Break Beats in the Bronx
Rediscovering Hip-Hop's Early Years
Joseph C. Ewoodzie Jr.
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
Imprint: The University of North Carolina Press
Published: 08/2017
Pages: 256
Subject: Social Science, Music
| University of North Carolina
Print ISBN: 9780000000000
eBook ISBN: 9781469632773
DESCRIPTION
The origin story of hip-hop—one that involves Kool Herc DJing
a house party on Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx—has become
received wisdom. But Joseph C. Ewoodzie Jr. argues that the full
story remains to be told. In vibrant prose, he combines
never-before-used archival material with searching questions about
the symbolic boundaries that have divided our understanding of the
music. In Break Beats in the Bronx, Ewoodzie portrays the
creative process that brought about what we now know as hip-hop and
shows that the art form was a result of serendipitous events,
accidents, calculated successes, and failures that, almost
magically, came together. In doing so, he questions the unexamined
assumptions about hip-hop's beginnings, including why there are
just four traditional elements—DJing, MCing, breaking, and
graffiti writing—and not others, why the South Bronx and not
any other borough or city is considered the cradle of the form, and
which artists besides Kool Herc, Afrika Bambaataa, and Grandmaster
Flash founded the genre. Ewoodzie answers these and many other
questions about hip-hop's beginnings. Unearthing new evidence, he
shows what occurred during the crucial but surprisingly
underexamined years between 1975 and 1979 and argues that it was
during this period that the internal logic and conventions of the
scene were formed.
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