|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 05:30 [#00619022]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
my dad reckons the first ever rapper was mohammed ali.
|
|
Bob Mcbob
on 2003-03-27 05:33 [#00619025]
Points: 9939 Status: Regular
|
|
most forms of singing i can imagine have been invented hundreds of years ago, but rapping i dont know about.....you could be right
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 05:38 [#00619030]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
i reckon hes full of shit.. he tried telling me once that mike oldfield played all the instruments on tubular bells himself... i dont believe anything he says anymore
|
|
Bob Mcbob
on 2003-03-27 05:45 [#00619045]
Points: 9939 Status: Regular
|
|
did ali ever release any rap?
|
|
Ophecks
from Nova Scotia (Canada) on 2003-03-27 05:50 [#00619056]
Points: 19190 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag
|
|
Isn't it the Sugarhill gang or someone? Well they took it mainstream, at least. Rapper's Delight is a riot.
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 05:51 [#00619058]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
not that ive ever seen i dont think ive ever seen a kool herc record either come to think of it
|
|
jonesy
from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2003-03-27 05:54 [#00619060]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker
|
|
Kool Herc never made records, he just DJed.
And Jamaican 'toasting' predated Sugarhill Gang.
|
|
diablo
on 2003-03-27 06:30 [#00619103]
Points: 3242 Status: Lurker
|
|
Some people do say Ali infuenced early MCs and stuff. First rap record was sugarhill, but they didn't use a DJ, they used a band which went against the origins of the music blah blah, but its a killer tune.
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-03-27 06:41 [#00619107]
Points: 24593 Status: Regular
|
|
I presume you were being ironic when you said it George, but oldfield did play all the instruments on Tubular Bells himself.
As to the "first rapper" issue, I'm sure people have been rapping for a long, long time. Gil Scott Heron for example, back in the early 70s, for a rap being recorded. Before that, jazz singing had a kind of rap on it. And before records, I'm sure there were black folks rappin' about cotton.
|
|
jonesy
from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2003-03-27 06:42 [#00619108]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker
|
|
Yeah, Gill Scott Heron and the Last Poets were rapping way before the Sugarhill Gang.
|
|
diablo
on 2003-03-27 06:44 [#00619112]
Points: 3242 Status: Lurker
|
|
Yeah but you wouldn't call them a rap record. But yeah, MCing goes back as far as language was invented
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 06:46 [#00619118]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
rappin' about cotton? thats well brutal huh
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-03-27 06:47 [#00619119]
Points: 24593 Status: Regular | Followup to George_Kaplan: #00619118
|
|
well, people rap about issues affecting them don't they George? If they're fo' real. And when they were slaves in the cotton fields of America, I imagine they rapped about cotton.
|
|
bill_hicks
from my city is amazing it is calle on 2003-03-27 07:09 [#00619149]
Points: 4286 Status: Lurker
|
|
Paul Robeson was the first ever rapper.
|
|
TonePu5her
from lincoln !UK! (United Kingdom) on 2003-03-27 07:13 [#00619164]
Points: 3640 Status: Regular
|
|
Heh,has anyone heard Steven Hawkins rap?
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 07:32 [#00619220]
Points: 838 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #00619119
|
|
fair enuff. i reckon they sang though.
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-03-27 07:37 [#00619232]
Points: 24593 Status: Regular | Followup to George_Kaplan: #00619220
|
|
Probably a combination of both, George. ON the left you have the first bluesmen, on the right, you have their more overtly rebellious and political offspring rappin' about the "fields of cotton, 'nd Yo! what have I gotten? I got an old man who can't stand, wit' dried callousey hands" or somesuch *ahem*
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 07:46 [#00619251]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
no, surely it was the more political ones who were singing cos they wanted to sound like bob dylan the famous political singer, and the ones who rapped would have been the crack smocking gun toting gold chain wearing ones? with adidas on
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 07:46 [#00619252]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
hehe smocking
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-03-27 07:48 [#00619255]
Points: 24593 Status: Regular
|
|
:O George!
|
|
jonesy
from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2003-03-27 07:49 [#00619259]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker | Followup to bill_hicks: #00619149
|
|
He was a baritone. And friend of the Welsh miners.
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 07:50 [#00619260]
Points: 838 Status: Regular | Followup to marlowe: #00619255
|
|
well you started it with your silly claims
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-03-27 07:54 [#00619265]
Points: 24593 Status: Regular | Followup to George_Kaplan: #00619260
|
|
silly claims? :O You mean my insighful hypothesies! :P
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 07:55 [#00619268]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
yeah, that.
|
|
marlowe
from Antarctica on 2003-03-27 07:57 [#00619273]
Points: 24593 Status: Regular
|
|
"hiphop went from smoking crack to selling it."
|
|
bill_hicks
from my city is amazing it is calle on 2003-03-27 07:58 [#00619277]
Points: 4286 Status: Lurker | Followup to jonesy: #00619259
|
|
Look mate, i don't need to you to search the internet and tell me what i already know. He also did a few raps in his time.
|
|
jonesy
from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2003-03-27 08:07 [#00619298]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker | Followup to bill_hicks: #00619277
|
|
No, but you need to search the net.
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 08:09 [#00619302]
Points: 838 Status: Regular | Followup to bill_hicks: #00619277
|
|
can i buy any of these raps? i never heardof this guy who is he?
|
|
jonesy
from Lisboa (Portugal) on 2003-03-27 08:11 [#00619304]
Points: 6650 Status: Lurker | Followup to George_Kaplan: #00619302
|
|
He was a 1950s black actor/singer/communist who was ostracised by the industry in the McCarthy red purges. He died broke, broken and alone.
|
|
bill_hicks
from my city is amazing it is calle on 2003-03-27 08:22 [#00619311]
Points: 4286 Status: Lurker | Followup to jonesy: #00619304
|
|
well put, jonesy. *sniff*
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 08:23 [#00619317]
Points: 838 Status: Regular
|
|
thanks
|
|
euphonicfilter
from illadelphia (United States) on 2003-03-27 09:03 [#00619401]
Points: 2443 Status: Addict
|
|
lord buckley
look it up
|
|
pachi
from yo momma (United States) on 2003-03-27 09:05 [#00619406]
Points: 8984 Status: Lurker
|
|
in that case, i reckon it's Dr. Seuss
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 09:08 [#00619413]
Points: 838 Status: Regular | Followup to euphonicfilter: #00619401
|
|
interesting.. beat poet? or diff?
|
|
pomme de terre
from obscure body in the SK System on 2003-03-27 09:37 [#00619455]
Points: 11941 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag
|
|
zero year spotting is useless really..
therefore, it's cool herc. he mc'd on his radio show. even though nothing was ever pressed..
|
|
euphonicfilter
from illadelphia (United States) on 2003-03-27 09:41 [#00619464]
Points: 2443 Status: Addict
|
|
jazz / beat poet
guy who liked to talk rhythmically
|
|
pomme de terre
from obscure body in the SK System on 2003-03-27 09:44 [#00619473]
Points: 11941 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag
|
|
lord buckley is dope..
george k, i recommend you collect some of his works being the audiophile you are mate..
|
|
euphonicfilter
from illadelphia (United States) on 2003-03-27 09:46 [#00619479]
Points: 2443 Status: Addict
|
|
one could also argue that many jazz musicians were the first rappers
one guy i spoke to in florida last week was convinced louis armstrong was the first rapper - due to how he would talk to music and jive in the middle of sets
the first documented rapper - who knows the first documented jazzer - who knows
hard to pin point
|
|
titsworth
from Washington, DC (United States) on 2003-03-27 10:52 [#00619557]
Points: 14550 Status: Lurker
|
|
gil-scott heron, curtis mayfield, bob marley, and parliament/funkadelic all integrated early ideas of rapping in their early 70s music.
also, think beat poetry set to music in the 50s and 60s.
|
|
X-tomatic
from ze war room on 2003-03-27 14:10 [#00619878]
Points: 2901 Status: Lurker
|
|
fred wesley(&the JB's)in little boy black (1974) starts this song by saying "rap" after which he does so. Alot of musicians may have "talked" over music way beforehe did, but probably didn't claim to "rap"?
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 14:11 [#00619881]
Points: 838 Status: Regular | Followup to pomme de terre: #00619473
|
|
yep im sniffing it out ta geeza
|
|
Crocomire
from plante (United States) on 2003-03-27 14:14 [#00619886]
Points: 2116 Status: Lurker
|
|
U Roy, a jamaican dj who is the father of toasting over a dub track, is credited by some to be the father of rap.
|
|
astrid-gil-botn
from Londinium (United Kingdom) on 2003-03-27 14:23 [#00619909]
Points: 1649 Status: Regular
|
|
all this who was the first stuff is really silly - things prety much emerge -recorded/unrecorded genrefied etc it's impossible to say but people have alwaysd boasted or moaned in rhyme etc ..
u- roy was the first jamacian radio dj to cut a toat to a record but he just got his style from r and b radio jocks in the states - they didn't cut any music ..
|
|
loeser
from Beaverville (Netherlands, The) on 2003-03-27 15:08 [#00619981]
Points: 455 Status: Lurker
|
|
I think it doesn't matter who was first cos' them Icy hot stuntaz are here and they will rock you more than anyone ever did!
More on the stuntaz...
|
|
astrid-gil-botn
from Londinium (United Kingdom) on 2003-03-27 15:09 [#00619986]
Points: 1649 Status: Regular | Followup to loeser: #00619981
|
|
somehow i think i'm gonna be underwhelmed
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 15:11 [#00619990]
Points: 838 Status: Regular | Followup to astrid-gil-botn: #00619909
|
|
yeah i know theres no way to know who was first but i just found out about 4 people i'd never heard of and i like rap so im quite happy now it was a useful thread for me..
|
|
astrid-gil-botn
from Londinium (United Kingdom) on 2003-03-27 15:17 [#00620001]
Points: 1649 Status: Regular | Followup to George_Kaplan: #00619990
|
|
yeah that's decent - here are my reccomendations - reflections by iceberg slim - he was a big playa who wrote books and recorded this lp about his experiences -
anything by the last poets stuff by the watts poets - those two are black power poets/rapeers lightnin rod - hustlers convention - early 70's funk with a mad story of hustling - a big influence on a number of mc's.
also check u roy - "don't check me with no lightweight stuff" and big youth any stuff for jamacain toasting kicks -
u-roy's style is beautiful - really lively and tuneful
|
|
astrid-gil-botn
from Londinium (United Kingdom) on 2003-03-27 15:20 [#00620004]
Points: 1649 Status: Regular | Followup to astrid-gil-botn: #00620001
|
|
sorry i mean the watts prophets - they and the last poets were 60's groups who rapped and rhymed - very political but a great insight into the black power movement of tne time blah blah blah
|
|
jupitah
from Minneapolis (United States) on 2003-03-27 15:56 [#00620078]
Points: 3489 Status: Lurker | Followup to TonePu5her: #00619164
|
|
http://xltronic.com/mb/topic.php3?topic=28805&start=0&seekw rd=stephen%20hawking&seekrel=and&idxstart=0
|
|
George_Kaplan
on 2003-03-27 17:45 [#00620275]
Points: 838 Status: Regular | Followup to astrid-gil-botn: #00620004
|
|
nice one.. serious result now :)
|
|
Messageboard index
|