Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Clive Campbell ( 16 de abril de 1955 ), também conhecido como Kool Herc e DJ Kool Herc, é um DJ jamaicano, considerado um dos fundadores "cultura hip hop " em razão do fato de que suas block parties (festas do bairro/bloco, em português) no bairro do Bronx em Nova Iorque terem estabelecido o formato e congregarem os elementos ...

    • Clive Campbell
    • Jamaica
  2. Luís Alberto Alves/Hourpress. Kool DJ Herc é o criador do DJing breakbeat, a essência do Hip-Hop. Ao isolar e repetir os "breaks", ou partes mais dançantes, dos discos de Funk de Mandrill , James Brown e Jimmy Castor Bunch , Herc criou o protótipo do Hip-Hop moderno.

  3. Para essa resposta, você precisa conhecer Clive Campbell, mais conhecido na história como DJ Kool Herc. Agora com 65 anos, o inspirador DJ nascido na Jamaica foi considerado o 'Fundador do Hip-Hop' e 'Pai do Hip-Hop'.

    • Overview
    • Early life
    • Career and the birth of hip-hop

    DJ Kool Herc (born April 16, 1955, Kingston, Jamaica) Jamaican American disc jockey (deejay or DJ) who is credited as the founder of hip-hop, a musical and cultural movement that revolves around four elements: rapping, graffiti painting, B-boying, and deejaying. In 1973 Herc introduced a number of innovations at a party he deejayed and cohosted tha...

    Clive Campbell is the eldest of six children born to Keith Campbell, who worked as an automobile mechanic, and Nettie Campbell, who was a nurse. His father was an avid record collector who exposed his children to many musical genres and styles, including jazz, funk, and gospel music. Growing up in Kingston, Jamaica, Campbell was also influenced by the neighbourhood parties at local dance halls and the innovative sound systems that deejays devised for the parties. In 1967 he immigrated to the Bronx in New York City, where his mother had moved to live and work. Eventually, the entire family joined them, and they moved into an apartment at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue.

    Campbell attended the Alfred E. Smith Career and Technical Education High School in the Bronx, where he earned the nickname Hercules for his muscular physique. He became involved with a crew of local graffiti artists, and he began using the tag name Clyde as Kool for his graffiti. Soon, he started going by Kool Herc. His mother took him to house parties in the neighbourhood, and eventually he began throwing block parties where he served as a deejay. Herc was known for his powerful sound system and impressive collection of funk and soul music records. He drew on his Jamaican background for his deejay style, incorporating a Jamaican musical tradition called “toasting,” in which the deejay spoke, or “rapped,” improvised rhymes over the music.

    On August 11, 1973, Herc’s sister Cindy Campbell hosted a back-to-school party, for which she hired her brother to deejay. The party was held in the recreation room of their apartment building on Sedgwick Avenue. In a 1998 interview with writer Frank Broughton, Herc recalled the party as “Lovely. Charged 25 cents for girls, 50 cents for fellas, 50 cents for sodas…beer was a dollar.”

    He introduced a new technique at the party that allowed him to keep playing the percussive instrumental breaks in songs for a longer, continuous dance flow. At previous events he noticed that the breaks brought out more people to dance. By setting up two turntables and a mixer and playing two copies of the same record, he was able to loop and extend the breaks so that guests could dance to them for longer periods of time. To build his grooves, he favoured breaks from heavy funk songs such as “Give It Up or Turnit a Loose” by James Brown, “Bongo Rock” by the Incredible Bongo Band, “Get into Something” by the Isley Brothers, and “Listen to Me” by Baby Huey and the Babysitters. Herc also began naming, or “calling out,” individual dancers at the party to encourage them to show off their moves. He called his two-turntable technique “merry-go-round” and the dancers who performed during the breaks “break-boys and break-girls,” or “B-boys and B-girls.”

    Music historians credit Herc’s innovations and experimentation at this event with providing the foundation for hip-hop, and August 11, 1973, is now considered the birth date of hip-hop. His techniques and style influenced the earliest rappers and hip-hop artists, including deejays Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmaster Flash.

    Students save 67%! Learn more about our special academic rate today.

    Learn More

    After the back-to-school party, Herc continued to deejay at local events and clubs, such as the Twilight Zone in the Bronx. The events were promoted by word of mouth and handmade flyers distributed around the neighbourhood. He performed with a group of dancers, deejays, and MCs known as The Herculords, who rapped over his beats. He was known for his impressive sound system and stereo speakers, which were dubbed “The Herculoids.” However, Herc stopped performing after being stabbed while trying to break up a fight at a club gig in 1977. He told Spin magazine in a 2023 interview, “It drew me into a shell. The mystique wasn’t there no more.”

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DJ_Kool_HercDJ Kool Herc - Wikipedia

    Clive Campbell (born April 16, 1955), better known by his stage name DJ Kool Herc, is a Jamaican American DJ who is credited with being one of the founders of hip hop music in the Bronx, New York City, in 1973. Nicknamed the Father of Hip-Hop, Campbell began playing hard funk records of the sort typified by James Brown .

  5. Luís Alberto Alves / Hourpress. Kool DJ Herc é o criador do breaking DJing, a essência do hip-hop. Ao isolar e repetir os "breaks", ou partes mais dançantes, dos discos de funk de Mandrill, James Brown e Jimmy Castor Bunch, Herc criou o protótipo do hip-hop moderno. Leia mais... Postado por luis Alberto Alves às 13:23.

  6. 11 de ago. de 2023 · Utilizando dois toca-discos e um microfone, o pioneiro jamaicano do funk e soul, DJ Kool Herc, revolucionou a música ao misturar dois discos, isolando e prolongando as batidas do bumbo, também...