DJ Kool Herc  

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 +"[[Count Matchuki|Count Machuki]], [[King Stitt]] and [[Sir Lord Comic]]'s style of [[Deejay (Jamaican)|speaking over records ]] may have had a great impact on a young Jamaican DJ named [[DJ Kool Herc]], who had emigrated to [[New York City]] in the late 1960s where he began holding parties in [[the Bronx]]. It was Kool Herc's parties and the scene that sprung up around them that is generally credited as [[Roots of hip hop|birth of hip hop and rap]]. Mixing techniques developed later in [[dub music]] have also influenced [[hip hop]]."--Sholem Stein
 +<hr>
 +"Some of [[DJ Kool Herc]]’s favorite [[break (music)|breaks]] included those of James Brown’s “[[Give It Up or Turnit a Loose]]” (1969), Babe Ruth's "[[The Mexican (song)|The Mexican]]" (1972), Booker T and the MGs’ “[[Melting Pot]]” (1971), Incredible Bongo Band’s “[[Bongo Rock]]” (1973) and “[[Apache (instrumental)|Apache]]" (1973); Baby Huey’s “[[Listen to Me]]" (1971), Dennis Coffee’s “[[Scorpio (instrumental)|Scorpio]] (1971), Mandrill’s “[[Fencewalk]]” (1973), Jimmy Castor’s “[[It's Just Begun]]” (1972), Bob James’s “[[Take Me to the Mardi Gras]]” (1975), Aretha Franklin’s “[[Rock Steady (Aretha Franklin song)|Rock Steady]], (1971) and Rare Earth’s “[[Get Ready (The Temptations song)|Get Ready]]” (1969)."--Sholem Stein
 +|}
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-'''DJ Kool Herc''' (born '''Clive Campbell''' on [[April 16]], [[1955]] in [[Kingston, Jamaica|Kingston]], [[Jamaica]]), is a musician and producer who is generally credited as the pioneer of [[hip hop music|hip hop]] during the [[1970s]].+'''Clive Campbell''' (born April 16, 1955), better known by his stage name '''DJ Kool Herc''', is a [[Jamaican American|Jamaican–American]] [[disc jockey|DJ]] who is credited with helping originate [[hip hop music]] in [[the Bronx]], [[New York City]], in the 1970s through his "Back to School Jam", hosted on August 11, 1973, at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue. After his younger sister, Cindy Campbell, became inspired to earn extra cash for back-to-school clothes, she decided to have her older brother, then 16 years old, play music for the neighborhood in their apartment building. Known as the "Founder of Hip-Hop" and "Father of Hip-Hop", Campbell began playing [[funk|hard funk]] records of the sort typified by [[James Brown]] as an alternative both to the violent gang culture of the Bronx and to the nascent popularity of [[disco]] in the 1970s.
-According to All Music Guide, he was the originator of [[break (music)|break-beat]] [[DJ]]ing, where the breaks of [[funk]] songs&mdash;being the most danceable part, often featuring [[percussion instrument|percussion]]&mdash;were isolated and repeated for the purpose of all-night dance parties. Later DJs such as [[DJ Grandmaster Flash|Grandmaster Flash]] refined and developed the use of breakbeats, including [[cutting (music)|cutting]]. +Campbell began to isolate the instrumental portion of the record which emphasized the drum beat—the "[[break (music)|break]]"—and switch from one break to another. Using the same two-turntable set-up of [[disco]] DJs, he used two copies of the same record to elongate the break. This [[breakbeat]] DJing, using funky drum solos, formed the basis of hip hop music. Campbell's announcements and exhortations to dancers helped lead to the [[Syncopation|syncopated]], rhythmically spoken accompaniment now known as [[rapping]].
-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 called the dancers "break-boys" and "break-girls", or simply [[b-boying|b-boys]] and [[B girl|b-girls]]. Campbell's DJ style was quickly taken up by figures such as [[Afrika Bambaataa]] and [[Grandmaster Flash]]. Unlike them, he never made the move into commercially recorded hip hop in its earliest years.
-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. +==Biography==
 +===Early life and education===
 +Clive Campbell was the first of six children born to Keith and Nettie Campbell in [[Kingston, Jamaica]]. While growing up, he saw and heard the [[Sound system (Jamaican)|sound systems]] of neighborhood parties called [[dance hall]]s, and the accompanying speech of their DJs, known as [[Deejay (Jamaican)|toasting]]. He emigrated with his family at the age of 12 to [[The Bronx]], [[New York City]] in November 1967, where they lived at [[1520 Sedgwick Avenue]].
-Kool Herc and his [[Rapping|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. +Campbell attended the [[Alfred E. Smith Career and Technical Education High School]] in the Bronx, where his height, frame, and demeanor on the basketball court prompted the other kids to nickname him "[[Hercules]]". After being involved in a physical altercation with school bullies, the [[Five Percenters]] came to Herc's aid, befriended him and as Herc put it, helped "Americanize" him with an education in New York City street culture. He began running with a [[Graffiti#Graffiti as an element of hip hop|graffiti]] crew called the Ex-Vandals, taking the name Kool Herc. Herc recalls persuading his father to buy him a copy of "[[Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine|Sex Machine]]" by [[James Brown]], a record that not a lot of his friends had, and which they would come to him to hear. He and his sister, Cindy, began hosting back-to-school parties in the recreation room of their building, 1520 Sedgwick Avenue.
-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 music|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 (DJ)|Terminator X]] (a DJ with [[Public Enemy]]). He still DJs around the world.+Herc's first sound system consisted of two turntables connected to two [[amplifier]]s and a Shure "Vocal Master" PA system with two speaker columns, on which he played records such as [[James Brown]]'s "[[Give It Up or Turnit a Loose]]", [[Jimmy Castor]]'s "[[It's Just Begun]]" and [[Booker T. & the M.G.'s]]' "[[Melting Pot]]". With Bronx clubs struggling with street gangs, uptown DJs catering to an older disco crowd with different aspirations, and commercial radio also catering to a demographic distinct from teenagers in the Bronx, Herc's parties had a ready-made audience.
-In an 1989 interview with Davey D, Herc said, "Hip Hop, the whole chemistry of that came from Jamaica". (Davey D [http://www.daveyd.com/interviewkoolherc89.html ]). 
-==Sources==+===The "break"===
-*Toop, David (1991). <cite>Rap Attack 2: African Rap To Global Hip Hop</cite>. New York. New York: Serpent's Tail. ISBN 1-85242-243-2.+DJ Kool Herc developed the style that was the blueprint for [[hip hop music]]. Herc used the record to focus on a short, heavily percussive part in it: the "[[Break (music)|break]]". Since this part of the record was the one the dancers liked best, Herc isolated the break and prolonged it by changing between two record players. As one record reached the end of the break, he cued a second record back to the beginning of the break, which allowed him to extend a relatively short section of music into "five-minute loop of fury". This innovation had its roots in what Herc called "[[merry-go-round|The Merry-Go-Round]]," a technique by which the deejay switched from break to break at the height of the party. This technique is specifically called "The Merry-Go-Round" because according to Herc, it takes one "back and forth with no slack."
-* Chang, Jeff (2005). <cite>Can't Stop, Won't Stop: A History of the Hip Hop Generation</cite>. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-30143-X.+ 
-* Bill Brewster, Frank Broughton, ''[[Last Night a DJ Saved My Life|Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The History of the Disc Jockey]]'', 2000 ISBN 0-8021-3688-5}}+Herc stated that he first introduced the Merry-Go-Round into his sets in 1972. The earliest known ''Merry-Go-Round'' involved playing James Brown's "Give It Up or Turnit a Loose" (with its [[refrain]], "Now clap your hands! Stomp your feet!"), then switching from that record's break into the break from a second record, "[[Bongo Rock]]" by [[Incredible Bongo Band|The Incredible Bongo Band]]. From the "Bongo Rock"'s break, Herc used a third record to switch to the break on "[[The Mexican (song)|The Mexican]]" by the English rock band [[Babe Ruth (band)|Babe Ruth]].
-*Kurutz, Steve. [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=Blsjc7i31g74r "Kool DJ Herc"], ''All Music Guide''. Accessed 01/18/07+ 
-*Davey D. [http://www.daveyd.com/interviewkoolherc89.html "Interview with DJ Kool Herc"]+Kool Herc also contributed to developing the rhyming style of hip hop by punctuating the recorded music with slang phrases, announcing: "Rock on, my mellow!" "B-boys, b-girls, are you ready? keep on rock steady" "This is the joint! Herc beat on the point" "To the beat, y'all!" "You don't stop!" For his contributions, Herc is called a "founding father of hip hop," a "nascent cultural hero," and an integral part of the beginnings of hip hop by ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]''.
 + 
 +On August 11, 1973, DJ Kool Herc was a disc jockey and [[emcee]] at a party in the recreation room at Sedgwick Avenue.
 + 
 +Specifically, DJ Kool Herc:
 + 
 +:"extended an instrumental beat ([[break (music)|breaking]] or [[scratching]]) to let people dance longer ([[break dancing]]) and began MC'ing ([[rapping]]) during the extended breakdancing. ... [This] helped lay the foundation for a cultural revolution."--''[[History Detectives]]''
 + 
 +According to music journalist Steven Ivory, in 1973, Herc placed on the turntables two copies of Brown's 1970 ''[[Sex Machine (album)|Sex Machine]]'' album and ran "an extended cut 'n' mix of the percussion breakdown" from "[[Give It Up or Turnit Loose]]", signaling the birth of hip hop.
 + 
 +===B-boys and b-girls===
 +The "[[Breakdancing|b-boys]]" and "[[B girl|b-girls]]" were the dancers to Herc's breaks, who were described as "breaking". Herc has noted that "breaking" was also street slang of the time meaning "getting excited", "acting energetically," or "causing a disturbance". Herc coined the terms "b-boy", "b-girl," and "breaking" which became part of the lexicon of what would be eventually called hip hop culture. Early Kool Herc b-boy and later DJ innovator [[Grandmixer DXT]] describes the early evolution as follows:
 + 
 +<blockquote> ... [E]verybody would form a circle and the B-boys would go into the center. At first the dance was simple: touch your toes, hop, kick out your leg. Then some guy went down, spun around on all fours. Everybody said wow and went home to try to come up with something better.
 +</blockquote>
 + 
 +In the early 1980s, the media began to call this style "[[breakdance]]," which in 1991 the ''New York Times'' wrote was "an art as demanding and inventive as mainstream dance forms like ballet and jazz." Since this emerging culture was still without a name, participants often identified as "b-boys," a usage that included and went beyond the specific connection to dance, a usage that would persist in hip hop culture.
 + 
 +===Move to the streets===
 +With the mystique of his graffiti name, his physical stature, and the reputation of his small parties, Herc became a folk hero in the Bronx. He began to play at nearby clubs including the Twilight Zone Hevalo, Executive Playhouse, the [[Police Athletic League|PAL]] on 183rd Street, as well as at high schools such as Dodge and [[William Howard Taft High School (New York City)|Taft]]. Rapping duties were delegated to [[Coke La Rock]] Herc's collective, known as The Herculoids, was augmented by Clark Kent and dancers The Nigga Twins. Herc took his soundsystem (the herculords) —still legendary for its sheer volume—to the streets and parks of the Bronx. [[Nelson George]] recalls a schoolyard party:
 + 
 +<blockquote>The sun hadn't gone down yet, and kids were just hanging out, waiting for something to happen. Van pulls up, a bunch of guys come out with a table, crates of records. They unscrew the base of the light pole, take their equipment, attach it to that, get the electricity – Boom! We got a concert right here in the schoolyard and it's this guy Kool Herc. And he's just standing with the turntable, and the guys were studying his hands. There are people dancing, but there's as many people standing, just watching what he's doing. That was my first introduction to in-the-street, hip hop DJing.
 +</blockquote>
 + 
 +===Influence on artists===
 +In 1975, the young [[Grandmaster Flash]], to whom Kool Herc was, in his words, "a hero", began DJing in Herc's style. By 1976, Flash and his [[MC]]s [[The Furious Five]] played to a packed [[Audubon Ballroom]] in [[Manhattan]]. Venue owners were often nervous of unruly young crowds, however, and soon sent hip hop back to the clubs, community centres and high school gymnasiums of the Bronx.
 + 
 +[[Afrika Bambaataa]] first heard Kool Herc in 1973. Bambaataa, at that time a general in the notorious Black Spades gang of the Bronx, obtained his own soundsystem in 1975 and began to DJ in Herc's style, converting his followers to the non-violent [[Universal Zulu Nation|Zulu Nation]] in the process. Kool Herc began using [[The Incredible Bongo Band]]'s "[[Apache (song)|Apache]]" as a break in 1975. It became a firm b-boy favorite—"the Bronx national anthem"—and is still in use in hip hop today. [[Steven Hager]] wrote of this period:
 + 
 +<blockquote>For over five years the Bronx had lived in constant terror of street gangs. Suddenly, in 1975, they disappeared almost as quickly as they had arrived. This happened because something better came along to replace the gangs. That something was eventually called hip-hop.
 +</blockquote>
 + 
 +In 1979, the record company executive [[Sylvia Robinson]] assembled a group she called [[The Sugarhill Gang]] and recorded "[[Rapper's Delight]]". The hit song ushered in the era of commercially released hip hop. By that year's end, [[Grandmaster Flash]] was recording for [[Enjoy Records]]. In 1980, Afrika Bambaataa began recording for [[Winley Records|Winley]]. By this time, DJ Kool Herc's star had faded.
 + 
 +Grandmaster Flash suggests that Herc may not have kept pace with developments in techniques of cueing (lining up a record to play at a certain place on it). Developments changed techniques of cutting (switching from one record to another) and scratching (moving the record by hand to and fro under the stylus for percussive effect) in the late 1970s. Herc said he retreated from the scene after being stabbed at the Executive Playhouse while trying to intercede in a fight, and the burning down of one of his venues. In 1980, Herc had stopped DJing and was working in a record shop in South Bronx.
 + 
 +===Later years===
 +[[File:Herc on the Wheels of Steel.JPG|thumb|right|Herc spins records in the [[Hunts Point, Bronx|Hunts Point]] section of the Bronx at a February 28, 2009 event addressing the "[[West Indian]] Roots of Hip-Hop."]]Kool Herc appeared in Hollywood's motion picture take on hip hop, ''[[Beat Street]]'' ([[Orion Pictures|Orion]], 1984), as himself. In the mid-1980s, his father died, and he became addicted to [[crack cocaine]]. "I couldn't cope, so I started medicating", he says of this period.
 + 
 +In 1994, Herc performed on [[Terminator X (DJ)|Terminator X]] & the Godfathers of Threatt's album, ''Super Bad''. In 2005, he wrote the foreword to [[Jeff Chang (journalist)|Jeff Chang]]'s book on hip hop, ''[[Can't Stop Won't Stop (book)|Can't Stop Won't Stop]]''. In 2005 he appeared in the music video of "Top 5 (Dead or Alive)" by [[MC Jin|Jin]] from the album ''[[The Emcee's Properganda]]''. In 2006, he became involved in getting Hip Hop commemorated at the [[Smithsonian Institution]] museums. He participated in the 2007 [[Dance parade]].
 + 
 +Since 2007, Herc has worked on a campaign to prevent 1520 Sedgwick Avenue from being sold to developers and withdrawn from its status as a [[Mitchell-Lama]] affordable housing property. In the summer of 2007, New York state officials declared 1520 Sedgwick Avenue the "birthplace of hip-hop", and nominated it to national and state historic registers. The city's Department of Housing Preservation and Development ruled against the proposed sale in February 2008, on the grounds that "the proposed purchase price is inconsistent with the use of property as a Mitchell-Lama affordable housing development". It is the first time they have so ruled in such a case.
 + 
 +===First vinyl record===
 +In May 2019 Kool Herc released his first vinyl record ever with DJ/Producer Mr. Green. “Last of the Classic Beats” was critically acclaimed.
 + 
 +==Discography==
 + 
 +===Albums===
 +*2019 - ''Last of the Classic Beats'' <small>(with Mr. Green)</small>
 + 
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}
 +[[Category:Canon]]

Current revision

"Count Machuki, King Stitt and Sir Lord Comic's style of speaking over records may have had a great impact on a young Jamaican DJ named DJ Kool Herc, who had emigrated to New York City in the late 1960s where he began holding parties in the Bronx. It was Kool Herc's parties and the scene that sprung up around them that is generally credited as birth of hip hop and rap. Mixing techniques developed later in dub music have also influenced hip hop."--Sholem Stein


"Some of DJ Kool Herc’s favorite breaks included those of James Brown’s “Give It Up or Turnit a Loose” (1969), Babe Ruth's "The Mexican" (1972), Booker T and the MGs’ “Melting Pot” (1971), Incredible Bongo Band’s “Bongo Rock” (1973) and “Apache" (1973); Baby Huey’s “Listen to Me" (1971), Dennis Coffee’s “Scorpio (1971), Mandrill’s “Fencewalk” (1973), Jimmy Castor’s “It's Just Begun” (1972), Bob James’s “Take Me to the Mardi Gras” (1975), Aretha Franklin’s “Rock Steady, (1971) and Rare Earth’s “Get Ready” (1969)."--Sholem Stein

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Clive Campbell (born April 16, 1955), better known by his stage name DJ Kool Herc, is a Jamaican–American DJ who is credited with helping originate hip hop music in the Bronx, New York City, in the 1970s through his "Back to School Jam", hosted on August 11, 1973, at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue. After his younger sister, Cindy Campbell, became inspired to earn extra cash for back-to-school clothes, she decided to have her older brother, then 16 years old, play music for the neighborhood in their apartment building. Known as the "Founder of Hip-Hop" and "Father of Hip-Hop", Campbell began playing hard funk records of the sort typified by James Brown as an alternative both to the violent gang culture of the Bronx and to the nascent popularity of disco in the 1970s.

Campbell began to isolate the instrumental portion of the record which emphasized the drum beat—the "break"—and switch from one break to another. Using the same two-turntable set-up of disco DJs, he used two copies of the same record to elongate the break. This breakbeat DJing, using funky drum solos, formed the basis of hip hop music. Campbell's announcements and exhortations to dancers helped lead to the syncopated, rhythmically spoken accompaniment now known as rapping.

He called the dancers "break-boys" and "break-girls", or simply b-boys and b-girls. Campbell's DJ style was quickly taken up by figures such as Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmaster Flash. Unlike them, he never made the move into commercially recorded hip hop in its earliest years.

Contents

Biography

Early life and education

Clive Campbell was the first of six children born to Keith and Nettie Campbell in Kingston, Jamaica. While growing up, he saw and heard the sound systems of neighborhood parties called dance halls, and the accompanying speech of their DJs, known as toasting. He emigrated with his family at the age of 12 to The Bronx, New York City in November 1967, where they lived at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue.

Campbell attended the Alfred E. Smith Career and Technical Education High School in the Bronx, where his height, frame, and demeanor on the basketball court prompted the other kids to nickname him "Hercules". After being involved in a physical altercation with school bullies, the Five Percenters came to Herc's aid, befriended him and as Herc put it, helped "Americanize" him with an education in New York City street culture. He began running with a graffiti crew called the Ex-Vandals, taking the name Kool Herc. Herc recalls persuading his father to buy him a copy of "Sex Machine" by James Brown, a record that not a lot of his friends had, and which they would come to him to hear. He and his sister, Cindy, began hosting back-to-school parties in the recreation room of their building, 1520 Sedgwick Avenue.

Herc's first sound system consisted of two turntables connected to two amplifiers and a Shure "Vocal Master" PA system with two speaker columns, on which he played records such as James Brown's "Give It Up or Turnit a Loose", Jimmy Castor's "It's Just Begun" and Booker T. & the M.G.'s' "Melting Pot". With Bronx clubs struggling with street gangs, uptown DJs catering to an older disco crowd with different aspirations, and commercial radio also catering to a demographic distinct from teenagers in the Bronx, Herc's parties had a ready-made audience.


The "break"

DJ Kool Herc developed the style that was the blueprint for hip hop music. Herc used the record to focus on a short, heavily percussive part in it: the "break". Since this part of the record was the one the dancers liked best, Herc isolated the break and prolonged it by changing between two record players. As one record reached the end of the break, he cued a second record back to the beginning of the break, which allowed him to extend a relatively short section of music into "five-minute loop of fury". This innovation had its roots in what Herc called "The Merry-Go-Round," a technique by which the deejay switched from break to break at the height of the party. This technique is specifically called "The Merry-Go-Round" because according to Herc, it takes one "back and forth with no slack."

Herc stated that he first introduced the Merry-Go-Round into his sets in 1972. The earliest known Merry-Go-Round involved playing James Brown's "Give It Up or Turnit a Loose" (with its refrain, "Now clap your hands! Stomp your feet!"), then switching from that record's break into the break from a second record, "Bongo Rock" by The Incredible Bongo Band. From the "Bongo Rock"'s break, Herc used a third record to switch to the break on "The Mexican" by the English rock band Babe Ruth.

Kool Herc also contributed to developing the rhyming style of hip hop by punctuating the recorded music with slang phrases, announcing: "Rock on, my mellow!" "B-boys, b-girls, are you ready? keep on rock steady" "This is the joint! Herc beat on the point" "To the beat, y'all!" "You don't stop!" For his contributions, Herc is called a "founding father of hip hop," a "nascent cultural hero," and an integral part of the beginnings of hip hop by Time.

On August 11, 1973, DJ Kool Herc was a disc jockey and emcee at a party in the recreation room at Sedgwick Avenue.

Specifically, DJ Kool Herc:

"extended an instrumental beat (breaking or scratching) to let people dance longer (break dancing) and began MC'ing (rapping) during the extended breakdancing. ... [This] helped lay the foundation for a cultural revolution."--History Detectives

According to music journalist Steven Ivory, in 1973, Herc placed on the turntables two copies of Brown's 1970 Sex Machine album and ran "an extended cut 'n' mix of the percussion breakdown" from "Give It Up or Turnit Loose", signaling the birth of hip hop.

B-boys and b-girls

The "b-boys" and "b-girls" were the dancers to Herc's breaks, who were described as "breaking". Herc has noted that "breaking" was also street slang of the time meaning "getting excited", "acting energetically," or "causing a disturbance". Herc coined the terms "b-boy", "b-girl," and "breaking" which became part of the lexicon of what would be eventually called hip hop culture. Early Kool Herc b-boy and later DJ innovator Grandmixer DXT describes the early evolution as follows:

... [E]verybody would form a circle and the B-boys would go into the center. At first the dance was simple: touch your toes, hop, kick out your leg. Then some guy went down, spun around on all fours. Everybody said wow and went home to try to come up with something better.

In the early 1980s, the media began to call this style "breakdance," which in 1991 the New York Times wrote was "an art as demanding and inventive as mainstream dance forms like ballet and jazz." Since this emerging culture was still without a name, participants often identified as "b-boys," a usage that included and went beyond the specific connection to dance, a usage that would persist in hip hop culture.

Move to the streets

With the mystique of his graffiti name, his physical stature, and the reputation of his small parties, Herc became a folk hero in the Bronx. He began to play at nearby clubs including the Twilight Zone Hevalo, Executive Playhouse, the PAL on 183rd Street, as well as at high schools such as Dodge and Taft. Rapping duties were delegated to Coke La Rock Herc's collective, known as The Herculoids, was augmented by Clark Kent and dancers The Nigga Twins. Herc took his soundsystem (the herculords) —still legendary for its sheer volume—to the streets and parks of the Bronx. Nelson George recalls a schoolyard party:

The sun hadn't gone down yet, and kids were just hanging out, waiting for something to happen. Van pulls up, a bunch of guys come out with a table, crates of records. They unscrew the base of the light pole, take their equipment, attach it to that, get the electricity – Boom! We got a concert right here in the schoolyard and it's this guy Kool Herc. And he's just standing with the turntable, and the guys were studying his hands. There are people dancing, but there's as many people standing, just watching what he's doing. That was my first introduction to in-the-street, hip hop DJing.

Influence on artists

In 1975, the young Grandmaster Flash, to whom Kool Herc was, in his words, "a hero", began DJing in Herc's style. By 1976, Flash and his MCs The Furious Five played to a packed Audubon Ballroom in Manhattan. Venue owners were often nervous of unruly young crowds, however, and soon sent hip hop back to the clubs, community centres and high school gymnasiums of the Bronx.

Afrika Bambaataa first heard Kool Herc in 1973. Bambaataa, at that time a general in the notorious Black Spades gang of the Bronx, obtained his own soundsystem in 1975 and began to DJ in Herc's style, converting his followers to the non-violent Zulu Nation in the process. Kool Herc began using The Incredible Bongo Band's "Apache" as a break in 1975. It became a firm b-boy favorite—"the Bronx national anthem"—and is still in use in hip hop today. Steven Hager wrote of this period:

For over five years the Bronx had lived in constant terror of street gangs. Suddenly, in 1975, they disappeared almost as quickly as they had arrived. This happened because something better came along to replace the gangs. That something was eventually called hip-hop.

In 1979, the record company executive Sylvia Robinson assembled a group she called The Sugarhill Gang and recorded "Rapper's Delight". The hit song ushered in the era of commercially released hip hop. By that year's end, Grandmaster Flash was recording for Enjoy Records. In 1980, Afrika Bambaataa began recording for Winley. By this time, DJ Kool Herc's star had faded.

Grandmaster Flash suggests that Herc may not have kept pace with developments in techniques of cueing (lining up a record to play at a certain place on it). Developments changed techniques of cutting (switching from one record to another) and scratching (moving the record by hand to and fro under the stylus for percussive effect) in the late 1970s. Herc said he retreated from the scene after being stabbed at the Executive Playhouse while trying to intercede in a fight, and the burning down of one of his venues. In 1980, Herc had stopped DJing and was working in a record shop in South Bronx.

Later years

[[File:Herc on the Wheels of Steel.JPG|thumb|right|Herc spins records in the Hunts Point section of the Bronx at a February 28, 2009 event addressing the "West Indian Roots of Hip-Hop."]]Kool Herc appeared in Hollywood's motion picture take on hip hop, Beat Street (Orion, 1984), as himself. In the mid-1980s, his father died, and he became addicted to crack cocaine. "I couldn't cope, so I started medicating", he says of this period.

In 1994, Herc performed on Terminator X & the Godfathers of Threatt's album, Super Bad. In 2005, he wrote the foreword to Jeff Chang's book on hip hop, Can't Stop Won't Stop. In 2005 he appeared in the music video of "Top 5 (Dead or Alive)" by Jin from the album The Emcee's Properganda. In 2006, he became involved in getting Hip Hop commemorated at the Smithsonian Institution museums. He participated in the 2007 Dance parade.

Since 2007, Herc has worked on a campaign to prevent 1520 Sedgwick Avenue from being sold to developers and withdrawn from its status as a Mitchell-Lama affordable housing property. In the summer of 2007, New York state officials declared 1520 Sedgwick Avenue the "birthplace of hip-hop", and nominated it to national and state historic registers. The city's Department of Housing Preservation and Development ruled against the proposed sale in February 2008, on the grounds that "the proposed purchase price is inconsistent with the use of property as a Mitchell-Lama affordable housing development". It is the first time they have so ruled in such a case.

First vinyl record

In May 2019 Kool Herc released his first vinyl record ever with DJ/Producer Mr. Green. “Last of the Classic Beats” was critically acclaimed.

Discography

Albums

  • 2019 - Last of the Classic Beats (with Mr. Green)




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