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Guest post by William Glanz of SoundExchangeWhen Clive Campbell developed a new technique to spin records, he also helped created a new genre of music.That was more than four decades ago, and this week hip-hop celebrates its unofficial birthday, 44 years after Campbell tried something new on a turntable.Campbell – known as DJ Kool Herc – had started using a technique that allowed him to play songs longer so b-boys and b-girls (break dancers) wouldn’t have to stop dancing so often. Herc already had been working as a DJ and noticed that break dancers preferred instrumental breaks in music, so he developed a method to extend those segments.He extended the backbeat of songs by playing the same song on two turntables. According to a 2008 story in New York Magazine:Utilizing two turntables and a mixer, Herc used two copies of the same record (removing the labels so others couldn’t “steal” them) to isolate and extend the percussion and bass. This became known as “the break.”“Herc was the first to play break beats, which made him a force on the turntables,” Nelson George, co-executive producer of the annual Hip Hop Honors for VH1, told New York Magazine.On August 11, 1973, DJ Kool Herc played at a party at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx that became legendary because many now consider that the birth of hip-hop.“We give props to Herc. If that day didn’t happen, there would be a different story being told,” MC Easy A.D., a founding member of the Cold Crush Brothers, a legendary hip-hop group from the Bronx that formed in 1978, told SoundExchange.Herc became a folk hero in the Bronx, DJ Toney Tone, another founding member of the Cold Crush Brothers, told us.“When I finally saw him, I walked up behind him and he had an aura about him,” DJ Toney Tone said.
August 11, 1973 – DJ Kool Herc deejays party at 1520 Sedgwick in the BronxOctober 13, 1979 – “Rapper’s Delight,” by Sugar Hill Gang, makes its first appearance on a Billboard chart1984 – Russell Simmons and Rick Rubin start Def Jam RecordingsAugust 3, 2017 – LL Cool J is the first hip-hop artist to be named a Kennedy Center Honors recipient