The other week Tone-Loc was hospitalized in Florida after passing
out during a concert. He's 43 now, and his collapse begs two questions:
can dudes rap into their forties, and... people go to hip-hop shows in
Florida?
Actually, the whole hip-hop generation is approaching
middle-age. I'm sure we could argue all day long about the first
hip-hop moment, the first hip-hop single, or the moment when hip-hop's
spark was truly ignited. I'm going to put a stake in the sand on that
last one and call it as August 11, 1973. That's the night Bronx DJ Kool
Herc (short for "Hercules" - a childhood nickname) played the first
breakbeat at the 1520 Sedgwick Avenue project housing recreation room.
And with this break the hip-hop blueprint was drawn.
Rap without
a breakbeat is like rock with out an amp. That "five-minute loop of
fury" gave rappers the foundation to build their rhymes. Thirty-six
years later, 1520 Sedgwick Avenue is now officially the "birthplace of
hip-hop" (thanks to Herc's lobbying) and a host of old-school rappers
are now approaching AARP age. While Eminem, Method Man & Redman,
and Cam'ron all suck up the hip-hop oxygen this summer, let's pay our
respects to the pioneers who hold them up. Know your history to create
your own.
MELLE MELTHEN: Grandmaster
Flash & The Furious Five's 1982 single "The Message" is credited as
the first socially conscious rap recording, but rapper Melle Mel (born
Melvin Glover) didn't want to do it when his label, Sugarhill, brought
it to him. Mel thought it was just another forgettable single. But when
he heard it played in the Bronx club Disco Fever, he knew he was wrong.
The crowd dug it.
NOW: Since his '80s glory
days Mel has done everything from pursue a wrestling career to write a
children's book ("The Portal in the Park"). He's also dropped an "l"
from his name and now goes by Mele Mel. The name change hasn't brought
him back to hop-hop's mainstream, but maybe it helped get him into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In 2007 he and the Furious Five became the
first rap artists inducted.
GRANDMASTER FLASHTHEN:
DJ Grandmaster Flash (born Joseph Saddler) moved to the Bronx from the
West Indies and quickly became a student of both his father's record
collection and Kool Herc's DJ style. Both helped Flash pioneer the
early use of scratching. An interesting bit of trivia: an unofficial
video for the 1983 single "White Lines (Don't Do It)" was directed by
NYU film student Spike Lee and featured an unknown Laurence Fishburne.
NOW:
Flash has travelled a lot of ground since his early '80s heyday. He
spent most of the '90s as musical director for Chris Rock's HBO series
and found a loyal following in Europe and Asia, where he continues mix
for legions of kids who wish they were born in the Bronx (but deep down
are glad they weren't). He's also taken to the airwaves with a show on
Sirius XM Radio and made himself a legit author with the publication of
his memoirs, which he wrote completely in rhyme. Just kidding.
KURTIS BLOWTHEN:
Harlem native Curtis Walker was in a late-'70s group called The Force
with future hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons. Simmons wound up managing
Walker and persuaded him to change his name to Kurtis Blow. His 1980
single "The Breaks" was the first hip-hop song to be released by a
major label (Mercury) and got him an opening slot for Bob Marley at
Madison Square Garden.
NOW: Blow gave up
recording in the '90s and briefly worked as a radio DJ with a show on
L.A.'s Power 106. Then he got religion. Blow went back to college as a
theology major, graduating this year. On the road to rap religion, he
lent his name to a compilation of Christian rap music and co-founded
Hip Hop Church New York, which holds services in Harlem. I guess this
answers the question, "Are there breakbeats in Heaven?" Pass the
turntable, and praise the lord.
DOUG E. FRESHTHEN: The
Human Beat Box, Douglas Davis, gained recognition in the classic 1984
hip-hop film "Beat Street." Throughout the '80s, Doug E. Fresh &
The Get Fresh Crew (whose M C Ricky D left the group and went on to
fame as Slick Rick) released a series of hugely successful records,
including the humbly titled "The World's Greatest Entertainer."
NOW: After
his crashing from his chart heights, Fresh turned to commercials to
keep the cash coming in. He's provided music for McDonalds, Coors,
Tanqueray, and all sorts of other brands begging for hip-hop cred.
Fresh also became a Scientologist. I assume he's bringing some hip-hop
to the Celebrity Center. What rhymes with L. Ron Hubbard?
KRS-ONETHEN:
New Yorker Lawrence Parker lived in homeless shelters as a teen. It was
there he met Scott Sterling (a.k.a. DJ Scott La Rock), and the two
formed the seminal late-'80s act Boogie Down Productions. The deaths of
La Rock in a 1987 shooting and a fan at a 1988 show prompted KRS to
form the Stop the Violence Movement, which donates money to the
National Urban League.
NOW: KRS-One briefly
worked as a label exec for Reprise Records but ditched the gig in 2001.
That same year he got himself into trouble when he said, "We cheered
when 9/11 happened." To clarify his remarks, KRS explained that he was
referring to the cheering for what happened to the rich and powerful.
That didn't help. As recently as 2007, he was still explaining himself
to Fox's Sean Hannity of all people.
PUBLIC ENEMYTHEN: Chuck
D (born Carlton Ridenhour) and Flavor Flav (William Drayton Jr.)
practiced their MC skills while delivering furniture for Chuck's
father's business. They were signed to Def Jam after a demo featuring
Chuck's freestyles caught the attention of label co-founder Rick Rubin.
Their powerful black militant stance put them in the center of many
controversies where they were accused of being homophobic and
anti-Semitic.
NOW: Today, aside from
continued PE touring, Chuck D has become a reliable political pundit
for the left. He co-hosted Air America's "Unfiltered" show with Rachel
Maddow and now his own show, "On the Real." Flavor Flav, meanwhile, has
become a reliable staple of reality shows, starring in four different
series. He wears a clock in all of them.
RUN-D.M.C.THEN:
One of the most influential hip-hop acts in history began when Russell
Simmons asked his younger brother, Joseph, to DJ for Kurtis Blow under
the name "DJ Run." Run's friend Daryl "D.M.C." McDaniels began rapping
to his beats and soon they recorded their first single right out of
high school with neighborhood bad boy Jason "Jam-Master Jay" Mizell.
NOW:
Mizell was gunned down in 2002, allegedly for deciding to work with a
young blacklisted rapper named 50 Cent. Run has since dedicated himself
to inner-city youth and reality TV, while D.M.C. successfully fought
depression (with the unlikely help of Sarah McLachlan's song "Angel")
and reunited with his birth mother in 2006.
LL COOL JTHEN: James
Todd Smith probably had the most idyllic childhood of any of his rap
contemporaries. He sang in church choir, joined the Boy Scouts, and
delivered papers. His grandfather bought him his first mixer at Sears.
His first single as LL Cool J (it stands for "Ladies Love Cool James),
"I Need a Beat," sold over 100,000 copies.
NOW:
In the great hip-hop tradition, LL Cool J is a serial entrepreneur.
He's written four books, has the requisite urban clothing line (Todd
Smith), and regularly acts in film and on television. Next up is a
starring role in CBS's upcoming fall series "NCIS: Los Angeles." Cool J
is also one of the most in-shape dudes in hip-hop, employing a personal
trainer and gracing the covers of fitness magazines. That's why the
ladies love him.
M.C. HAMMERTHEN:
Say what you will about his credibility (or lack thereof), Hammer
taught the world how to wear baggy pants and blow $30 million. Hammer
began his career as a batboy for the Oakland A's in the early '80s. By
the early '90s he was a multi-millionaire thanks to rap-lite hits like
"U Can't Touch This." He tried to toughen up his image by signing to
Death Row Records at the end of the decade (none of his recordings,
which included collaborations with Tupac Shakur, were released).
NOW:
By '96 Hammer was bankrupt and his career a punch line. He went from
traveling with a 300-person entourage to appearing with Ed McMahon in a
Cash 4 Gold commercial on this year's Super Bowl broadcast. He's now a
minister (the "M.C." now stands for "Man of Christ"), which earns him
extra cash for officiating weddings of other faded pop-culture icons,
such as Corey Feldman and Vince Neil. But things may be looking up for
the MC: his new TV show "Hammertime," which chronicles his struggle to
relaunch his empire with the help of his wife of 24 years and their six
kids, debuts June 19 on A&E.
D.J. JAZZY JEFF & THE FRESH PRINCETHEN: Jeff
Townes was a local Philadelphia hero when he met a kid named Will Smith
at a 1985 house party. They had instant chemistry and soon a hit single
with 1986's "Girls Ain't Nothing But Trouble." It was released a month
before Smith's high school graduation. Three years later they won the
first ever rap Grammy for "Parents Just Don't Understand."
NOW: Officially,
DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince have never disbanded, but they have
taken very different career paths. DJ Jeff went on to contribute
scratching for Eminem, Talib Kweli, The Roots, and others.
Unfortunately, things didn't turn our so well for Will Smith's career:
a forgettable sitcom and some box-office bombs. Maybe Flavor Flav will
put him in his next reality show.