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    Hip-Hop/Rap
    Old School Rap/Hip-Hop
    East Coast Old School

East Coast Old School

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    Fight For Your Right
    Fight For Your Right
    Beastie Boys
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    4:03
    Not Leaving You Tonight
    Not Leaving You Tonight
    LL Cool J
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    Let's Talk About Sex
    Let's Talk About Sex
    Salt-N-Pepa

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Stephen Kelly Thompson
Deshaun Sequence II
Stephen Kelly Thompson und Deshaun Sequence II hat zuletzt East Coast Old School gehört

Beschreibung

The East Coast region is arguably the birthplace of hip-hop culture. Hip-hop's origins date to the mid-'70s, but its recorded history began in 1979 with several protean 12-inches, including The Sugarhill Gang's Top 40 hit "Rapper's Delight" and the Fatback Band's "King Tim III (Personality Jock)." The Sugarhill Gang's success led to a deluge of now-forgotten artists, but a few innovators emerged amid the confusion. Afrika Bambaataa created electro-hop with "Planet Rock"; Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five introduced social consciousness with "The Message"; and Run-D.M.C. hit the pop mainstream with a hardcore street image and hard rock appeal. By the mid-'80s, rap's sound was evolving dramatically from the choppy electro-funk of Kurtis Mantronik and Larry Smith to the sampling techniques of Rick Rubin, Marley Marl and Prince Paul. The emcee's role grew from party-rocker to complex lyricist, thanks to the storied Juice Crew, LL Cool J, Slick Rick and Rakim. Public Enemy's 1988 masterpiece, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, proved hip-hop was not just a passing fad, but a new and significant American art form. This era is considered the "golden age" of hip-hop.