Friday 11 November 2011

Hip Hop Awards 2011... Nitty Scott

I filmed this clip while watching the 'Hip Hop Awards 2011' on TV. 
The show featured a New York based female rapper named Nitty Scott. 
The lyrics "Dropping bombs" inspired me to create my logo for the 
Boombox. It refers to rappers practicing the spoken form of Hip Hop.
 "Dropping Bombs" means reciting their lyrics.

Wednesday 9 November 2011

Alex Harsley-“Between Coincidences” .

For nearly 50 years, Alex Harsley documented events that took shape in the Bronx, Harlem, and the East Village


Friday 4 November 2011

KRS one

KRS-One gives a lecture on the potential of hip hop as a culture and the political climate that hip hop emerged from. He makes references to Malcom X and Martin Luther. It is very interesting  and if you follow the video links there are more recordings from the lecture.




In this final clip 'KRS one' talks about how powerful and important the boombox, rapping and graffiti were to ,Hip Hop' in spreading the sounds and sights of the hip hop movement.

Wednesday 2 November 2011

'Styelwars'







Directed by Tony Silver and produced by Tony Silver and Henry Chalfant, it was awarded the Grand Prize for Documentaries at the 1983 Sundance Film Festival. STYLE WARS is regarded as the indispensable document of New York Street culture of the early '80s, the filmic record of a golden age of youthful creativity that exploded into the world from a city in crisis.

STYLE WARS captured the look and feel of New York's ramshackle subway system as graffiti writers' public playground, battleground and spectacular artistic canvas. Opposing them by every means possible were Mayor Edward Koch, the police, and the New York Transit Authority. Meanwhile MCs, DJs and B-boys rocked the city with new sounds and new moves and street corner breakdance battles evolved into performance art.

New York's legendary kings of graffiti and b-boys own a special place in the hip Hop pantheon. STYLE WARS has become an emblem of the original, embracing spirit of hip hop as it reached out across the world from underground tunnels, uptown streets, clubs and playgrounds.

“The best hip hop film ever made. Reveals hip hop in its purest state, capturing it before it was part of pop culture and a source of revenue for major corporate entities. The film shows the innocence of these young innovators who are considered forefathers of a movement bigger than they could have ever imagined. A superb job of showing the bond between the different elements, displaying how the art, music and dance are interchangeable and maintain a close symbiotic relationship.” ––Insomniac – DVD Highlights