The founders of hip hop DJ Kool Herc and Coke La Rock the very first ones to start it back in 1973 the birth of rap/hip hop everyone should show respect to these two men
I know him and Herc I remenber when his first child was born...I went to a lot their parties at the Executive Playhouse also known as the Sparkle Coke and Herc was friends with my neighbor who lived on Long Island CoCo La Rock ( what the ladies called him) speak the truth especially about that go move your car and that Echo was crazy these were the best parties ever....they had a special mix for us coming from LI they use to run that train mix everytime we came thru the door...a BT Express and Trans Euro Express track mix it was crazy...they were way ahead of Sugar Hill...this is where it originated my neighbor had a tape of every party I had one that was stolen from me in college...much love to him Herc. Doronda and RIP Jimmy who introduced me to them...I'm a part of history I tell my kidsI was there when and with the Hip Hop originators...
Has he ever been honored by B.E.T. Or Hiphop awards??? We need to celebrate the founding father of hiphop..... He is truly the one who put millions of dollars into peoples hands
He is not the foundation of Rap because Rapping and Jive talking goes back to African American Slavery times then African musicians blues, jazz and rock and roll was Rapping in 1920 on records.
Wow! This brings back so many childhood memories. I remember seeing Coke LaRock's name on the old school flyers with the Herculoid and thinking to myself, this is one of the flyest names in the game. But you also had City Boy, Clark Kent and Turtledove from the heavens above! and can't forget Mandiplite (he wasn't with the Herculoids).Thanks Coke for help planting the seed of hip hop in me!
DAVID Edwards Talkin' radio play or bootleg? Lotsa bootleg rap battles from way before Rapper's Delight. They can be found online if you look hard enough. Good luck!
Nope Rapping ,and Jive talking goes back to African American slavery times. There are rap records that goes back to 1920 African American Blues, Jazz, rapping in those styles of music on records. Coke la Rock did a good job but Rapping goes back to African American slavery times.
Cowboy was the first dude to make crowd response rhymes like "all the ladies in the house say oooooow!" you know like rhymes that required an answer from the audience, big up to Coke La Rock and R.I.P. Keith "Cowboy" Wiggins.
@@funkyfreshzorro00 What I remembered was Coke LA Rock as more of a Hype MC than a rapper by today's standards. He would hype the crowd and say a couple of rhymes to get the people dancing.
just listening to him talk, you can tell this guy is true shit. this kind of art barely exists anymore, the music industry has just about killed real hip hop.
DJs like Jocko Henderson were using rhymes to introduce songs long before hip hop started. This was already apart of black culture in America going back to the 20s. Check "Coal Black and De Sebben Dwarfs" an old cartoon from the 40s to see that. You had "talking blues" like Albert King and Cold Feet which used it and Bebop Jazz was another background for this style of rhyming and then into the 60s some radio DJs started using it for their shows and then into the 70s with Disco you had folks doing it and then it moved into Hip Hop. And of course don't forget the last poets either. Also check what the Jamaicans were doing with "cut selectas" or "dub selectas" as well.
No one disputes elements of hip hop came from earlier sources. DJ Hollywood was rapping at Bronx block parties two years before Herc threw his first party. However, the teens in the South Bronx took elements and forged them into something new they called hip hop, and that hybrid changed the world. Busy Bee was the first solo MC who never did any deejaying. The rest of the early MC's came in the form of crews or MC/deejays, of which Coke was the first.
Yes. I am just saying the idea of rhyming in between records as a way of introducing songs as a DJ was not really new . Not to mention other genres of black music had rhyming to rhythms not unlike later hip hop prior to that as well. So it is an evolution not something truly "brand new". Without the 50s and 60s blues bebop and jazz, there are no 70s and 80s soul, r&b and disco which leads to hip hop. Hip Hop borrowed many elements from previous eras, even the dance. Heck you can see "beat boxing" and break dancing in the Mills brothers from the 1940s on "Caravan".
Steven Hager Totally agree. The main new thing with hip hop was that the DJs and MCs were taking their turntables and records and putting on big parties and productions for local people in the street as opposed to the big discos where DJs had expensive sound systems that you had to pay to go to. And they experimented on their own with their own systems that were put together from scratch which created a demand for Dee Jays and Em Cees to do all the various block parties, playground parties and house parties which became popular at that time based on this new style of sound. And hence the rest is history.
Like all in the music. Rock (not "50s Rock n Roll") was product of the re-inventing Electric Chicago Blues stuff from young musicians fron ENGLAND! (The Rolling Stones, The Kinks, The Animals). Funk take bass 16th notes previously jammed by jazzist like Oscar Pettiford and Ray Brown.
2:30 I love how he's specifically not trying to take credit for creating rap/hip-hop but simply implying that he was just a DJ shouting out people's names at a block party and saying things in a rhythmical funky way. He didn't intentionally try create rap or hip-hop he more so popularized it or spread it's influence albeit unintentionally. Grandmaster Caz and others were at the same block party peeped the way he said things and pretty much copied it but essentially this style of rap would evole very quickly even in it's early years. Slowly forming into it's own genre in the mid 70 to late 70's. NY is definitely where hip-hop was birthed.
@@hellchill2453 Coke La Rock was a friend and musical partner of DJ Kool Herc, who himself is generally considered to have laid down the foundation for hip-hop music starting in 1973. Coke La Rock is an old school New York City rapper who is sometimes credited as being the first MC in the history of hip-hop. Before that time, he had no name and did his rapping out of sight from the audience, so no one knew who was doing the rapping. Kool Herc can be considered the father of hip-hop but undoubtedly Coke La Rock is the father of rap.
@@Young_Dab yeah i read all that when i was trying to find more information on coke la rock. but it doesnt say he created rap, because it also said kool herc created rap as well. Yeah i know he was rapping beside herc when know one knew who coke la rock was, but that still doesnt mean dj kool herc never created rap when so many sources say he did and they were both partners
@@Young_Dab coke la rock is credited as being the first mc rapper so many sources say that so i agree. but kool herc is credited as creating rap when he used to talk during the break of the songs. Since they were partners thats a hard one to know who was the first to spit
No One can say who was the first MC. Everyone has his own Opinion. 'KC the Prince of Soul' was another NY Rapper in early 70s and Kurtis Blow has mentioned him as First. But Respect for Coke.
+funkydopebeats True, but remember, the Jamaican reggae scene, and the MC's and Toasters which were DeeJaying way back then, was taken to New York by Herc.
+Martin Henry No Jamaican DJs took it from American DJs. Example Jocko Henderson was an American DJ rapping over records who started in the 1940s. Jamaican DJs picked it up from him.
The Jamaican Reggae Scene is still going strong, and vibrant, also diversifying because of Fu__in' copycats. NY rappers learned from the Jamaicans how to compere. forget who was the first MC. Jamaica's Mento, SKa, Rocksteady, Bluebeat, etc,...etc. Jamaica has always been at the forefront of music. Aknowledge the Jamaicans first.... I'm from London
What we now call rapping, Black Americans doing on record since the 1920's and the 1930s. What Jamaicans call toasting, which they got from Black American R&B radio DJ's who were doing rhyming jive/patter/slick talk live on air.
+Martin Henry That's a lie NY rappers didn't learn how to rap from Jamaicans. NY rappers are heavily influenced by James Brown, the Watts Prophets, the Last Poets, Gil Scott- heron, Hank Spann, Jacko Henderson, and the hustlers convention.
Also i think that if you know where to look you can find hip hop music with much more complex and intellectual lyrics then most old school hip hop. I think old school has a more crude language, that while exposing the truth is still different (not saying better or worse) from today's language. Check out uochi toki, but keep in mind that they are an alternative hip hop band from italy, so their lyrics are written in italian :(
What i really meant to say is differenent, i dont know why i said it in that way. Hip hop nowadays is not underground music as it used to be in the past. So now most people know about it and because of marketing they think it's "cool"... so the major music companies obviously started to sell shitty EMPTY wannabe music. It's easy to get lost in this thing, but you have you a computer. Use it and find new music that you love. Art is not sitting there waiting for you, an artist's job is to think.
I see comments below saying Hiphop is dead.. well maybe because you only pay attention to the mainstream.. Go search rap battle leagues.. they are alive and stronger than ever.. and for those who might say that Rap and Hiphop are different things.. think again.. Hiphop is a culture.. and Rap is the biggest part of it.. KOTD, GTN, GTNA, URL, SMACK, DON'T FLOP, BASEMENTALITY, FLIPTOP and a lot more others.. HIPHOP AIN'T DEAD!!
Nobody thought that. Everybody knows 2Pac and Biggie came before Eminem. So did Dr. Dre and he was the one who signed him at first and mentored Eminem.
They Lied and said this man was Jamaican and he brought Toasting to America. They also lied and said Disco DJ Mario was Puerto Rican, and his brought Latin style to America. Claiming Hip/Hop and Rap was just stolen/copied from Caribbean and Latino culture. Agenda trying to rewrite history, under a PRO immigrant narrative. -- Including an artificial "Creation" Date to pander with. Rap is 100+ years old. No disrespect to the "individual" immigrants who Contributed to Black American Music, but it was Black America music with contribution by others Including Caribbean's, Jewish, Latino's, Asian, and whites. The foundation is the linage and evolution of our 200 plus year of music.
this should run on history channel
definitely
I want to thank Coke La Rock, for creating this whole music that makes me feel like a true human being. From Mexico to La Rock.
The founders of hip hop DJ Kool Herc and Coke La Rock the very first ones to start it back in 1973 the birth of rap/hip hop everyone should show respect to these two men
💯
Rap?......was around way before 73😉
The First EMCEE ON were DJ Hollywood, and DJ Eddie Cheebia in 1970. Coke La Rock started in 1973 with DJ herc in 1973.
@@dolobrolic6066 Right, but the First to EMCEE IN 1970 were DJ Hollywood, and DJ Eddie Cheebia before Coke la Rock.
@@stanleyshack26 thats true..i believe Coke La Rock switched the drumming sound what we call the boom bap beat.
True living legend,thank u for your contribution for the hiphop culture
yep
For starting*
Its not just contributing, he literally started it
I would love to get more history from Coke La Rock
same
I know him and Herc I remenber when his first child was born...I went to a lot their parties at the Executive Playhouse also known as the Sparkle Coke and Herc was friends with my neighbor who lived on Long Island CoCo La Rock ( what the ladies called him) speak the truth especially about that go move your car and that Echo was crazy these were the best parties ever....they had a special mix for us coming from LI they use to run that train mix everytime we came thru the door...a BT Express and Trans Euro Express track mix it was crazy...they were way ahead of Sugar Hill...this is where it originated my neighbor had a tape of every party I had one that was stolen from me in college...much love to him Herc. Doronda and RIP Jimmy who introduced me to them...I'm a part of history I tell my kidsI was there when and with the Hip Hop originators...
That's really dope
Its a shame the tape was stolen... if it hadn't then it would be the first recorded hip hop track.
Respect and thank you and Herc for Hip Hop.
*Happy Birthday Legend! We love you!*
Word the first mc was a Taurus like me
Has he ever been honored by B.E.T. Or Hiphop awards??? We need to celebrate the founding father of hiphop..... He is truly the one who put millions of dollars into peoples hands
2:10 His first rhyme is pretty hard tho
I respect him 100%
So glad I came across this.
Mad respect for founder of Hip-Hop
Thanks for sharing, I could have listened to him for hours.
So amazing to see this man. Living history.
Living Legend, much respect from Poland!
Mad homage to this man right here" coke la rock" the foundation of rap everybody
The Fathers of EMCCE Are DJ Hollywood, and DJ Eddie Cheebia in 1970. Coke La Rock in 1973 with dj herc
He is not the foundation of Rap because Rapping and Jive talking goes back to African American Slavery times then African musicians blues, jazz and rock and roll was Rapping in 1920 on records.
Wow! This brings back so many childhood memories. I remember seeing Coke LaRock's name on the old school flyers with the Herculoid and thinking to myself, this is one of the flyest names in the game. But you also had City Boy, Clark Kent and Turtledove from the heavens above! and can't forget Mandiplite (he wasn't with the Herculoids).Thanks Coke for help planting the seed of hip hop in me!
Do you happen to know what the earliest recorded rap song is? The only song I could think of is "Rappers Delight"
DAVID Edwards Talkin' radio play or bootleg? Lotsa bootleg rap battles from way before Rapper's Delight. They can be found online if you look hard enough. Good luck!
Chris Wallace
Well if you find any let me know, I played some Kool Herc at work
Try old-school-hip-hop-tapes-at-blogspot-dot-com. Lots of very nice stuff!
Thanks
respect the founders! elders thank you! thank you for posting.
MAXIMUM RESPECT for this interview....Hip-Hop History Word Up! Peace Love N Infinite Blessings! Salute!
Salute! We respect the Elders.
I've heard the name and it's soooo good to see the man is alive! : )
This man is regarded as the 1st known rapper! Amazing!
Nope Rapping ,and Jive talking goes back to African American slavery times. There are rap records that goes back to 1920 African American Blues, Jazz, rapping in those styles of music on records. Coke la Rock did a good job but Rapping goes back to African American slavery times.
He seems like a really cool dude to hang out with
Cowboy was the first dude to make crowd response rhymes like "all the ladies in the house say oooooow!" you know like rhymes that required an answer from the audience, big up to Coke La Rock and R.I.P. Keith "Cowboy" Wiggins.
The first time I saw Coke La Rock, he was at a park in Highbridge with DJ Kool Herc in 1973. This guy is genuine.
And ...in this time,was he rapping?
@@funkyfreshzorro00 What I remembered was Coke LA Rock as more of a Hype MC than a rapper by today's standards. He would hype the crowd and say a couple of rhymes to get the people dancing.
@@chuckanthanio ok. Thankbyou very much....Hiw do you remember later Clark Kent and Timmy Timm? How were rapping,rhyming? Was better than Nasty Coke?
@@chuckanthaniothat’s how all the early MC’s were at first. The DJ was the star. The Mic Controller or Master of Ceremony contolled the crowd
My kind of history
When you hear the story from the horses mouth you get the truth. Respect Mr La Rock
SALUTE KING, Words could never 🙏🏾express youy contributions to the CULTURE of HipHop and for HighTimes
The Amazing SAHSAH the first dancer B-BOY - HE DANCED TO JAMES BROWN RECORDS at kool herc parties
Let us not forget ‘slim’ , who was the floor show highlight at each jam
WORD UP! REAL LEGENDS ARE BORN NOT MADE
Thank you sir!!! Coke LA rock!
respect and salute..
Thankyou!! this is historic I love hiphop....
peace and blessings..set the record straight...
True story i use to work with him and didn't know who he was until he said who he was
It’s mad the first ever mc is still alive but the amount of rappers that came after him that died it’s because the ogs looked after themselves
wow did i just witness history or what with a vision so clear
and you dont stop. hip hop lives forever
This is the real shit.I kicked it with him. My boy dj Ice is Busy Bees dj. Coke L Rock is the real deal. djRodneyO
It’s nice to see one of the black American pioneers of hip-hop able to tell his story because a lot of them are gone & written out of history
One of the coolest hip hop interviews on the internet. Great historical source
Damn!!...true black history...black don't crack!!...
Big big super large shout to Coke La Rock
Life back then seems so much more fun
WOW allways great to see the pioneers and legends of Hip Hop Kulture. :) I´m gonna be in Amsterdam on november 25th for shure. :)
They didn't say Cowboy invented rhyming. They just said he invented the term hip hop and was the best crowd rocker of the 70s.
just listening to him talk, you can tell this guy is true shit. this kind of art barely exists anymore, the music industry has just about killed real hip hop.
Wow!!!
To here this man talk you know he speaks the truth,Even his eyes say it brothers.
Old skool. the source.
Salut the legend he is amazing. History in the making🙌🏾
What a legend! Great interview.
Respect & Salute!!!
THIS IS THE TRUTH!!!
...with Coke La Rock, Kool Herc and then Bam.....
Thanks KRS.
DJs like Jocko Henderson were using rhymes to introduce songs long before hip hop started. This was already apart of black culture in America going back to the 20s. Check "Coal Black and De Sebben Dwarfs" an old cartoon from the 40s to see that. You had "talking blues" like Albert King and Cold Feet which used it and Bebop Jazz was another background for this style of rhyming and then into the 60s some radio DJs started using it for their shows and then into the 70s with Disco you had folks doing it and then it moved into Hip Hop. And of course don't forget the last poets either. Also check what the Jamaicans were doing with "cut selectas" or "dub selectas" as well.
No one disputes elements of hip hop came from earlier sources. DJ Hollywood was rapping at Bronx block parties two years before Herc threw his first party. However, the teens in the South Bronx took elements and forged them into something new they called hip hop, and that hybrid changed the world. Busy Bee was the first solo MC who never did any deejaying. The rest of the early MC's came in the form of crews or MC/deejays, of which Coke was the first.
Yes. I am just saying the idea of rhyming in between records as a way of introducing songs as a DJ was not really new . Not to mention other genres of black music had rhyming to rhythms not unlike later hip hop prior to that as well. So it is an evolution not something truly "brand new". Without the 50s and 60s blues bebop and jazz, there are no 70s and 80s soul, r&b and disco which leads to hip hop. Hip Hop borrowed many elements from previous eras, even the dance. Heck you can see "beat boxing" and break dancing in the Mills brothers from the 1940s on "Caravan".
As Grandmaster Caz says: "Hip hop didn't invent anything. It re-invented everything."
Steven Hager
Totally agree. The main new thing with hip hop was that the DJs and MCs were taking their turntables and records and putting on big parties and productions for local people in the street as opposed to the big discos where DJs had expensive sound systems that you had to pay to go to. And they experimented on their own with their own systems that were put together from scratch which created a demand for Dee Jays and Em Cees to do all the various block parties, playground parties and house parties which became popular at that time based on this new style of sound. And hence the rest is history.
Like all in the music. Rock (not "50s Rock n Roll") was product of the re-inventing Electric Chicago Blues stuff from young musicians fron ENGLAND! (The Rolling Stones, The Kinks, The Animals). Funk take bass 16th notes previously jammed by jazzist like Oscar Pettiford and Ray Brown.
Coke La Rock is the foundation of mcying and DJ Hollywood is the Foundation of rap!BLESS To the Originators!
So blessed to see this.
2:30 I love how he's specifically not trying to take credit for creating rap/hip-hop but simply implying that he was just a DJ shouting out people's names at a block party and saying things in a rhythmical funky way. He didn't intentionally try create rap or hip-hop he more so popularized it or spread it's influence albeit unintentionally. Grandmaster Caz and others were at the same block party peeped the way he said things and pretty much copied it but essentially this style of rap would evole very quickly even in it's early years. Slowly forming into it's own genre in the mid 70 to late 70's. NY is definitely where hip-hop was birthed.
Did dj kool herc create rap as well, because i heard that he was doing the same thing spitting over old funky classics
@@hellchill2453 Coke La Rock was a friend and musical partner of DJ Kool Herc, who himself is generally considered to have laid down the foundation for hip-hop music starting in 1973. Coke La Rock is an old school New York City rapper who is sometimes credited as being the first MC in the history of hip-hop.
Before that time, he had no name and did his rapping out of sight from the audience, so no one knew who was doing the rapping. Kool Herc can be considered the father of hip-hop but undoubtedly Coke La Rock is the father of rap.
@@Young_Dab yeah i read all that when i was trying to find more information on coke la rock. but it doesnt say he created rap, because it also said kool herc created rap as well.
Yeah i know he was rapping beside herc when know one knew who coke la rock was, but that still doesnt mean dj kool herc never created rap when so many sources say he did and they were both partners
@@Young_Dab coke la rock is credited as being the first mc rapper so many sources say that so i agree.
but kool herc is credited as creating rap when he used to talk during the break of the songs. Since they were partners thats a hard one to know who was the first to spit
@@Young_Dab just because kool herc stuck to djing and didnt become an mc didnt mean he didnt inspire or create rap, his love was djing
Thanks O.G. for the music that I love so much
This BrothaMan right here is a Hip Hop Legend and I will have a big study session on him. Starting.... now lol
Can somebody tell me what the hell his REAL NAME IS!!!? IT'S NOWHERE ON THE INTERNET. I cant even write my fckin paper!
Legendary 🏆💪💯🎤🎶
They need to make a movie of Coke La Rock from when he started
Respect.....................peace!!
Great interview Mr. Steve Hager
Hip Hop is not dead, it's just not popular as it used to be and it just evolved.
Bless up fam
GRAND MASTER MY RESPECT COKS LA ROCK
LOVE THIS DUDE !!! LEGEND
Great upload but wasn't Blowfly rapping in the 60's?
Super legend.
Mele Mel said a rhyme one time something like "Coke La Rock, Kool Herc and Timmy Tim I wanna be just like them..."
Id take this guy over 95% of these so called mc's of today
This dude is the pure hiphop. these new school niggas should be ashamed.. They do not even know this man. It's a sad day in hiphop.
The real OG!
wow im speachless thank you for creating HIP HOP with dj kool herc Coke la Rock greetings from germany i hear you !
I respect the OG. And it maybe the truth in the BX but it’s all cap. Hip hop started in brooklyn with grand master flowers 🌺
Flowers Rip was just a Dj Herk was to but he flipped it in the BX and that what's made it take off big time
LMAO! that car shit was hilarious! Love you homie! long live the gods!
God bless!
hell yeah this is awesome.
the first rapper ever coke la rock
Maximum respect to this guy^^
No One can say who was the first MC.
Everyone has his own Opinion.
'KC the Prince of Soul' was another NY Rapper in early 70s and Kurtis Blow has mentioned him as First.
But Respect for Coke.
+funkydopebeats True, but remember, the Jamaican reggae scene, and the MC's and Toasters which were DeeJaying way back then, was taken to New York by Herc.
+Martin Henry No Jamaican DJs took it from American DJs. Example Jocko Henderson was an American DJ rapping over records who started in the 1940s. Jamaican DJs picked it up from him.
The Jamaican Reggae Scene is still going strong, and vibrant, also diversifying because of Fu__in' copycats. NY rappers learned from the Jamaicans how to compere. forget who was the first MC. Jamaica's Mento, SKa, Rocksteady, Bluebeat, etc,...etc. Jamaica has always been at the forefront of music. Aknowledge the Jamaicans first.... I'm from London
What we now call rapping, Black Americans doing on record since the 1920's and the 1930s. What Jamaicans call toasting, which they got from Black American R&B radio DJ's who were doing rhyming jive/patter/slick talk live on air.
+Martin Henry That's a lie NY rappers didn't learn how to rap from Jamaicans. NY rappers are heavily influenced by James Brown, the Watts Prophets, the Last Poets, Gil Scott- heron, Hank Spann, Jacko Henderson, and the hustlers convention.
Also i think that if you know where to look you can find hip hop music with much more complex and intellectual lyrics then most old school hip hop. I think old school has a more crude language, that while exposing the truth is still different (not saying better or worse) from today's language. Check out uochi toki, but keep in mind that they are an alternative hip hop band from italy, so their lyrics are written in italian :(
Thanks For This Production!!!
Ice Cube: I'm the oldest rapper alive
Coke La Rock: hold my pipe
or weed
THE LEGEND.
Rolling 100 deep brought me here....hard bars from a true legend
Lots of class!
I got maaad love 4 You Coke!!! All The Best from the Polish Crew- KSM :D!!!
Mostly mini DV with some audio cassette.
What i really meant to say is differenent, i dont know why i said it in that way. Hip hop nowadays is not underground music as it used to be in the past. So now most people know about it and because of marketing they think it's "cool"... so the major music companies obviously started to sell shitty EMPTY wannabe music. It's easy to get lost in this thing, but you have you a computer. Use it and find new music that you love. Art is not sitting there waiting for you, an artist's job is to think.
Dude couldn't wait to get that "Nigga Twins" question off! 😂😂😂😂😂 j/k
I see comments below saying Hiphop is dead.. well maybe because you only pay attention to the mainstream.. Go search rap battle leagues.. they are alive and stronger than ever.. and for those who might say that Rap and Hiphop are different things.. think again.. Hiphop is a culture.. and Rap is the biggest part of it.. KOTD, GTN, GTNA, URL, SMACK, DON'T FLOP, BASEMENTALITY, FLIPTOP and a lot more others.. HIPHOP AIN'T DEAD!!
I love to document interviews like this because for a lot of people, hip hop started with Eminem. And they could care less about what came before him.
Nobody thought that. Everybody knows 2Pac and Biggie came before Eminem. So did Dr. Dre and he was the one who signed him at first and mentored Eminem.
I'm obsessed with music and everything surrounding the culture..
Real OG.
Coke La Rock!
They Lied and said this man was Jamaican and he brought Toasting to America.
They also lied and said Disco DJ Mario was Puerto Rican, and his brought Latin style to America.
Claiming Hip/Hop and Rap was just stolen/copied from Caribbean and Latino culture.
Agenda trying to rewrite history, under a PRO immigrant narrative. -- Including an artificial "Creation" Date to pander with. Rap is 100+ years old.
No disrespect to the "individual" immigrants who Contributed to Black American Music, but it was Black America music with contribution by others Including Caribbean's, Jewish, Latino's, Asian, and whites.
The foundation is the linage and evolution of our 200 plus year of music.