DJing and
turntablism, MCing/
rapping,
breakdancing,
graffiti art and
beatboxing are the creative outlets that collectively make up Hip Hop culture and its revolutionary aesthetic. Like the
blues, these arts were developed by urban communities to enable people to make a statement, whether political or emotional and participate in community activities. These practices spread globally around the 1980s as fans could "make it their own" and express themselves in new and creative ways in music, dance and other arts.
DJing manipulating a
record turntable at a turntablism competition in France in 2006 DJing and turntablism are the techniques of manipulating sounds and creating music and beats using two or more
phonograph turntables or other sound sources, such as tapes, CDs or
digital audio files and a
DJ mixer that is plugged into a
PA system. One of the first few Hip Hop DJs was
Kool DJ Herc, who helped popularize Hip Hop in the 1970s through the isolation and extending of "breaks" – the parts of albums that focused solely on the percussive beat. In addition to developing Herc's techniques, DJs
Grandmaster Flowers,
Grandmaster Flash,
Grand Wizzard Theodore, and
Grandmaster Caz made further innovations with the introduction of "
scratching", which has become one of the key sounds associated with hip hop music.
Grandmaster Flash became known for “flashing” during the breaks, flashing being the section of two albums where only the drums are played. Traditionally, a DJ will use two turntables simultaneously and mix between the two. These are connected to a DJ mixer, an
amplifier,
speakers, and various electronic music equipment such as a microphone and
effects units. The DJ mixes the two albums currently in rotation and/or does "
scratching" by moving one of the record platters while manipulating the
crossfader on the mixer. The result of mixing two records is a unique sound created by the seemingly combined sound of two separate songs into one song. Although there is considerable overlap between the two roles, a DJ is not the same as a record producer of a music track. The development of DJing was also influenced by new
turntablism techniques, such as
beatmatching, a process facilitated by the introduction of new turntable technologies such as the
Technics SL-1200 MK 2, first sold in 1978, which had a precise variable
pitch control and a
direct drive motor. DJs were often avid record collectors, who would hunt through used record stores for obscure
soul records and vintage
funk recordings. DJs helped to introduce rare records and new artists to club audiences. mixing with two turntables In the early years of hip hop, the DJs were the stars, as they created new music and beats with their record players. While DJing and turntablism continue to be used in hip hop music in the 2010s, the star role has increasingly been taken by MCs since the late 1970s, due to innovative, creative MCs such as Kurtis Blow and
Melle Mel of
Grandmaster Flash's crew, the
Furious Five, who developed strong rapping skills. However, a number of DJs have gained stardom nonetheless in recent years. Famous DJs include Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa,
Mr. Magic,
DJ Jazzy Jeff,
DJ Charlie Chase,
DJ Disco Wiz,
DJ Scratch from
EPMD,
DJ Premier from
Gang Starr, DJ
Scott La Rock from
Boogie Down Productions, DJ
Pete Rock of
Pete Rock & CL Smooth,
DJ Muggs from
Cypress Hill,
Jam Master Jay from
Run-DMC,
Eric B.,
DJ Screw from the
Screwed Up Click and the inventor of the
Chopped & Screwed style of mixing music,
Funkmaster Flex,
Tony Touch,
DJ Clue,
Mix Master Mike, Touch-Chill-Out, DJ Red Alert, and
DJ Q-Bert. The underground movement of turntablism has also emerged to focus on the skills of the DJ. In the 2010s, there are turntablism competitions, where turntablists demonstrate advanced beat juggling and scratching skills.
MCing performs in Las Vegas for a
BET party
Rapping (also known as emceeing, MCing, or just rhyming) refers to "spoken or chanted rhyming lyrics with a strong rhythmic accompaniment". Rapping typically features complex wordplay, rapid delivery, and a range of "street slang", some of which is unique to the hip hop subculture. While rapping is often done over beats, either done by a DJ, a
beatboxer, it can also be done without accompaniment. It can be broken down into different components, such as "content", "flow" (rhythm and
rhyme), and "delivery". Rapping is distinct from
spoken word poetry in that it is performed in time to the beat of the music. The use of the word "rap" to describe quick and slangy speech or witty repartee long predates the musical form. MCing is a form of expression that is embedded within ancient African and Indigenous culture and oral tradition as throughout history verbal acrobatics or jousting involving rhymes were common within the Afro-American and Latino-American community.
Graffiti can, a common tool used in modern
graffiti Graffiti is the most controversial of hip hop's elements, as a number of the most notable graffiti pioneers say that they do not consider graffiti to be an element of hip hop, including
Lady Pink,
Seen, Blade, Fargo,
Cholly Rock, Fuzz One, and Coco 144.
Lady Pink says, "I don't think graffiti is hip hop. Frankly I grew up with disco music. There's a long background of graffiti as an entity unto itself," and Fargo says, "There is no correlation between hip hop and graffiti, one has nothing to do with the other." Hip hop pioneer
Grandmaster Flash has also questioned the connection between hip hop and graffiti, saying, "You know what bugs me, they put hip hop with graffiti. How do they intertwine?" In America in the late 1960s, before hip hop,
graffiti was used as a form of expression by political activists. In addition, gangs such as the
Savage Skulls,
La Familia Michoacana, and
Savage Nomads used graffiti to mark territory.
Julio 204 was a Puerto Rican graffiti writer, one of the first graffiti writers in New York City. He was a member of the "Savage Skulls" gang, and started writing his nickname in his neighborhood as early as 1968. In 1971, the
New York Times published an article ("'Taki 183' Spawns Pen Pals") about another graffiti writer,
TAKI 183. According to the article Julio had been writing for a couple of years when Taki began tagging his own name all around the city. Taki also states in the article that Julio "was busted and stopped." Writers following in the wake of Taki and
Tracy 168 would add their street number to their nickname, "bomb" (cover) a train with their work, and let the subway take it—and their fame, if it was impressive, or simply pervasive, enough—"all city". Julio 204 never rose to Taki's fame because Julio kept his tags localized to his own neighborhood. is an influential graffiti artist who began painting in the 1970s. One of the most common forms of graffiti is tagging, or the act of stylizing the unique name or logo of oneself. Tagging began in Philadelphia and New York City and has expanded worldwide. Spray painting public property or the property of others without their consent can be considered vandalism, and the "tagger" may be subject to arrest and prosecution for the criminal act. Whether legal or not, the hip hop culture considers tagging buildings, trains, bridges and other structures as visual art, and consider the tags as part of a complex symbol system with its own social codes and subculture rules. Such art is in some cases now subject to federal protection in the US, making its erasure illegal. Bubble lettering held sway initially among writers from
the Bronx, though the elaborate
Brooklyn style Tracy 168 dubbed "wildstyle" would come to define the art. The early trend-setters were joined in the 1970s by artists like
Dondi,
Futura 2000, Daze, Blade,
Lee Quiñones,
Fab Five Freddy,
Zephyr,
Rammellzee,
Crash, Kel, NOC 167 and
Lady Pink. Graffiti is understood as a visual expression of rap music, just as
breaking is viewed as a physical expression. The 1983 film
Wild Style is widely regarded as the first hip hop motion picture, which featured prominent figures within the New York graffiti scene during that period. The book
Subway Art and the documentary
Style Wars were also among the first ways the mainstream public were introduced to hip hop graffiti. Graffiti remains part of hip hop, while crossing into the mainstream art world with exhibits in galleries throughout the world.
Breakdancing , an early form of
hip hop dance, often involves dance
battles, showing off technical skills, trying to out-do a rival dancer, and displaying tongue-in-cheek bravado. Breaking, also called B-boying/B-girling or breakdancing, is a dynamic, rhythmic style of dance which developed as one of the major elements of hip hop culture. Like many aspects of hip hop culture, breakdance borrows heavily from many cultures, including 1930s-era street dancing, Brazilian and
Asian Martial arts,
Russian folk dance, and the dance moves of
James Brown,
Michael Jackson, and California
funk. Breaking took form in the
South Bronx in the 1970s alongside the other elements of hip hop. Breakdancing is typically done with the accompaniment of
hip hop music playing on a
boom box or
PA system. Breakdancing includes four dance styles: rocking,
b-boying/b-girling, locking and popping, all of which trace their origins to the early 1970s. According to the 2002 documentary film
The Freshest Kids: A History of the B-Boy, DJ Kool Herc describes the "B" in B-boy as short for breaking, which at the time was slang for "going off", also one of the original names for the dance. However, early on the dance was known as the "boing" (the sound a spring makes). Dancers at DJ Kool Herc's parties saved their best dance moves for the percussion
break section of the song, getting in front of the audience to dance in a distinctive, frenetic style. Breaking was documented in
Style Wars, and was later given more focus in fictional films such as
Wild Style and
Beat Street. Early acts made up of "mainly Latino Americans" include the
Rock Steady Crew and
New York City Breakers.
Beatboxing is noted for his beatboxing skills. He is holding the mic close to his mouth, a technique beatboxers use to imitate deep basslines and bass drums, by exploiting the
proximity effect.
Beatboxing is the technique of
vocal percussion, in which a singer imitates drums and other percussion instruments with her or his voice. It is primarily concerned with the art of creating beats or rhythms using the human mouth. The term
beatboxing is derived from the mimicry of the first generation of
drum machines, then known as beatboxes. It was first popularized by
Doug E. Fresh. As it is a way of creating hip hop music, it can be categorized under the production element of hip hop, though it does sometimes include a type of rapping intersected with the human-created beat. It is generally considered to be part of the same "Pillar" of hip hop as DJing—in other words, providing a musical backdrop or foundation for MC's to rap over. Beatboxers can create their beats just naturally, but many of the beatboxing effects are enhanced by using a microphone plugged into a
PA system. This helps the beatboxer to make their beatboxing loud enough to be heard alongside a rapper, MC, turntablist, and other hip hop artists. Beatboxing was popular in the 1980s with prominent artists like the Darren "Buffy, the Human Beat Box" Robinson of the
Fat Boys and
Biz Markie displaying their skills within the media. It declined in popularity along with b-boying in the late 1980s, but has undergone a resurgence since the late 1990s, marked by the release of "Make the Music 2000" by
Rahzel of
The Roots.
Beatmaking/producing Although it is not described as one of the four core elements that make up hip hop,
music producing is another important element. In music, record producers play a similar role in
sound recording that film directors play in making a movie. The record producer recruits and selects artists (rappers, MCs, DJs, beatboxers, and so on), plans the vision for the recording session, coaches the performers on their songs, chooses
audio engineers, sets out a budget for hiring the artists and technical experts, and oversees the entire project. The exact roles of a producer depend on each individual, but some producers work with DJs and drum machine programmers to create beats, coach the DJs in the selection of sampled
basslines,
riffs and
catch phrases, give advice to rappers, vocalists, MCs and other artists, give suggestions to performers on how to improve their flow and develop a unique personal style. Some producers work closely with the audio engineer to provide ideas on mixing,
effects units (e.g.,
Auto-Tuned vocal effects such as those popularized by
T-Pain), micing of artists, and so on. The producer may independently develop the "concept" or vision for a project or album, or develop the vision in collaboration with the artists and performers. behind a large
audio console in a recording studio In hip hop, since the beginning of MCing, there have been producers who work in the studio, behind the scenes, to create the beats for MCs to rap over. Producers may find a beat they like on an old funk, soul, or disco record. They then isolate the beat and turn it into a loop. Alternatively, producers may create a beat with a
drum machine or by hiring a drumkit percussionist to play acoustic drums. The producer could even mix and layer different methods, such as combining a sampled disco drum break with a drum machine track and some live, newly recorded percussion parts or a live electric bass player. A beat created by a hip hop producer may include other parts besides a drum beat, such as a sampled
bassline from a funk or disco song, dialogue from a spoken word record or movie, or rhythmic "scratching" and "punches" done by a
turntablist or DJ. An early beat maker was producer
Kurtis Blow, who won producer of the year credits in 1983, 1984, and 1985. Known for the creation of sample and sample loops, Blow was considered the
Quincy Jones of early hip hop, a reference to the prolific African American record producer, conductor, arranger, composer, musician and bandleader. One of the most influential beat makers was J. Dilla, a producer from Detroit who chopped samples by specific beats and would combine them together to create his unique sound. Those who create these beats are known as either beat makers or producers, however producers are known to have more input and direction on the overall the creation of a song or project, while a beat maker just provides or creates the beat. As Dr. Dre has said before "Once you finish the beat, you have to produce the record." The process of making beats includes sampling, "chopping", looping, sequencing beats, recording, mixing, and mastering. Most beats in hip hop are
sampled from a pre-existing record. This means that a producer will take a portion or a "sample" of a song and reuse it as an instrumental section, beat or portion of their song. Some examples of this are
The Isley Brothers' "Footsteps in the Dark Pts. 1 and 2" being sampled to make
Ice Cube's "
It Was a Good Day". Another example is
Otis Redding's "
Try a Little Tenderness" being sampled to create the song "
Otis", released in 2011, by
Kanye West and
Jay-Z. "Chopping" is dissecting the song that you are sampling so that you "chop" out the part or parts of the song, be that the bassline, rhythm guitar part, drum break, or other music, you want to use in the beat. Looping is known as melodic or percussive sequence that repeats itself over a period of time, so basically a producer will make an even-number of bars of a beat (e.g., four bars or eight bars) repeat itself or "loop" of a full song length. This loop provides an
accompaniment for an MC to rap over. old records, using turntables and
drum machines to create beats, producers use electric and acoustic instruments on some songs. Pictured is an electric bass player at a hip hop show. The tools needed to make beats in the late 1970s were funk, soul, and other music genre
records,
record turntables,
DJ mixers,
audio consoles, and relatively inexpensive
Portastudio-style
multitrack recording devices. In the 1980s and 1990s, beat makers and producers used the new electronic and digital instruments that were developed, such as samplers, sequencers, drum machines, and synthesizers. From the 1970s to the 2010s, various beat makers and producers have used live instruments, such as drum kit or electric bass on some tracks. To record the finished beats or beat tracks, beat makers and producers use a variety of
sound recording equipment, typically
multitrack recorders.
Digital audio workstations, also known as DAWs, became more common in the 2010s for producers. Some of the most used DAWs are
FL Studio,
Ableton Live, and
Pro Tools. DAWs have made it possible for more people to be able to make beats in their own home studio, without going to a recording studio. Beat makers who own DAWs do not have to buy all the hardware that a recording studio needed in the 1980s (huge 72 channel audio consoles, multitrack recorders, racks of rackmount effects units), because 2010-era DAWs have everything they need to make beats on a good quality, fast laptop computer. Beats are such an integral part of rap music that many producers have been able to make instrumental mixtapes or albums. Even though these instrumentals have no rapping, listeners still enjoy the inventive ways the producer mixes different beats, samples and instrumental melodies. Examples of these are
9th Wonder's "Tutenkhamen" and
J Dilla's "Donuts". Some hip hop records come in two versions: a beat with rapping over it, and an instrumental with just the beat. The instrumental in this case is provided so that DJs and turntablists can isolate breaks, beats and other music to create new songs.
Language The development of hip hop linguistics, including own
poetics, is complex. Source material include the spirituals of slaves arriving in the new world, Jamaican dub music, the laments of jazz and blues singers, patterned cockney slang and radio deejays hyping their audience using rhymes. Hip hop has a distinctive associated slang. It is also known by alternate names, such as "Black English", or "
Ebonics". Academics suggest its development stems from a rejection of the racial hierarchy of language, which held "White English" as the superior form of educated speech. Due to hip hop's commercial success in the late 1990s and early 2000s, many of these words have been assimilated into the cultural discourse of several different dialects across America and the world and even to non-hip hop fans. The word
diss for example is particularly prolific. There are also a number of words which predate hip hop, but are often associated with the culture, with
homie being a notable example. Sometimes, terms like
what the dilly, yo are popularized by a single song (in this case, "
Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See" by
Busta Rhymes) and are only used briefly. One particular example is the rule-based slang of
Snoop Dogg and
E-40, who add
-izzle or
-izz to the end or middle of words. Hip Hop lyrics have also been known for containing swear words. In particular, the word "bitch" is seen in countless songs, from NWA's "A Bitch Iz a bitch" to Missy Elliot's "She is a Bitch". It is often used in the negative connotation of a woman who is a shallow "money grubber". Some female artists have tried to reclaim the word and use it as a term of empowerment. Regardless, the hip hop community has recently taken an interest in discussing the use of the word "bitch" and whether it is necessary in rap. Not only the particular words, but also the choice of which language in which rap is widely debated topic in international hip hop. In Canada, the use of non-standard variants of French, such as
Franglais, a mix of French and English, by groups such as
Dead Obies or
Chiac (such as
Radio Radio) has powerful symbolic implications for Canadian language politics and debates on
Canadian identity. In the United States rappers choose to rap in English, Spanish, or
Spanglish, depending on their own backgrounds and their intended audience. ==Social impact==