An account of the origins of hip-hop music as presented by its founders and stars traces the work of such performers as DJ Kool Herc, Grandmaster Flash, and DMC.
Have you seen a hip hop documentary? If you have chances are you've heard nearly all of this information. At least that's how I felt while reading through the book. While filled with tons of first person anecdotes, great stories, and oral history I became hella bored after a while and found myself skipping forward quite a bit. Why is it always the "beginning" of hip hop that is covered? It's always the same 5 or 6 guys talking about each other, pontificating about who started what and where.
So I guess I came into this with a chip on my shoulder. I wanted/expected more and instead saw the same information only in text form rather than film.
So here's my final recommendation: Have you seen a hip hop documentary? If you said yes skip the book unless you are a HUGE hip hop head. But that's just me.
This is the straight dope about the early days of hip-hop from the people that were there. Reminiscent of jazz oral histories, though with considerably more street crime.
On the whole enjoyable history of the first ten years of hip-hop. Hearing directly from all of the principals was great, it is easy to forget how young everyone was when this was popping off in the 70's. The focus on the soundsystem culture as the foundation and it's ultimate demise at the hands of it's own success in records and disco clubs in Manhattan was very interesting.
I think Piskor's Hip Hop Family Tree graphic novels are actually a more accessible and fun way to read these same histories, but the written word gives more depth and breadth than you can squeeze in a graphic novel format.
Last thing, I would have bumped it up to four stars, except for the really distracting formatting of the book. It has too many pages with hella small typography and too similar coloration of the prose and background page color; it makes for frustrating reading in less than perfect daylight. The pictures are wonderful, the captioning is illegible. The publisher f'd this up for everyone; authors get a pass.
So I'm getting going and adding a few books that I've read recently--in an effort to make them not all children's books I'll start with this one. This is a truly fascinating and well put together book and I wouldn't say it is for hiphop fans only (although if you are a fan, run don't walk to your local independent bookseller and buy a copy). This is told firsthand by the dj's, dancers, mc's, graffiti artists and other's who lived through the beginning, giving some great insight to the bronx in the late 70's and chock full of awesome photos and my favorite part--original show flyers.
Puts you right there in the early to late seventies and into the eighties as the burgeoning hip hop movement gets it's feet off the ground. From underground movement to commercial superstars, this book is utterly fascinating. There are so many parallels between underground and counter-cultural movements that sprung up around this time period. This is a great read for anyone who loves music, the city, and youth movements; all with a slight undertone of seediness.
I read this for a book club. Nobody else could make it all the way through. Perhaps my tolerance is higher than most because I love burgeoning revolutions, and this was certainly one. Plus, great early visual artifacts.
A tie with "Please Kill Me" as one of the most important books written about 20th century music. Completely engaging, relevant, and well written, in the same oral tradition of "Please Kill Me". If you don't read this book and love it, you're a fucking moron.
interesting read. Developed off of filmed interviews and it definitely showed, sort of like reading a transcript of a documentary, not that that's bad thing.
Second time I've read through this and delighted all over again by the liveliness of these first-person accounts of hip-hop's birth in the 1970s. So many exciting stories here.