, along with Last Poets, Ghetto Fighters and Gil Scott. But if JB is 'Christ', does that make George Clinton Peter, the fisherman, the favoured disciple? And what about Sly? biggrin

So far, I'd say most of James Brown's musical innovations have been more deeply explored in jazz fusion and electronica rather than hip-hop imo, mainly due to hip-hop's overly rigid, programmed beats, and the often slow, loping rhythms it has these days (not to mention the somewhat limited subject matter of the raps in general).

Hip-Hop's getting old. Look at history. New Orleans jazz lasted in it's original form for, like, 20 years, then Louis Armstrong took it to the next stage, be-bop in it's original form last 10 years at most. Funk, as invented by James Brown and his collegues got thrown in the P-Funk blender and lasted 15 years (1965-80-ish), before diversifying. Truly innovative rock lasted maybe 15 years (I'd say 1965-80) before being put in the museum, more or less.

Hip-Hop is 25 years old if you're going back just to Grandmaster Flash and the 'Wheels of Steel' and over 30 if Kool Herc is the touchstone. We need another James Brown. Only the Second Coming of the Godfather can save us!! smile

It is for future generations to develop, explore, deconstruct or abandon the music of James Brown in new sounds. Maybe Hip-Hop (as we know it) is a dead man walking ...


This post is gold.

I have to admit, if hiphop were actually followers of James Brown, then we would have a million funk bands or hiphop bands like The Roots.
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Reply #22 posted 01/03/07 2:17pm

CinisterCee

TonyVanDam said:

CinisterCee said:

I posted in a thread earlier in 2006 that "Hip Hop is basically the Church of James Brown". nod

Nice of KRS to come along and reinforce this. smile


Mr. Cee, can you (or anyone for that matter) please explain to me how the f*** did Snap get blame for giving the first deathblow to hip-hop?!?
disbelief lol lol lol


Who said THAT lol No one even thinkin' bout Snap!
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Reply #23 posted 01/03/07 4:04pm

TonyVanDam

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CinisterCee said:

TonyVanDam said:



Mr. Cee, can you (or anyone for that matter) please explain to me how the f*** did Snap get blame for giving the first deathblow to hip-hop?!?
disbelief lol lol lol


Who said THAT lol No one even thinkin' bout Snap!


AllHipHop.com: The resounding theme has been the death of Hip-Hop. Ghostface, earlier, he blamed Snap for its demise – and a lot of people agreed with him. Then Nas took it a step further, and made an album [Hip Hop is Dead], proclaiming the death of Hip-Hop. You’re someone who has been an inspiration to both of them, so what’s your opinion? Is Hip-Hop dead?

KRS-One: No, ‘cause you’re on the phone with Hip-Hop right now, so I would start there. Of course Hip-Hop cannot be dead. We’re looking at poetry, we’re looking at symbolism, we’re looking at vision even. I think Nas is warning us. I think one of the best ways to warn a culture is to shock it. I think Nas shocked Hip-Hop culture by declaring its death. By declaring its death, it means that it will live now. A lot of people don’t like the term “Hip-Hop is dead.” The people that I know, grassroots organizations, universities, and cats that’s livin’ the culture for real, they’re like, “Nah, this is crazy! This is actually the epitome of the apathy, complacency, and money-grabbin’, and bling bling, and pimpin’ – this is the height of it. Nas is pointing it out.
[b]
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Reply #24 posted 01/03/07 4:05pm

TonyVanDam

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EmbattledWarrior said:

TonyVanDam said:



clapping clapping clapping

By that statement, James Brown is also the REAL godfather of House, Electro, Breakbeats, Acid Jazz, Downtempo, and Techno (during the Juan Atkins/Derrick May/Kevin Sanderson era!) cool

so Miles davis is just the God Emperor of those genres as well then


Miles Davis is a GOD (.....of jazz that is!).
wink
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Reply #25 posted 01/04/07 7:54am

vainandy

avatar

TonyVanDam said:

CinisterCee said:

I posted in a thread earlier in 2006 that "Hip Hop is basically the Church of James Brown". nod

Nice of KRS to come along and reinforce this. smile


Mr. Cee, can you (or anyone for that matter) please explain to me how the f*** did Snap get blame for giving the first deathblow to hip-hop?!?
disbelief lol lol lol


Snap? Are you talking about the same Snap that made "I've Got The Power"? Hell, they threwdown. If anything, they sped it up and put some pep and rhythm in it like there should be. You could actually dance to their shit. I guess these dead asses don't like anything faster than a "bob your head and swat flies" pace.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #26 posted 01/04/07 9:14am

Adisa

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Great article, CC.

rose for Grandaddy James
I'm sick and tired of the Prince fans being sick and tired of the Prince fans that are sick and tired!
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Reply #27 posted 01/04/07 11:38am

CinisterCee

vainandy said:

"bob your head and swat flies" pace.

lol
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Reply #28 posted 01/04/07 4:18pm

CinisterCee

DJ Pump scratch/juggle routine with The Payback



http://youtube.com/watch?v=ZFSOEVTC4Tw
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Reply #29 posted 01/04/07 6:06pm

TonyVanDam

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vainandy said:



Snap? Are you talking about the same Snap that made "I've Got The Power"? Hell, they threwdown. If anything, they sped it up and put some pep and rhythm in it like there should be. You could actually dance to their shit. I guess these dead asses don't like anything faster than a "bob your head and swat flies" pace.


lol lol lol Sad but true!
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