Kool DJ Herc

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Kool Herc)
Jump to: navigation, search
Kool Herc
Image:Kool herc at hot 97 busta rhymes vip lounge shop on june 7th 2006.jpg
Background information
Birth name Clive Campbell
Born April 16 1955 (1955-04-16) (age 54)
Origin Kingston, Jamaica
Bronx, New York, USA
Genre(s) Hip hop
Years active 1969–present

Clive Campbell (born April 16, 1955), better known by his DJ name DJ Kool Herc, is an American Hip-Hop DJ who is widely regarded as the founder of Hip-Hop music. He is the originator of break-beat DJing, where the breaks of funk songs—being the most danceable part, often featuring percussion—were isolated and repeated for the purpose of all-night dance parties (AMG [1]). Later DJs such as Grandmaster Flash refined and developed the use of breakbeats, including cutting. While growing up in Kingston he saw and heard the sound systems firsthand at neighborhood parties called dancehalls (Chang 2005). He moved to the Bronx, New York at the age of 12 and began to throw free neighborhood parties.

He is also well known for his massive, high-quality, high-volume sound system, against which even superior DJs could not compete (Toop, 1991). Herc first used reggae records and was toasting to the music like Jamaican artists U-Roy and I-Roy. But he started using funk records due to popular demand.

Kool Herc and his MC crew The Herculords "started a movement which recycled the creativity of black American jive jocks back into the USA" (Toop 39). The relationship between hip hop and reggae became more important again with reggae artists and rappers collaborating with each other, from Yellowman and Afrika Bambaataa to KRS-One and Shabba Ranks. Hip hop and reggae still influence each other in both directions.

During the later part of the decade, Herc was stabbed at one of his own parties, sidelining him during most of the 1980s as hip hop spread throughout the country (AMG). During the 1990s, he made several appearances, gave interviews, and appeared on The Godfathers of Threat by Terminator X (a DJ with Public Enemy). He still DJs around the world.

Herc is featured in Jin's music video, Top 5 (Dead or Alive)

In an 1989 interview with Davey D, Herc said, "Hip Hop, the whole chemistry of that came from Jamaica." In the interview, Herc talked about the first modern day rappers and the lyrics they had. He said "Well the rhyming came about..because I liked playing lyrics that were saying something. I figured people would pick it up by me playing those records, but at the same time I would say something myself with a meaningful message to it."( (Davey D [2]).

DJ Kool Herc is mentioned in the song "It Dosen't Matter" by Wyclef Jean in the lyrics: "Foundation like Kool Herc, or DJ Red Alert goes bezerk, The needle ain't skip the record jerked, Cause y'all jumpin' too hard"

Kool Herc appeared in the movie Beat Street as himself.


[edit] Sources

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Kool DJ Herc

de:Kool DJ Herc es:DJ Kool Herc fr:Kool Herc it:DJ Kool Herc nl:DJ Kool Herc ja:クール・ハーク no:DJ Kool Herc pl:Kool Herc pt:Kool Herc sv:Kool DJ Herc

Views
Personal tools

Toolbox