1. Tuyển Mod quản lý diễn đàn. Các thành viên xem chi tiết tại đây

HIPHOP stuff - AGES OF HIPHOP

Chủ đề trong 'Nhạc Rap và Hiphop' bởi KoolJ, 24/04/2003.

  1. 1 người đang xem box này (Thành viên: 0, Khách: 1)
  1. KoolJ

    KoolJ Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/03/2002
    Bài viết:
    455
    Đã được thích:
    0
    (The Dark Age, 1961-1971)

    1960 õ? Students, Ezell Blair, Franklin McCain, David Richmond and Joseph McNeil, protest
    segregation through nonviolent sit-ins at Whites only lunch counters in Greensboro,
    North Carolina. This protest movement would eventually spread to fifteen southern
    cities in five states.
    õ? Marion Barry is the first national Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
    Committee (SNCC). Barry would later become mayor of Washington D.C. in 1979.

    1961 õ? Many of Hiphopõ?Ts pioneering artists, executives, e***ors, filmmakers, etc. are born.

    1962

    1963

    1964 õ? Martin Luther King Jr. wins Nobel Peace Prize.
    õ? July 18th-22nd, In response to social injustice, mass rebellions break out on the streets
    of Harlem, New York. The rebellion eventually spreads to Bedford-Stuyvesant section
    of Brooklyn, Rochester, New York City, Jersey City and Patterson, New Jersey.

    1965 õ? Malcolm X is assassinated.
    õ? In response to injustice and the assassination of Malcolm X, 35 people are killed, 4000
    are arrested and $40 million in property damage is the result of the Watts rebellion in
    Los Angeles, CA.
    õ? Ku Klux Klan fires shots and violence breaks out during a Martin Luther King Jr. Civil
    Rights march of 4,000 people to deliver a Negro petition in Selma, Alabama.
    õ? Comedian/activist Bill Cosby stars in network television series I Spy.

    1966 õ? Color television is popular.
    õ? Howard University graduate Stokely Charmichael (Kwame Toure), becomes head of
    the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).

    1967 õ? Richard Roundtree is a model for Ebony Fashion Fair.
    õ? Martin Luther King Jr. leads anti-Vietnam war march in New York.
    õ? In response to injustice, African-Americans rebel in Cleveland, Ohio, Newark, New
    Jersey, and Detroit, Michigan.

    1968 õ? Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated.
    õ? Actress Diahann Carroll stars in weekly NBC series Julia.
    õ? October 16õ?"Tommie C. Smith, winner of the 1968 Olympic gold metal for the 200-
    meter run, and John Wesley Carlos, winner of the 1968 Olympic bronze metal for the
    200-meter run, are expelled from the Olympic games for lowering their heads and
    raising their fists (reflecting the Black Power movement of the time) during the singing
    of the national anthem at the Olympic games in Mexico City.

    1969 õ? Actress Della Reese is the first Black woman to host a television variety show, The
    Della Reese Show.

    1970 õ? Maya Angelou publishes her autobiography entitled: I know why the caged bird sings.
    õ? Comedian Flip Wilson is the first Black man to have a weekly primetime television
    show in his own name.
    õ? Double Dutchõ?"the urban jump-rope gameõ?"is popular.
    õ? Graffiti Art is popular.
    õ? The Dozensõ?"a friendly exchange of insults between street kids is popular. Usually
    two or more people would make derogatory jokes about members of each othersõ?T
    family. The Dozens would later be incorporated into the techniques of Emcee battling.
    õ? The Civil Rights Movement continues. Stockley Carmichael (Kwame Toure) and the
    Black Power Movement is popular.
    õ? Four students are killed by the National Guard at Kent State University after
    protesting against the Vietnam War. In 1975, a Federal jury in Cleveland, Ohio,
    would exonerate Governor James A. Rhodes, 27 Ohio National guardsmen, and
    former President of Kent State of any responsibility in the shootings.




    (The Light Age, 1971-1981)

    1971 õ? Richard Roundtree stars in the movie Shaft.
    õ? James Brown, The Last Poets, Sly and the Family Stone, the Jimmy Castor Bunch,
    Gill Scott Heron, and others of similar style are popular in the inner city.
    õ? Mr. Rock, the Nigga Twins, Peewee Dance, Sister Boo, and others are at the Factory
    West perfecting the Freestyle Dance maneuvers that would later be known as Breakin
    Poppin, and Lockin.
    õ? The Five Percenters, founded by Clarence 13X--Father, is popular.

    1972 õ? Kool DJ Herc, a well known Deejay in the Bronx, takes the advice of his sister, Cindy,
    and begins to regularly play his collection of Soul and Funk music for the youth of the
    1600 and 1520 Sedgwick Avenue Community Centers, in the Bronx.
    õ? Jimmy Lee, Jimmy Dee, and JoJo form the Rock Steady Crew.
    õ? Mahalia Jackson, famous gospel singer dies at age sixty.
    õ? Angela Davis is acquitted of murder conspiracy charges.
    õ? Started locally in Chicago, Soul Train (a Black music and dance television show) airs
    with the support of Johnson products, Inc.

    1973 õ? Boy Yong Yong hats are in style.
    õ? The movie, The Godfather, wins three Academy Awards, one for Best Picture.
    õ? Bernice Johnson Reagon forms the socially conscious acapella singing group Sweet
    Honey in the Rock.
    õ? Afrika Bambaataa establishes The Mighty Zulu Nation; formerly The Organization.

    1974 õ? Grandmaster Flash introduces the idea for the Deejay mixer and begins cutting, mixing
    and scratching the musical breaks of phonograph records.
    õ? Hiphoppas are meeting at the Sparkles Night Club, Club Plaza, and The Sand Box in
    the Bronx.
    õ? Wanda Dee, believed to be the first female DeeJay, is popular in the Bronx along with
    Cool DeeJay Dee and Disco B.

    1975 õ? DeeJay Flash and Cowboy popularized the call and response routine Say Ho--oo and
    Throw ya hands in the airõ?Ư.
    õ? Television show The Jeffersons starring Isabel Sanford, Sherman Hemsley and Marla
    Gibbs is popular.
    õ? Disco King Mario is popular.

    1976 õ? Grand Wizard Theodore, an apprentice to Grandmaster Flash, discovers Scratchin.
    õ? DeeJay Jazzy Jay, (of Zulu Nation) and D.ST. (Delancey Street) are B-Boys.
    õ? Crazy Leggs, Ken Swift, Kippy Dee, Buc 4, Cooliyaki, Mr. Freeze, Take One, and
    others join Rock Steady Crew.
    õ? M.C. Cassanova Fly (Grandmaster Caz) is popular.
    õ? DeeJay Eddie Cheba is popular.

    1977 õ? New York experiences a Black Out after an explosion at one of its main power plants.
    Massive looting and violence occurred all night into the morning.
    õ? For eight consecutive nights, ABC Television broadcast Alex Haileyõ?Ts Roots.
    õ? DeeJays and Emcees are making cassette tape recordings of their live performances
    and selling them on the street.
    õ? Graffiti Art has exploded. Some feel this era of Graffiti Art remains to be itõ?Ts most
    creative time.
    õ? Kool Moe Dee begins his Emcee career.

    1978 õ? Hiphop branches out to other parts of New York as a standard inner-city expression
    and code of communication.
    õ? Disco Fever is where all of the Hiphop community would meet. It was this year that
    early Hiphop began to recognize the uniqueness of its expressions. MC Busy Bee is
    popular.

    1979 õ? July--Good Times by Chic (Atlantic) hits No.1 on the pop chart, becomes a roller-rink
    favorite, and provides the bass line for Rapperõ?Ts Delight.
    õ? The Fatback Bandõ?Ts album Fatback XII, including the proto-rap track King Tim III
    (Personality Jock), hits the pop chart.
    õ? The Sugarhill Gangõ?Ts Rapperõ?Ts Delight is the first Rap single released on the Sugar
    Hill label, formed in New Jersey earlier in the year by former R&B singer Sylvia
    Robinson. Itõ?Ts the first Rap single to hit Top 40.
    õ? Tanya Sweet Tee Winley releases Vicious Rap, the first known Hiphop recording by a
    female vocalist, on her dadõ?Ts label, Paul Winley Records.
    õ? Studio 54, a nightclub in the New York Times Square area is popular.




    ĐặỏằÊc KoolJ sỏằưa chỏằa / chuyỏằfn vào 19:26 ngày 24/04/2003

    ĐặỏằÊc KoolJ sỏằưa chỏằa / chuyỏằfn vào 19:44 ngày 24/04/2003
  2. KoolJ

    KoolJ Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/03/2002
    Bài viết:
    455
    Đã được thích:
    0

    (The Golden Age, 1981-1991)


    1980 õ? January 25--Black Entertainment Television, founded and owned by Robert L.
    Johnson premieres.
    õ? May--Kurtis Blowõ?Ts The Breaks is released and becomes the first Rap 12-inch single
    to be certified gold and only the second 12-in single ever to do so. His Christmas
    Rappin, released in late õ?T79, becomes the third 12-inch to be certified gold. Later this
    year, Blow releases the first Rap album on a major label. (Mercury Records).
    õ? September--Kurtis Blow plays Madison Square Garden on a bill featuring Bob Marley
    and the Commodores.
    õ? How We Gonna Make the Black Nation Riseõ? (Clappers) by Brother D with
    Collective Effort - the first Hiphop recording to openly question the status of Black
    people, preceding Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Fiveõ?Ts The Message by two years
    - dated on its sleeve as being released this year. According to Brother D himself, it
    was actually released in 1981.
    õ? The Funky Four + 1More perform at the Mudd Club. Though not widely noted or
    remembered, this and other shows expose much of New Yorkõ?Ts hip, White, downtown
    audience to Hiphop, accelerating the co-opting of the form by the mainstream.

    1981 õ? February--The Funky Four +1More are the first Hiphop musical guests on Saturday
    Night Live.
    õ? April--The first major news article on B-Boyin (a.k.a. Break Dancing), To the Beat
    Yõ?Tall: Breaking is Hard to Do by Sally Banes, is published in the Village Voice.
    õ? July--ABCõ?Ts 20/20 airs Rappinõ?T to the Beat, televisionõ?Ts first national news story on
    Hiphop.
    õ? December--New York City mayor Ed Koch escalates his war on graffiti by allocating
    $22.4 million to build double fences with razor-edged metal coils around 18 subway
    yards, in ad***ion to the dogs that were already patrolling. These new efforts do not
    stop graffiti writers.
    õ? Tom Silverman founds Tommy Boy Records in New York City. It becomes one of
    Hiphopõ?Ts most influential labels featuring Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force,
    De La Soul, Queen Latifah and others.

    1982 õ? April--Planet Rock by Afrika Bambaataa and the Soul Sonic Force (Tommy Boy) is
    released; it is certified gold four months later. Advanced for its time, it also deeply
    influences what will later become the bass music style of Rap from the Southeast.
    õ? July--Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Fiveõ?Ts õ?oThe Messageõ? (Sugar Hill) explodes.
    Itõ?Ts widely hailed by many for demonstrating that Hiphop music can provide insightful
    social commentary.
    õ? October--Wild Style, directed by Charlie Ahearn, premieres. The first feature film
    about Hiphop Kulture and its elements. Officially opens in 1983.
    õ? December--The New York City Rap tour-featuring Emcees, DeeJays, Breakers,
    Poppers, Lockers, and Graffiti Artists-travels to London and Paris. This is the first
    international tour to feature all of Hiphopõ?Ts elements.
    õ? Kool Moe Dee battles Busy Bee.

    1983 õ? Michael Jackson releases Thriller.
    õ? September 15th--Michael Stewart, 25, is arrested for writing graffiti on a New York
    subway wall. Thirteen days later, he dies in the hospital; the New York Times reports,
    õ?oAn autopsy found that Stewartõ?Ts fatal coma was caused by a spinal injury inflicted
    while he was being subdued.õ? Stewartõ?Ts controversial death precedes a host of police
    brutality cases that will mar the coming decade.
    õ? October--Kool DJ Red Alertõ?Ts show debuts on WRKS New York 98.7 FM, creating a
    prime-time, commercial radio showcase for new and established Rap music artists. In
    õ?T88, influenced by Boogie Down Productions, Red Alert begins playing dance hall
    music as well.
    õ? Run DMC releases the 12 inch single Itõ?Ts like that (A side) and Sucker M.C.s (B side)
    and takes Hiphop fashion, language, political views and music into the American
    mainstream.
    õ? The Fearless Four, after releasing several well-received singles on the Harlem-based
    Enjoy label, becomes the first Emcee crew (Rap group) to sign with a major label,
    Elektra Records.
    õ? Grandmaster Flash, a.k.a. Joseph Saddler, leaves the group Grandmaster Flash & the
    Furious Five and begins a lengthy $5 million lawsuit against Sugar Hill Records to
    regain control of the groupõ?Ts full name. The group reunites in the late õ?~80s.
    õ? Technics introduces the SL-1200MKII turntable, which will become a DeeJay
    standard.
    õ? Crazy Leggs of the Rock Steady Crewõ?Ts brief but powerful appearance in Flashdance
    catalyzes a worldwide break-dancing craze, though there is no Rap music on the
    movieõ?Ts million selling soundtrack.

    1984 õ? Rapper Sweet Tee releases One for the Treble (Tuff City) with Davey DMX.
    õ? RUN DMC release their debut album RUN DMC (Profile).
    õ? January 18--Henry Chalfant and Tony Silverõ?Ts Style Wars, the first documentary about
    Hiphop Kulture with a focus upon Graffiti Art subculture, is broadcast on PBS.
    õ? April--Video Music Box, the first music video TV show devoted to Hiphop, is
    founded by Ralph McDaniels and Lionel Vid Kid Martin, on WNYC New York.
    õ? Before becoming Public Enemy, Chuck D and others released a song this year entitled
    Lies under the name of Spectrum City.
    õ? June 29--The short-lived program Graffiti Rock premieres on WPIX-TV New York.
    It features performances by popular Rap groups like Run DMC and the Treacherous
    Three.
    õ? September--The 1984 Swatch Watch New York City Fresh Fest, Hiphopõ?Ts first
    national tour, debuts Labor Day weekend in Greensboro, NC. Including 27 dates
    through Christmas, the tour featuring Run D.M.C., Kurtis Blow, Whodini, the Fat
    Boys, Newcleus, and New Yorkõ?Ts Dynamic Breakers grosses $3.5 million. Later, the
    Fat Boys sign an endorsement deal with Swatch.
    õ? November--Def Jam Recordings, an independent Hiphop label in New York City co-
    owned by manager/promoter Russell Simmons and producer Rick Rubin, is founded in
    Rubinõ?Ts New York University dorm room with an initial investment of $8,000. The
    12-inch single õ?oI Need a Beatõ? by 16-year-old L.L. Cool J is the first record for both
    the artist and the label. Recorded for just $700, it sells more than 100,000 copies.
    õ? The Five Percenters celebrate their 20th anniversary. The tenets of this Islamic
    organization are associated with many prominent artists including Rakim Allah, King
    Sun, Poor Righteous Teachers and others.

    1985 õ? LL Cool J releases his debut album Radio (Def Jam).
    õ? Before becoming Boogie Down Productions, Scott LaRock and the Celebrity Three
    (KRS-ONE, MC Quality, Levi 167) release a song entitled Advance (Zakia)
    õ? Michael Schultzõ?Ts Krush Groove, featuring performances by Run D.M.C., the Fat
    Boys, L.L. Cool J, Kurtis Blow, and the Beastie Boys made on a $3 million budget,
    opens in 515 theaters nationwide and is cited as the No. 1 movie in America by
    Variety the following week. When a 17-year-old is thrown through a window after one
    New York screening, Krush Groove becomes the first to fall victim to the rap-movies-
    cause-violence paranoia that will grip the genre for the next decade.
    õ? Run DMC, Kurtis Blow, The Fat Boys, Melle Mel and Whodini appear on the song
    King Holiday to promote a national observance for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.õ?Ts
    birthday (Polygram).
    õ? Roxanne Shante battles U.T. F.O.
    õ? Def Jam Recordingsõ?T co-owners, Russell Simmons and Rick Rubin, sign a distribution
    agreement for $600,000 with Columbia Records, the largest major label deal for a
    Hiphop record company at the time. The first release under the agreement is the album
    Radio by L.L. Cool J.
    õ? King of Rock by Run D.M.C. (Profile) becomes the first Rap album available on CD.
    õ? Run DMC, Melle Mel, Scorpio, Duke Bootee, The Fat Boys and Afrika Bambaataa
    appear on the song Sun City to rap against Apartheid in South Africa.
    õ? Scott Sterling (Scott LaRock) and Krist Parker (KRS-ONE) form Boogie Down
    Productions, with the intention of making intelligence and knowledge a new trend in
    Hiphop. KRSONE is an acronym for Knowledge Reigns Supreme Over Nearly
    Everyone.
    õ? The Show b/w La-Di-Da-Di by Doug E. Fresh and MC Ricky D. (a.k.a. Slick Rick)
    hits. Soon after, the two break up and pursue solo careers.
    õ? Grandmaster Flash signs a solo contract with Elektra, followed by Grandmaster Melle
    Mel and other group members. After their lack of success, the group reunites in 1987
    as Grandmaster Flash, Melle Mel & the Furious five for a charity concert at Madison
    Square Garden, hosted by Paul Simon.
    õ? Supernature (Salt nõ?T Pepa) battles Doug E Fresh with their debut 12 inch single The
    Showstopper (Reality).

    1986 õ? January--Kurtis Blow appears on the cover of Englandõ?Ts Blues & Soul magazine,
    demonstrating the international appeal of Hiphopõ?Ts first major Rap star.
    õ? June--Run D.M.C., performing on the Raising Hell tour at the Spectrum in
    Philadelphia, exhort fans to hold up their Adidas. Five thousand pairs of Adidas
    immediately go up in the air, as the crowd of 20,000 watches the trio rip into their hit
    single, õ?oMy Adidas.õ? Their manager video tapes the moment and sends a copy to the
    company. The gesture earns the crew an endorsement deal with the German footwear
    manufacturer. The company manufactures four Run D.M.C. styles: The Eldorado, the
    Brougham, and the Fleetwood (named after the groupõ?Ts three favorite Cadillac
    models), and the Ultra Star.
    õ? Beastie Boys release their debut album Licensed to Ill (Def Jam).
    õ? Boogie Down Productions release South Bronx, a song that was to start an Emcee
    battle between Boogie Down Productions (B.D.P.) and the Juice Crew (M.C. Shan,
    Mr. Magic Marley Marl and others). It was called, õ?oThe Bridge Wars.õ?
    õ? August 17--Fighting breaks out between gang members attending the Long Beach
    Arena date of Run D.M.C.õ?Ts Raising Hell tour. Police, summoned by promoters when
    the melee erupts at 7:35 P.M., donõ?Tt arrive until 11. Forty-two people are injured in
    what is, up to that time, Hiphopõ?Ts most notoriously violent event. The California arena
    had already established a 16-year history of violence at concerts. Some of the previous
    incidents: In 1970, 46 were arrested at a Jethro Tull show, in 1971, 21 were arrested
    after battling with police at a Ten Yearõ?Ts After Show; in 1972, 31 were arrested on
    drug charges at a Led Zeppelin performance; in 1985, a young concert goer was
    injured when he fell from a balcony onto his head at a Deep Purple show.
    õ? December 4--Run D.M.C. are the first Rap group to appear on the cover of Rolling
    Stone, an honor they earn as a result of "Raising Hell" (Profile) becoming Hiphopõ?Ts
    first multiplatinum Rap album.

    1987 õ? The Juice Crew release Evolution, which featured Debbie D, Kool G Rap, Glamorous,
    MC Shan and TJ Swan for Black History Month.
    õ? Boogie Down Productions release its debut album Criminal Minded (B Boy).
    õ? Eric B & Rakim release their debut album Paid in Full (Broadway/Island).
    õ? KRS-ONE battles Melle Mel live at the Latin-Quarter Night Club.
    õ? February 24--At the 29th Grammy ceremony a trio of young, White New York
    Rappers called the Beastie Boys present the Best Male Rock Vocalist award to Robert
    Palmer for Addicted to Love. But before announcing the winner, they interrupt the
    proceedings to play a taped portion of Public Enemyõ?Ts unreleased Timebomb.
    õ? March 7--Licensed to Ill by the Beastie Boys (Def Jam) becomes the first Rap album
    to hit No. 1 on the pop album chart, after first charting in November 1986.
    õ? August 27th--, Twenty-five-year old Scott Monroe Sterling, a.k.a. D.J. Scott LaRock
    of Boogie Down Productions, dies at 1:25 A.M. from gunshot wounds to the head.
    Along with Blastmaster KRS-ONE and Ced G of Ultramagnetic MCõ?Ts, LaRock had
    just produced Criminal Minded (B-Boy), now considered one of the landmarks in
    recorded Rap music. LaRock is later memorialized at Madison Square Garden by
    KRS-ONE in a show that also features Public Enemy.
    õ? New Music Seminar holds it's first event.
    õ? Eric B. and Rakim Releases Paid in Full (4th and Broadway).
    õ? Street Frogs, the first Rap-music oriented Saturday morning cartoon, makes its T.V.
    debut. It is cancelled, only to be followed by the Kid õ?~n Play cartoon (1990), and then
    Hammerman (1991).
    õ? Just Ice, who once appeared on Americaõ?Ts Most Wanted, dubs himself the original
    Hiphop gangsta on his album Back to the Old School (Sleeping Bag/Fresh). KRS-
    ONE would produce Just Iceõ?Ts next two albums Kool and Deadly (1987) and the
    Desolate One (1988).
    õ? Afrika Bambaataa holds a cipher discussion on the need for a Hiphop Union. This
    meeting took place at the Latin Quarters nightclub in Manhattan, New York. It was
    attended by Stetsasonic, Heavy D, the Audio Two, KRS-ONE, MC Lyte and others.

    1988 õ? Public Enemy release It takes a nation of millions to hold us back (Def Jam).
    õ? EPMD releases their debut album Strictly Business (Priority).
    õ? Big Daddy Kane releases his debut album Long live the Kane (Cold Chillin).
    õ? Slick Rick releases his debut album The Great Adventures of Slick Rick (Def Jam).
    õ? NWA (Niggas With Attitude) releases Straight Outta Compton (Ruthless/Priority).
    õ? Latin Quarter nightclub on 48th Street and Broadway in New Yorkõ?Ts Times Square
    closes down.
    õ? January--Boogie Down Productions release By All Means Necessary (Jive) which
    features the single Stop The Violence.
    õ? September--A fan is stabbed to death at the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, N.Y.
    during a date on the Dope Jam tour, after a patron brings a knife into the arena. Jive
    Recordsõ?T A&R Executive Ann Carli would eventually talk to KRS-ONE and Nelson
    George about the formation of the Stop the Violence Movement.
    õ? The single Self Destruction, by the all star Rap group The Stop the Violence
    Movement (Jive), is released to counter the rising tide of violence associated with Rap
    music. It features KRS-ONE, Stetsasonic, Kool Moe Dee, MC Lyte, D Nice, Ms.
    Melodie, Doug E Fresh, Just-Ice, Heavy D, Public Enemy, and others.
    õ? February--The first Grammy is awarded in the Best Rap Performance category to D.J.
    Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince for Parents Just Donõ?Tt Understand. This year they
    release Heõ?Ts the DJ, Iõ?Tm the Rapper (Jive), their second album and one of Rap musicõ?Ts
    first double albums, which becomes certified double platinum. However, they do not
    show because the presentation of their award will not be aired.
    õ? July--Heavyweight champ Mike Tyson, fractures his right hand in a street fight with
    boxer Mitch Blood Green in front of Hiphop clothier Dapper Danõ?Ts Boutique in
    Harlem.
    õ? Dana Owens, a.k.a. Queen Latifah, debuts with the single Wrath of My Madness
    (Tommy Boy).
    õ? August--Co-founded by Harvard students, David Mays and Jon Schecter as a
    newsletter for the Street Beat radio program, the Source magazine publishes its first
    issue. Slick Rick and KRS-ONE would be among their first cover stories.
    õ? September--YO! MTV Raps (created by Ted Demme) premieres on MTV, with
    former Graffiti Artist and occasional Emcee Fab 5 Freddy as host.
    õ? November--Tone-Locõ?Ts Wild Thing video debuts on MTV, and the record soon sells
    more than 2.5 million copies. Wild Thing is later blamed in some circles for inspiring
    the vaguely defined phenomenon known as wilding and for inciting the rape of a
    jogger in New Yorkõ?Ts Central Park in April 1989.

    1989 õ? January 3--The Arsenio Hall Show airs its first episode. The program becomes the
    only late night talk show to regularly feature Rap artists as musical guests until its
    cancellation in 1994, which ended with an all-star freestyle rap session featuring Yo-
    Yo, Wu Tang Clan, MC Lyte, Das Efx, KRS-ONE, Mad Lion, CL Smooth, Pete Rock
    and others.
    õ? Wreckx-n-Effect battles Stetsasonic.
    õ? X Clan battles 3rd Bass.
    õ? Inspired by DJ Brucie B of the legendary Roof Top Roller Rink/club, DJ Kid Capri
    releases a landmark mix tape entitled 10/9/89 which changes Rap music marketing
    forever.
    õ? May 22--In an interview in the Washington Times, Professor Griff of Public Enemy is
    quoted as saying that Jews are responsible for the majority of wickedness that goes on
    across the globe. The comment goes largely unnoticed until the story hits the Village
    Voice fours weeks later, when the incident promptly goes nuclear. Griff later leaves
    the group due to the fallout from the controversy, and his own group, the Last Asiatic
    Disciples, is signed to Luke Records.
    õ? August--An FBI representative sends a letter to Priority Records, regarding N.W.A.õ?Ts
    song **** tha Police on the platinum selling Straight Outta Compton. The letter
    suggests that the group is inciting violence against and disrespect for the law
    enforcement officer.
    õ? After not performing **** tha Police throughout their first national tour, N.W.A. are
    chased from the stage by police as they start the song during the tourõ?Ts final date at
    Detroitõ?Ts Joe Louis Arena.
    õ? September 8--Twenty-eight-year-old Keith Wiggins, a.k.a. Cowboy of Grandmaster
    Flash & the Furious Five, dies in Queens after waking up two days earlier paralyzed
    from the waist down. He was perhaps one of the most distinctive vocalists and
    innovative stylists in early recorded and pre-recorded Rap music.
    õ? October 13õ?"Rap group Salt-N-Pepa sell one million records for Rap label Next
    Plateau as Push It becomes certified platinum.
    õ? The cable channel Video Jukebox Network (the Box) starts airing nationally and will
    succeed in breaking many artists after the decline of YO! MTV Rapsõ?T video
    dominance.
    õ? Slick Rick releases his first solo album, The Great Adventures of Slick Rick (Def Jam).
    õ? Kool Moe Dee battles L.L. Cool J.
    ĐặỏằÊc KoolJ sỏằưa chỏằa / chuyỏằfn vào 19:39 ngày 24/04/2003
    ĐặỏằÊc KoolJ sỏằưa chỏằa / chuyỏằfn vào 19:44 ngày 24/04/2003
  3. KoolJ

    KoolJ Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/03/2002
    Bài viết:
    455
    Đã được thích:
    0

    (The Platinum Age, 1991-2001)

    1990 õ? Influenced by the Stop the Violence Movement, West Coast entreprenuer Mike
    Concepcion organizes an all-star recording entitled Weõ?Tre all in the same gang, to
    condemn gang violence. It featured King Tee, Body & Soul, Michelõ?Tle, Tone Loc,
    Above the Law, Ice T, MC Ren, Dr. Dre, JJ Fad, Young MC, Shock G, Oaktownõ?Ts 3-
    5-7, MC Hammer, and Eazy E (Warner Bros.).
    õ? A commemorative book Stop the Violence: Overcoming Self-Destruction, by Nelson
    George, published by the National Urban League, will be released in 1990. The STV
    project will go on to generate at least $400,000 for the National Urban League's
    empowerment programs in the inner cities. Stop The Violence would become a
    popular slogan amongst community-based organizations, corporations and politicians.
    õ? June 6--Voting activist organization Rock the Vote is born when a federal district court
    judge in Fort Lauderdale, Florida rules that 2Live Crewõ?Ts As Nasty As They Wanna Be
    is obscene.
    õ? Hiphop Artists Against Apartheid featuring X Clan, Lakim Shabazz, Jungle Brothers,
    UTFO, Ultimate Force, Grand Puba, Kings of Swing, Queen Latifah, Revolucion,
    Solo, Linque, and Author X release a song entitled Ndodemnyama--Free South Africa
    (Warlock).
    õ? July 3--Slick Rick shoots Eilbert Henry and Mark Plummer with a .38 caliber
    automatic in the Bronx for allegedly shooting up his car and attempting to rob him
    outside a local club three months earlier. Police chase Rickõ?Ts car for more than two
    miles until Rick slams it into a tree and is surrounded by cops. Breaking his leg in the
    crash, Rick gets out of the car with his then six months pregnant girlfriend, Lids
    Santiago. The police search the car and find six fully loaded weapons: two Tec 9
    machine pistols; two .25-caliber handguns; a .38 caliber pistol, and a shotgun reported
    stolen from the Richmond, VA Police Department. Rick is later arrested for and
    convicted of attempted murder. The incident eerily echoes the lyrics of Childrenõ?Ts
    Story from The Great Adventures of Slick Rick, which warns against a life of violence.
    õ? Luke Skywalker (2Live Crew) battles Vanilla Ice.
    õ? July 15--Twenty-two-year-old Troy Dixon, a.k.a. Trouble T-Roy, dancer for Heavy D
    & the Boyz, dies in Indianapolis from injuries sustained in a fall from a 20-foot high
    platform while the group is on tour. T-Royõ?Ts life will later be commemorated in Pete
    Rock & C.L. Smoothõ?Ts 1992 hit They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.) (Elektra).
    õ? August--Signed to Def American Records, which is distributed by Geffen Records,
    Houstonõ?Ts Geto Boys are dropped when CEO David Geffen objects to the groupõ?Ts
    violent and ***ually explicit lyrics, especially in the song Mind of a Lunatic. Rick
    Rubin, head of Def American, decides to end his distribution deal over the incident.
    õ? September--The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air debuts on NBC, marking the first sitcom
    starring a Rapper.
    õ? The first episode of In Living Color, a comedy ensemble show, airs on Fox. In
    ad***ion to live performances by prominent Hiphop artists, the show highlights the
    street-dancing style of the Fly Girls, choreographed by Rosie Perez. The show comes
    to be seen as a watermark, validating the influence of Hiphop on mainstream culture.
    õ? Please Hammer Donõ?Tt Hurt õ?~Em (Capitol), M.C. Hammerõ?Ts second record, is
    released. It goes on to take the all time Rap album sales record with 10 million in
    certified sales, passing the Beastie Boysõ?T previous record of 4 million of Licensed to
    Ill.

    1991 õ? Marley Marl, Tragedy, King Tee, Grand Puba, Def Jef, and Chubb Rock release a
    song entitled, Keep Control (Cold Chillin), raising the awareness of Hiphopõ?Ts social
    responsibility.
    õ? Chubb Rock and 3rd Bass, with others, release a song entitled Bring õ?~em Home Safely
    (Select), encouraging Hiphoppas to consider the sacrifices of those that served in
    Desert Storm.
    õ? Rapper/actor Ice Cube, actors Cuba Gooding Jr., Lawrence Fishburne and Morris
    Chesnut star in the film Boyz N the Hood. Directed by John *********.
    õ? 3rd Bass battles Vanilla Ice and Marky Mark.
    õ? NWA battles Ice Cube.
    õ? Tim Dog battles Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg and DJ Quik.
    õ? Lyricist Lounge in NYC starts their open mic sessions.
    õ? Sway, King Tech and DJ Joe Quixx broadcast the Wake Up Show in the Bay area on
    KMEL.
    õ? Big Daddy Kane appears in Playgirl Magazine.
    õ? Main Source releases Live at the BBQ and Nas is introduced to the world.
    õ? LL Cool J, MC Lyte, and De La Soul become the first Rappers on MTV Unplugged.
    õ? January 27--Dr. Dre violently assaults Dee Barnes, host of the TV show Pump It Up
    Barnes sues Dre, and as part of his agreement with the court, Dre records a little seen
    PSA about domestic violence.
    õ? March 4--The videotape of L.A. motorist Rodney King being beaten by police officers
    on March 3 is broadcast nationally.
    õ? March 18--Rapper Eazy-E attends a Republican Party fundraiser in Washington, D.C.
    He donates $1,230 to the party and is later criticized by many for being hypocritical.
    õ? May--Main Source release their debut album Breaking Atoms (Wild Pitch).
    õ? June 15--Efil4zaggin by N.W.A. (Ruthless/Priority) enters the pop chart at No. 2
    before going to No.1, the highest album debut since Michael Jacksonõ?Ts Bad. It sells 1
    million copies in two weeks, making it the fastest selling Rap record at the time.
    õ? August 27--Public Enemyõ?Ts Chuck D files suit against McKenzie River Corp., which
    markets St. Ides malt liquor, for sampling his voice in a radio commercial produced by
    DJ Pooh. The parties eventually settle out of court for an undisclosed amount.
    õ? October 11--Soon Ja Du, a Korean grocer in L.A. is convicted of voluntary
    manslaughter of shooting black teenager, Latasha Harlins, in the head after a fight over
    Harlinsõ?Ts alleged attempt to steal a container of orange juice.
    õ? November 16--Ice Cubeõ?Ts Death Certificate (Priority) debuts at No. 2 on the pop
    album chart, selling more than 193,000 copies in its first week. The album, which
    ultimately is certified platinum, sets off protests against what are perceived as anti-
    Korean, anti-Jewish, and anti-gay lyrics in songs like Black Korea and No Vaseline.
    õ? December--U.S. District Judge, Kevin Duffy, finds Biz Markie and six other
    defendants, including Warner Bros. Records, guilty of illegally sampling Gilbert
    Oõ?TSullivanõ?Ts 1972 hit Alone Again (Naturally) on Bizõ?Ts I Need a Haircut album. The
    incident has a massive chilling effect on the use of sampling in Rap music production.
    The Bizõ?Ts next album in 1993 will be titled All Samples Cleared.
    õ? While attending a Hiphop celebrity basketball game promoted by Sean Puffy Combs
    and Heavy D at the City College of New York, nine people are crushed to death when
    a breakdown in security causes a stampede. People are quick to blame the tragedy on
    Hiphop, but a City University of New York investigation concludes that the security
    problems were not õ?oisolated or uniqueõ? for events at the college.
    õ? Professor Z and KRS-ONE form Human Education Against Lies (H.E.A.L.) and
    releases an album entitled Civilization vs. Technology. The all-star 12 inch single
    featured Harmony, Big Daddy Kane, Freddy Foxxx, LL Cool J, MC Lyte, Queen
    Latifah, KRS-ONE, DMC, Jam Master Jay and Ms. Melodie. The album featured
    Michael Stipe, Billy Bragg, Sister Carol, and Ziggy Marley. (Elektra/Edutainer).
    õ? KDAY L.A., the country's only all Rap station, goes off the air, ending a seven year
    run.

    1992 õ? X Clan battles KRS-ONE.
    õ? House of Pain battles DJ Quik.
    õ? Luke Skywalker (2Live Crew) battles Kid Nõ?T Play.
    õ? King Tee, Yo-Yo, MC Eiht, B Real, Da Lench Mob, Kam, Threat, and Ice Cube
    release a song entitled Get the Fist, in an attempt to create a Black United Front
    (Mercury).
    õ? The Poetess, Def Jef, Almigh-T, and Kool G Rap release a song entitled Love Hurts,
    condemning domestic violence (Innerscope).
    õ? FUBU Clothing is launched.
    õ? The Guinness Book Of World Records features Tongue Twista as the worldõ?Ts fastest
    Rapper, spittinõ?T 598 syllables in one minute.
    õ? January--Ice Cube release his album Death Certificate.
    õ? January 23--Rolling Stone magazine pushes Public Enemy off its cover in favor of a
    story on Clarence Thomas by Hunter S. Thompson. Earlier this month, PE released
    the video By the Time I Get to Arizona, whose explosive imagery attacks that state for
    not legislating a Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday. The song draws firm criticism from
    state officials and lands Chuck D on Nightline.
    õ? Prince Be of P.M. Dawn is pushed off the stage during Money Bõ?Ts album release party
    by KRS-ONE and the BDP crew for allegedly dissing KRS-ONE in an interview that
    appeared in Details magazine. While the streets would hail KRS-ONE as a hero,
    others would criticize KRS-ONE as being contradictory. KRS-ONE later apologizes
    for the incident.
    õ? February--Karl Kani begins production of his distinctively logoed, loose-fitting, street-
    chic sportswear. Within two years, aided by ads that feature artists like Snoop Doggy
    Dogg and Tupac Shakur, the company will earn between $30 million and $40 million.
    õ? March 26--Former heavyweight champ and Hiphop hero, Mike Tyson is sentenced to
    six years in prison for a July 1991 ***ual assault on Desiree Washington.
    õ? April 18--Totally Krossed Out by Kris Kross (Ruffhouse/Columbia) hits the charts,
    propelled by the first single, Jump, and the duoõ?Ts backward and baggy clothes.
    õ? April 29-- Los Angeles bursts into flames after the four police officers charged with
    brutalizing Rodney King are acquitted. The L.A. rebellion eventually tally 58 dead and
    damage approaching $1 billion. Rap artists like Ice-T and Ice Cube are cited in the
    media as having predicted such a cataclysm in their lyrics. KRS-ONE appears on the
    Arsenio Hall show to discuss the incident.
    õ? After an eight-year run as one of the most successful sitcoms of the õ?~80s, The Cosby
    Show airs its final episode.
    õ? May 18--Iõ?Tve never heard of them, President George Bush Sr. says of Ice Cube in
    Newsweek. But I know that Rap is the music where it rhymes.
    õ? June 29--In its cover story titled Rap and Race: Beyond Sister Souljah - The New
    Politics of Pop Music, Newsweek reports that while addressing Jesse Jacksonõ?Ts
    Rainbow Coalition Leadership Summit, presidential candidate Bill Clinton quotes
    Souljahõ?Ts comments from a Washington Post interview, but takes her words out of
    context.
    õ? Police groups nationwide call for a boycott of Time Warner products unless Warner
    Bros. Records withdraws the song Cop Killer from the self-titled album of Ice-Tõ?Ts
    heavy metal group, Body Count. On July 30th President Bush Sr. calls the song sick.
    A month later, Ice-T pulls it from the album.
    õ? July--Tommy Boy Records drops artist Paris amid controversy, after an employee
    leaks word of his song Bush Killa and his album artwork for Sleeping With the Enemy
    (an assassination fantasy starring President Bush and Paris).
    õ? December--Russell Simmons appears on the cover of Black Enterprise magazine. By
    this time, his company, Rush Communications, is the second largest black owned
    entertainment firm in the U.S. that feature artists like L.L. Cool J and the Beastie
    Boys, the company will earn between $30 million and $40 million.

    1993 õ? X Clan, Poor Righteous Teachers, Big Daddy Kane, Digital Underground, Ex-
    girlfriend, Public Enemy, Sista Souljah, Freedom Williams, YZ, College Boyz, and
    Two Kings in a Cipher release a song entitled Close the Crackhouse, speaking out
    against the crack cocaine epidemic of the time (Polygram).
    õ? Subroc, former DJ for KMD dies after being hit by a car.
    õ? The Beastie Boys found Grand Royal Records.
    õ? January 28--In a controversy over artwork and lyrics for his upcoming album Home
    Invasion, Ice-T leaves Warner Bros. Records. He is quickly signed by Priority.
    õ? February--Dr. Dre releases his debut solo album The Chronic (Death
    Row/Interscope).
    õ? April--EPMD breaks up.
    õ? May 23--Hiphop Unity Rally is held at the Nation of Islamõ?Ts Muhammad Mosque #7
    in Harlem.
    õ? June 6--The Rev. Calvin Butts steamrolls offensive Rap music at a protest rally in New
    York City. He encourages the crowd to trample the CDs and cassettes.
    õ? July 14--Ronald Ray Howard, 19, is sentenced to death for murdering a Texas state
    trooper the previous April. Howard claimed that Tupac Shakurõ?Ts song Souljahõ?Ts Story
    made him do it, marking the first time that a specific song and artist are used as an alibi
    for murder.
    õ? Cypress Hillõ?Ts Black Sunday (Ruffhouse/Columbia) debuts at No. 1 on the pop chart,
    and sells more than 260,000 copies in the first week.
    õ? August 22--The sitcom Living Single, starring Queen Latifah, debuts on Fox, showing
    that Latifah - who also founded her own label and management company, Flavor Unit
    - can do more than just rock a rhyme.
    õ? Forty-eight years after the A-bomb was dropped on Hiroshima (August 6) and
    Nagasaki (August 9), Kris Kross are required to change the cover artwork for the
    Japanese e***ions of their second album, Da Bomb (Ruffhouse/Columbia), when its
    photo of a nuclear explosion and the title cutõ?Ts references to Hiroshima are deemed
    offensive by executives within Columbiaõ?Ts Japan based parent company, Sony.
    õ? VIBE magazine is launched with Snoop Doggy Dogg on the cover. Snoop
    subsequently appears on the September 30th Rolling Stone cover (with Dr. Dre), even
    though his highly anticipated Doggy style debut hasnõ?Tt come out yet.
    õ? November 7--Timberland executive vice president, Jeffrey Swartz says in a New York
    Times story that while the company enjoyed a 46 percent sales increase from the
    previous year, the urban market consisted of a negligible 5 percent of sales. This
    blatant dis of the Hiphop nationõ?Ts support of the Hampton, N.H. based companyõ?Ts
    products incites an informal boycott of Timbos and spawns bootleg T-shirts
    emblazoned **** TIMBERLAND.
    õ? Around the time WBLS announces a ban on certain Rap records, New York radio
    station WQHT (Hot 97) changes its format from dance to Rap and initiates the slogan
    Where Hiphop lives, making it the only Rap based station in New York City.
    õ? Eric B. & Rakim, the creators of such hits as My Melody, Eric B Is President, and
    Paid in Full, split up and pursue their own solo careers.
    õ? Hiphop Reggae artist Mad Lion debuts with his 12 inch single Shoot to Kill (Weeded).

    1994 õ? Sean Puffy Combs establishes Bad Boy Records. The notorious B.I.G. releases Ready
    to Die (Bad Boy).
    õ? New York Cityõ?Ts Hot 97 begins to include Undaground Rap in itõ?Ts regular format
    with well-known street Deejays mixing at prime times of the day.
    õ? January--Harry Allen (The Media Assassin) forms Rhythm Cultural Institute (R.C.I.)
    to begin documenting and awarding elements of Hiphop Kulture. To commemorate
    this announcement, KRS-ONE organizes a massive conference at the Alphonse
    Schomberg Center in Harlem, featuring Afrika Bambaataa and Zulu Nation, Kool DJ
    Herc, Crazy Legs, Grand Wizard Theodore and others to discuss Hiphopõ?Ts proper
    documentation, preservation and further development.
    õ? February--Wu Tang Clan releases their debut album Enter the Wu Tang (36
    Chambers), (Loud/RCA).
    õ? Snoop Dogg releases his debut album Doggy Style (Death Row/Interscope).
    õ? February 23--Representative Cardiss Collins (D-Ill) and Senator Carol Mosely-Braun
    (D-Ill) hold hearings on Capitol Hill regarding explicit lyrics in pop music. The event
    becomes known as the gangsta rap hearings.
    õ? Whoomp! (There It is) by Tag Team, on the black owned label Bellmark, reaches
    certified sales of 4 million copies, making it one of Rapõ?Ts biggest selling singles. The
    song starts a catch phrase heard round the world.
    õ? March 7--2 Live Crew win a copyright infringement suit brought by Acuff-Rose
    Music, claiming that the Crew made unfair use of Roy Orbisonõ?Ts Oh Pretty Woman.
    The Supreme Court holds that 2 Live Crewõ?Ts Pretty Woman is a parody and is
    therefore protected under copyright law.
    õ? May 22--Masta Killa, part of the Staten Island Rap group Wu-Tang Clan, punches
    journalist Cheo H. Coker in the eye because members of the crew disliked artwork
    that accompanied Cokerõ?Ts article in a recent issue of Rap Pages.
    õ? July--Twenty-three-year-old Clarence Lars, a.k.a. D.J. Train, is burned to death in a
    fire in his motherõ?Ts Los Angeles home. Train worked with the crew J.J. Fad on their
    hit record Supersonic and later with M.C. Ren of N.W. A.
    õ? Cypress Hillõ?Ts Black Sunday is certified double platinum.
    õ? August 18--The Sugarhill Gang perform Rapperõ?Ts Delight at VIBEõ?Ts first anniversary
    party. The crowd, including L.L. Cool J, Treach of Naughty by Nature, D.J. Premier
    of Gang Starr, and Heavy D goes wild, highlighting this yearõ?Ts resurgent interest in the
    old school.
    õ? September 28--The Sourceõ?Ts co-e***or, James Bernard, writes a letter charging Source
    publisher, David Mays, with conflict of interest for allegedly being the manager of the
    Almighty RSO and for publishing a stealth article on the group unbeknownst to
    Bernard and the e***orial staff. Mays later denies having any proprietary interest in
    the group.
    õ? Octoberõ?"The Notorious B.I.G. releases his debut album Ready to Die (Bad Boy).
    õ? November--The Universal Zulu Nation celebrates its 20th anniversary.
    õ? Elektra Records drops KMD because of the controversial artwork for their Black
    Bastards album. The cover shows a hanging cartoon figure, which is described by a
    record executive as an Al Jolson character.
    õ? After being coined the Greatest live Emcee of all time by a variety of critiques, judges
    and writers, KRS-ONE publishes a how to book entitled the Science of Rap. Five
    thousand of them are sold and/or given away. The Science of Rap was also published
    in Japanese because of its high demand in Tokyo.

    1995 õ? The Notorious B.I.G., Coolio, Redman, Ill Al Scratch, Big Mike, Busta Rhymes,
    Black Moon, and Bone Thugs Nõ?T Harmony release a song entitled The Points, in
    tribute to the legacy of the Black Panther Party (Polygram).
    õ? C. DeLores Tucker and William Bennett launch an anti-rap campaign aimed at Time
    Warner.
    õ? Buffy from the Fat Boys dies of a heart attack.
    õ? Salt nõ?T Pepa are the first female Rappers to win a Grammy award.
    õ? The Roots album, Do You Want More, brings live instruments back into Hiphop
    popularity.
    õ? March--Mercury of Force MDõ?Ts dies of diabetes complications.
    õ? June--Mobb Deep release their debut album The Infamous (Loud/RCA).
    õ? DJ Doo Wop releases his mix tape 95 Live.
    õ? Eazy E dies of AIDS complications on the 21st.
    õ? September 1--Sugar Shaft of the X Clan dies of AIDS complications.
    õ? October 16--Million Man March in Washington D.C. is lead by Minister Louis
    Farrakhan.
    õ? Ice Cube, Mobb Deep, Ice T, Chuck D, Nice and Smooth, Wu Tang Clan, Da Lench
    Mob, DA Smart, and Kam release a song entitled Where ya atõ?Â, in support of the
    Million Man March (Mergela).

    (...to be continued)
  4. KoolJ

    KoolJ Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/03/2002
    Bài viết:
    455
    Đã được thích:
    0
    1996 õ? Tupac battles Mobb Deep, Notorious B.I.G., Sean Puffy Combs, Lilõ?T Cease, Lilõ?T Kim,
    and Chino XL.
    õ? Dr. Dre, RBX, KRS-ONE, B Real and Nas release a song entitled East Coast/West
    Coast Killas in an attempt to end the illusion of an East Coast/West Coast fued hyped
    up by irresponsible music magazines (Aftermath).
    õ? DJ Tony Touch releases 50 MCõ?Ts, a mix tape that featured 50 of Hiphopõ?Ts best
    Emcees of the time.
    õ? The Temple of Hiphop, a Hiphop preservation society and ministry is founded by
    KRS-ONE, affectionately known as The Teacha.
    õ? March--The Fugees release The Score (Columbia).
    õ? September 13--Tupac Shakur dies from gunshot wounds after being shot at while
    driving through Las Vegas with Death Row CEO Suge Knight who is also shot but
    survives.
    õ? September 22--The Nation Of Islam hosts a historic event in an effort to end the
    East/West rivalry many well-known Rappers, executives and activitsts attend.
    õ? Jeru tha Damaja battles Foxy Brown.
    õ? Fugees battle Jeru tha Damaja.

    1997 õ? Despite its high ratings and importance in Hiphop Kulture, Yo!MTV Raps is taken off
    the air.
    õ? February--Suge Knight is sentenced to nine years in prison for a parole violation.
    õ? March--Rapper Notorious B.I.G. dies of gunshot wounds while sitting in his car after
    attending a Vibe magazine industry party.
    õ? September--KRS-ONEõ?Ts I Got Next album is certified gold. Not only did this album
    include a Temple of Hiphop registration and questionnaire form, in which over 80,000
    Hiphoppas filled out and returned to the Temple of Hiphop, but the video for the
    albums first single, Step into a world, revitalized Breakin, Poppin and Lockin on
    television and in the clubs.

    1998 õ? Snoop Dogg leaves Death Row Records for No Limit.
    õ? NYC Mayor Rudolph Giuliani implements an Anti-Graffiti Task Force.
    õ? May 18th-24th --Temple of Hiphop announces the first annual Hiphop Appreciation
    Weekõ?"a time for Hiphoppas to reflect upon the state of Hiphop and how it may be
    productively passed on to our children and the rest of the world.
    õ? Octoberõ?"Graffiti artist, Dondi, dies from unconfirmed causes.
    õ? Kurput battles DMX.
    õ? Queen Latifah battles Foxy Brown.

    1999 õ? Ego Tripõ?Ts Book of Rap Lists is published by Ego Trip publications.
    õ? Darryl C., DJ of the 15-Man Crash Crew dies of cancer.
    õ? Russell Simmons and Lyor Cohen sell Def Jam to the Universal Music Group for a
    reported $100 million.
    õ? Temple of Hiphop airs on 92.3 the Beat in Los Angeles on Sunday nights at 9pm-
    12am.
    õ? Rapper Freaky Tah of the Lost Boyz is shot and killed.
    õ? Ma$e leaves the Rap industry to pursue God. His Atlanta based ministry would be
    called S.A.N.E. (Saving A Nation Endangered).
    õ? February 15--Rapper Big L is shot and killed.
    õ? March 19--Rappinõ?T 4tay sues MCA Music and Warner Chapell Music for breach of
    contract, fraud and discrimination.
    õ? April--Famous civil rights activist Rosa Parks sues Rap group Outkast for allegedly
    exploiting her name on their tribute song Rosa Parks, which appeared on their album
    Aquemini.
    õ? May--Bigga B. former Loud Records executive and well-known Los Angeles club
    promoter dies of respiratory failure.
    õ? Erika Fuller and Candice Hoys of Harvard University organize the Next Level Hiphop
    conference.
    õ? Mayor Ron Gonzales of San Jose launches Tag You Lose to crack down on Graffiti
    writers.
    õ? May 17-23--Second Annual Hiphop Appreciation Week is celebrated all over New
    York with lectures, conferences and concerts. Professor Z and KRS-ONE distribute
    the rough draft of a book that would later be called the Gospel of Hiphop.
    õ? July--After years of broadcasting, the Baka Boys of LAõ?Ts Power 106 KPWR, quit after
    the station decides to decrease its Rap music play.
    õ? August--Ed Lover quits Hot 97 in New York City to reunite with his radio co-host
    Doctor Dre on Los Angeles 92.3 The Beat (KKBT) morning show.
    õ? September--Khalid Abdul Muhammad holds 2nd Million Youth March in Harlem.
    õ? Producer Sam Sneed who was diagnosed with brain cancer receives a $10,000
    donation from Busta Rhymes to help pay for medical bills. Other artists also stepped
    forward to perform charity.
    õ? November--A state of emergency is declared in Seattle when some 45,000 activists
    protest against the World Trade Organization (WTO) for exploiting labor abroad and
    environmental issues.
    õ? December--Philadelphiaõ?Ts DJ Swift is accidentally shot and killed.
    õ? Jazz legend, Grover Washington Jr. dies of a heart attack. He was greatly sampled in
    Rap music production.
    õ? December--Curtis Mayfield dies.
    õ? December 27õ?"Sean Puffy Combs, Jennifer Lopez and Hiphop/Reggae artist Shyne
    are involved in a shooting incident at a club in New York City, where one woman was
    shot in the face. She would survive. Puffy would be later acquitted, but Shyne would
    get sentenced to 10 years in prison for the incident. Jennifer Lopez was not a suspect.
    Sean Puffy Combs would later change is name from Puff Daddy to P Diddy.
    (The Information Age, 2001-2011)

    2000 õ? February 7õ?"Rapper Big Punisher dies of a heart attack.
    õ? Jack the Rapper, founder of the Jack the Rapper Music Conference and first Black
    music radio personality, dies at age 79 from prostrate cancer.
    õ? Bryan õ?oBabyõ? Williams and Ronald õ?oSlimõ? Williams, founders of Ca$h Money
    Records purchase half of their native New Orleans Magnolia Projects allowing
    residents rent-free housing.
    õ? 5,000 people attend a No on Prop 21 concert/rally in Oakland. Prop 21 sought to
    increase efforts of police gang units to treat minors as adults in court. Many criticized
    that Prop. 21 would only escalate racial profiling.
    õ? A boycott is launched against New York Cityõ?Ts Hot 97 due to their lack of response
    during the Diallo verdict.
    õ? March--Hillary Clinton is criticized for accepting a $1,000 campaign donation from
    Bad Boy CEO Sean P Diddy Combs.
    õ? Al Gore also receives criticism after accepting funds from Rapper/musician Wyclef
    Jean of the Rap group The Fugees.
    õ? Hiphop for Respect project is released. It was inspired by the killings of Tyesha Miller
    in Los Angeles and Amidou Diallo in New York by local law enforcement. Rapper
    Mos Def and others participate.
    õ? Prop. 21 passes and 170 Hiphoppas are arrested for protesting with 500+ others. No
    More Prisons project is released inspired by the passing of Prop. 21.
    õ? KKBT 92.3 in LA is sold to Radio One and becomes Hot 92.3. The Temple of Hiphop
    goes off the air.
    õ? Wyclef Jean, along with other artists and the NAACP launch a boycott of South
    Carolina for flying the Confederate flag at the capitol.
    õ? March 16--Native to Los Angeles, DJ Rob One dies of cancer.
    õ? March 28--The 2nd annual B.I.G. Night Out raises money for the Christopher Wallace
    foundation which provides educational assistance for children in Biggieõ?Ts native
    Brooklyn neighborhood.
    õ? April--Chicago Hiphoppas boycott the House of Blues for denying the local Hiphop
    community to perform at their venue.
    õ? Rapper Common founds a charity to help raise funds for low-income youths to assist
    them in college. It is called the Common Ground Foundation.
    õ? The Hiphop Generation Conference in Madison, Wisconsin touches on social and
    political issues.
    õ? Rah Digga and Rapper AG team up with HMV Records in Harlem to raise money for
    Lifebeatõ?Ts Counter AIDS program to increase AIDS/HIV awareness.
    õ? April 27--Commo***y or necessity, permanency or transcience, fantasy or realityõ?Â
    What is the true nature of Hiphop music in the 21st centuryõ? is held at Yale
    University.
    õ? With the protest slogan Driving While Black/Brown (DWB), Hiphoppas in
    Sacremento, California rally against racial profiling in front of the Capitol building.
    õ? April 28--A New York District Judge rules in favor of Recording Industry Association
    of America (RIAA) in their suit against MP3.com for violating copyright laws.
    õ? May 5--Kool DJ Hercõ?Ts birthday bash is held in New York City, many Hiphop artists
    pay tribute to the father of Hip Hop.
    õ? May 15-21--Third annual Hiphop Appreciation Week is celebrated all over the United
    States. The Theme this year was Forgiveness.
    õ? July--Mausberg (affiliated with DJ Quik) is shot to death on the 7th.
    õ? November--DJ Screw overdoses on codeine-dosed syrup. He dies.
    õ? Everlast battles Eminem.
    õ? November 25--Bruce Mayfield of the Wu-Tang affiliated American Cream Team is
    shot and killed over a money dispute.

    2001 õ? Poetic of the Gravediggaz dies of cancer.
    õ? January 10--DJ Q-Bert debuts the worldõ?Ts first animated Hiphop film and publishes a
    childrenõ?Ts book entitled Turntable Timmy.
    õ? January 19--The Detroit Hiphop Coalition organizes a boycott on WTLB 98 for not
    playing top independent local artists.
    õ? January 21--Oh NO! (Mos Def, Pharoe Monch and Nate Dogg) is the first vinyl-only
    release to become #1 on the Billboard Rap Singles Chart.
    õ? January 22--WZEE of Madison, Wisconsin is fined by the Federal Communications
    Commission (FCC) for $7,000 for accidentally playing the une***ed version of õ?oThe
    Real Slim Shadyõ? by Eminem.
    õ? January 30--First ever Rhode Island Hiphop Awards is organized by Basement Flavor.
    õ? Februaryõ?"The Temple of Hiphop holds a press conference at the Sounds of Brazil
    restaurant/club (S.O.Bõ?Ts) in New York City to announce the fourth annual Hiphop
    Appreciation Week. After an opening prayer from the Reverend Al Sharpton, speakers
    included Kool DJ Herc, Afrika Bambaataa, Doug E Fresh, DXT, Chivon Dean, KRS-
    ONE, Thembisa Mshaka-Morris and Harry Dõ?TJante as host.
    õ? March 13-16--The Hiphop Hall of Fame conference focusing on the creation of
    Hiphop history is held in New York City. The Cold Crush Brothers, DJ Red Alert,
    KRS-ONE and others attend.
    õ? Russell Simmons battles Conrad Muhammad.
    õ? April 26--NYPD begins to stalk out night clubs that attract Hiphop/Rap industry
    people to compile intelligence files of those with criminal records.
    õ? May 5--Marlon Brando of Rap group Sporty Thieves is hit and killed by a car.
    õ? May 14-21--The Temple Of Hiphop presents the fourth annual Hiphop Appreciation
    Week. The Theme this year was Charity.
    õ? May 16th--During Hiphop Appreciation Week, 300 Hiphop Pioneers, activists, artists,
    executives, authors, government officials, ministers and students announced Hiphop as
    an international culture for peace and prosperity to the United Nations Educational
    Scientific and Cultural Organization (U.N.E.S.C.O.). Recognized as an official
    international culture, many prominent Hiphoppas signed the Hiphop Declaration of
    Peace symbolizing Hiphopõ?Ts unity and cultural existence in the world.
    õ? May 27--The Revolution is Hiphop world-wide tour kicks off featuring an array of
    True Skool Artists.
    õ? June 5--PNB Nation supports the Bronx Museum of the Arts for The Bronx keeps
    creating it benefit.
    õ? June 11--KKMG in Colorado is fined by the FCC for $7,000 for playing The Real Slim
    Shady by Eminem stating that the clean version is too provocative and raunchy.
    õ? June 18--Napster signs deals with BMG Entertainment, EMI Recorded Music and
    Warner Music Group.
    õ? June 28--Hiphop Summit is organized by Russell Simmons. Many music executives,
    artists and politicians attend including the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan.
    õ? July--Graffiti artist Spek is shot to death over a Graffiti dispute.
    õ? August 25-- Hiphop/R&B singer Aalyiah dies in a plane crash in the Bahamas, while
    shooting a video for her CD single Rock the Boat.
    õ? September 11--The World Trade Center Towers in New York City are struck down
    when two airplanes deliberately crashed into them. Simultaneously, another airplane
    deliberately crashes into the Pentagon in Washington DC. The passengers of yet a
    fourth aircraft, headed for the White House, heroically crashed the plane to divert
    another disaster. Between all four plane crashes, hundreds are killed. Thousands are
    injured. No terrorist organization took cre***, but President George W. Bush declared
    a war on terror and a world-wide hunt for suspected terrorist Osama Bin Laden.
    õ? Dr. Dre, CEO of Aftermath Records, donates $1 million for the tragedies of 9.11.
    õ? October--Rap producer Timberland decides to retire from rapping to focus on
    production at the age of 29.
    õ? Decemberõ?"KRS-ONE and The Temple of Hiphop release Spiritual Minded, a gospel
    Rap album that comes in at No. 4 on the Billboard Gospel Chart. Many Christians
    confess their devotion to, and respect for Hiphop Kulture.
    õ? December--A federal judge throws out the death penalty for former Black Panther,
    Mumia Abu-Jamal.

    2002 õ? Rawkus Records merges with MCA.
    õ? Rapper Mystical is incarcerated on rape charges.
    õ? Jay Z battles Nas.
    õ? Jermaine Dupri battles Dr. Dre and Eminem.
    õ? Nelly battles KRS-ONE.
    õ? Outkast wins a Grammy award for Best Hiphop Artist.
    õ? March 12-15 The Hiphop Super Conference and Expo in New York City has 100
    panels and a variety of workshops.
    õ? April 25--Lisa Lefteye Lopes dies in a car accident while vacationing in Honduras.
    õ? Mayõ?"Hiphoppas celebrate the 5th annual Hiphop Appreciation Week all across the
    world. The theme this year was Gratitude. Events took place in Los Angeles, New
    York and Atlanta.
    õ? June--R. Kelly is charged with 21 counts of child pornography.
    õ? The Crip Walk dance is banned from LA high schools due to gang affiliation.
    õ? July--Allen Iverson is charged with two misdemeanors for breaking into his cousins
    apartment while looking for his wife on the 30th.
    Immigration officers arrest Slick Rick (a British Subject) for leaving the US and
    returning illegally.
    õ? August--Russell Simmons and the NAACP re-launch the Rap the Vote campaign.
    õ? P Diddy launches a marketing and advertising company called Blue flame along with
    Bluemindset, a polling and market research company.
    õ? DMX battles Ja Rule.
    õ? September 11--The Temple Of Hiphop hosts An õ?~Iõ?T on Terror Conference at the
    Roosevelt Hotel in Los Angeles to reflect upon the events of September 11, 2001.
    After opening prayer by Minister Jahneen Ameni One, speakers included Jehmu
    Greene (Rock/Rap the Vote), Kool Moe Dee (artist, actor, activist), Nicole Hodges
    (doctorial student), Dionne Bennett (doctorial student), Malik One (Hiphop kultural
    specialist), Monica Satchell (Pre-paid legal services), Joey Luna (Pre-paid legal
    services) and KRS-ONE (artist, activist). Over 150 Hiphoppas attended.
    õ? November--Zulu Nation and the Temple of Hiphop celebrate Hiphop History Month
    with lectures, concerts and conferences.
    õ? November 7-10--Holy Hiphop Summit in Tampa, FL.

    2003 May18 th -25thõ?"The Sixth annual Hiphop Appreciation Week is celebrated all over the
    world. The theme this year was Responsibility.
  5. fantasy_xy

    fantasy_xy Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    22/04/2002
    Bài viết:
    1.010
    Đã được thích:
    0
    đọc bai` của bác em chỉ hỉu đc chút ít ! seo bác ko up lại cái bai` lần trc' = tiếng việt í , cho dân tinh` đỡ khổ

    Em vén áo lên để cho anh tràn tinh khôi và mãnh liệt

    [​IMG]
  6. one-courage

    one-courage Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    04/04/2002
    Bài viết:
    1.345
    Đã được thích:
    0
    vẫn cái của khỉ này à,,,,, Nói thật, nhìn nhức hết cả mắt . Cho fép mở ngoặc ko fải ai cũng là cao thủ tiếng Anh , mạn fép đóng ngoặc
    Everyday is 1st April
  7. PrincessAriel

    PrincessAriel Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    03/04/2003
    Bài viết:
    296
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Ối dài quá không đọc được! Hip hop và R&B nghe cool ra phết mà chẳng thấy ai bình luận gì cả! Tỉ người hay sao cứ lúc nào hip hop là lôi Eminem ra thế (trong forum nào cũng thế)? Nghe nhạc không nên nông cạn
    Why should I care?
  8. _X_

    _X_ Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    10/04/2003
    Bài viết:
    1.364
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Ối trời ... 4 cái sớ dài dằng dặc đọc tới bao giờ cho xong đây? Paste vào Word rồi đọc dần dần vậy. Cảm ơn bác KoolJ!!
    ..:: We're like night and day - white and black
    But what we have is a perfect match
    When i say this - you say that
    But love comes easy 'cause opposites attract::..
  9. ChinhQuai

    ChinhQuai Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    17/04/2002
    Bài viết:
    225
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Đơn giản nhất là đưa web đấy ra, copy làm gì cho tốn công. Nếu post ở đây thì dịch ra nhé.
    * * * * * * *
    No blood no foul
    No pain no gain
    Streetball to the fullest

Chia sẻ trang này