DJ Kool Herc
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DJ Kool Herc

DJ Kool Herc

Published Mon, October 4, 2021 at 7:15 PM EDT

DJ Kool Herc is the father of the culture. We explore some of the key events that defined his legendary career.

1973

THE DAY AFTER

DJ Kool Herc took the parties outside of 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx. In the aftermath, park jams sprung up, club promoters took note, and Grandmaster Flash saw how picking up a record needle could change the world.

1973

CINDY CAMPBELL

THE ANATOMY OF THE 1973 PARTY

On August 11, 1973, DJ Kool Herc and Cindy Campbell rented the rec room in their apartment building for $25. The party in the tiny room with linoleum floors, steel-encased radiators, and white-tiled drop ceiling, would change their lives forever. Hip-Hop was born.

1971

The Ex Vandals

THE EX-VANDALS

Students at Eramus High School in Flatbush legitimized graffiti as not only a genuine artistic expression, but also helped create an organizational structure that would lay the groundwork for future Hip-Hop organizations like the Zulu Nation.

1966

DJ Kool Herc

FROM JAMAICA TO THE BRONX

Hip-Hop is often unpacked using sampling as the primary example of how the sound was shaped by peripheral genres. However, the infancy of Hip-Hop reveals an unexpected connection to both Jamaican sound system culture, and the immigrant, DJ Kool Herc, who helped launch it in the Bronx.

1973

CINDY CAMPBELL

THE ANATOMY OF THE 1973 PARTY

On August 11, 1973, DJ Kool Herc and Cindy Campbell rented the rec room in their apartment building for $25. The party in the tiny room with linoleum floors, steel-encased radiators, and white-tiled drop ceiling, would change their lives forever. Hip-Hop was born.

1966

DJ Kool Herc

FROM JAMAICA TO THE BRONX

Hip-Hop is often unpacked using sampling as the primary example of how the sound was shaped by peripheral genres. However, the infancy of Hip-Hop reveals an unexpected connection to both Jamaican sound system culture, and the immigrant, DJ Kool Herc, who helped launch it in the Bronx.

1973

THE DAY AFTER

DJ Kool Herc took the parties outside of 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx. In the aftermath, park jams sprung up, club promoters took note, and Grandmaster Flash saw how picking up a record needle could change the world.

1971

The Ex Vandals

THE EX-VANDALS

Students at Eramus High School in Flatbush legitimized graffiti as not only a genuine artistic expression, but also helped create an organizational structure that would lay the groundwork for future Hip-Hop organizations like the Zulu Nation.

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