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  1. #251
    Pooper of Parties
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    He does have some flow and I dig his tone and as far as it goes; I think I could dig it, could follow 'em.
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  2. #252
    Opening Act
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    I think the last album I listened through in full was DAM's debut, Dedication. Arabic is a nice langauge to rap in, very physical sounding.
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  3. #253
    Road Warrior
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    opened a bunch of threads and replied to the wrong one.

    HIP HOP IS GOOD. I PREFER THE '90S TO ANY OTHER ERA

    UH...
    Last edited by Rocket2Russia; 07-22-2011 at 10:06 PM.
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  4. #254
    Pooper of Parties
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    I don't think I'm all that impressed with any of the Odd Future collective, even the highlights (ES, TTC). It just feels so damn underwhelming.
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  5. #255
    What's the oldest hip hop song that you like? How far back can you go with it and still call it hip hop?

  6. #256
    Pooper of Parties
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    1979-1980.

    Both Blondie's "Rapture" and The Sugarhill Gang's "Rappers Delight" are some of the earliest existing produced hip-hop songs.
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  7. #257
    Oh. I guess I knew that already, just wondering if there were any more. Is that as far back as it goes? Rapping goes back even further, doesn't it?

  8. #258
    Pooper of Parties
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    It does, but not within recorded music (or at least contemporary music that was recorded before '79), I admit I don't know much of it outside that it evolved from disco, electro and beat poetry of the era.
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  9. #259
    I like to go back even further than that into history (thanks to music!) and try to find instances of rapping that happened by chance somehow. There was a type of wordsmith from the 1950s called a beatnik who would make rhymes and then they would go onstage and recite their rhymes while being backed by a band playing music behind them. I've found several instances of rapping in 1950s recorded music. I don't know what else you'd call it, it's not singing. I suppose it would be called prototypical rapping if it came out before the Seventies?

  10. #260
    Pooper of Parties
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    If you want to liken beat poetry done by beatniks to hip-hop rapping, then I suppose it's not that much of a far cry. But like I said beat poetry, electro and to a lesser extent disco were the instrumental building blocks of hip-hop. But do understand that rapping as a technique is so rhythmically dominating and at times complex to say it's the same as spoken word and beat poetry; though it does take heavy influences (especially conscious hip-hop) from the latter of the two. It is pretty much musical fact that beat poet and soul musician Gil Scott-Heron heavily influenced hip-hop musicians and lyricists (Kanye sampled Comment #1).

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGaRtqrlGy8
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