Major Clearinghouses
- hiphop.sh
- allhiphop.com
- Hip Hop record labels sorted by chart performance (poly-graph.co)
Documentaries/Media Reports
- Deadly Art of Survival (Charlie Ahearn, 1979)
- Wild Style (Charlie Ahearn, 1982)
- Big Fun in the Big Town (1986 Dutch doc): Grandmaster Flash; Doug E. Fresh; Roxanne Shante (12:40); Run DMC (25:05); Russell Simmons (26:25)
- And You Don’t Stop (VH1 documentary by Dana Perry)
- Founding fathers: The Untold Story of Hip Hop
- Beyond Beats and Rhymes:
- online video; trailer
- ITV educational resource guides
- Byron Hurt (director) website with resources
- Early 1990s objections (Rev. Calvin Butts)
- 1993 NBC Gangsta Rap report part 1 (Rev. Calvin Butts, Jesse Jackson 2:25); part 2 (Mark Gunn, KACE-FM, Jesse Jackson 2:40)
- 1993? PBS? “Rapping Rap” gangsta rap exposé (Rev. Calvin Butts) , part 1, part 2
- Video Music Box: Rap Debate with Calvin Butts and Ice-T (WNYC, 6/30/1993)
- 1994 SPECIAL REPORT: “GANGSTA RAP PROTEST” (Hezakya News)
- History of the Birth of Hip Hop Culture (with Afrika Bambaataa), part 1
- Dr. Dre early MTV interview (1989: “Everything we say on our records is true,” 1:08)
- 2009 Chuck D On the Real Off the Record (interview with DMC) (search Chuck D)
- Planet Rock: The Story of Hip Hop and the Crack Generation (2011)
- Google Doodle: 44th Anniversary of Hip Hop (8/11/2017)
Old School sites
- OldSchoolHipHop.com
- thafoundation.com
- West Coast Pioneers (includes early video)
- Fab Five Freddy (Fred Brathwaite)
- Early rap goes to downtown New York, 1981
- How Hip Hop Came Downtown (East Village Eye)
- Breakin’ ‘n’ Enterin’
Rap
- Sugar Hill Gang, “Rapper’s Delight” (1979) (official video w/lyrics); on Soul Train
- Grandmaster Caz
- Grandmaster Caz talks Big Bank Hank (VLAD TV)
- Brian Williams, Lester Holt (Jimmy Fallon Show)
- Nile Rodgers on “Rapper’s Delight” (Good Times 1:05; Fab 5 Freddy, Blondie, The Clash 1:50); w/Pharrell and Daft Punk, “Get Lucky“
- Nile Rodgers Discusses Legendary Bassline of “Good Times,” Sampling & FOLD! Festival (4:10 “Who played this first?”; 8:30, “Blurred lines”; 9:55, the Intro sounds like an interpolation; 10:25 cousin in Kool and the Gang–inspiration, not interpellation)
- Chic and Sugarhill Gang together
- Kurtis Blow, “The Breaks” (1980) (Soul Train)
- Blondie, “Rapture” (1980); Acura car commercial (2015); original viral video
- Kool Moe D versus Busy Bee at Harlem World, December 1981
- Grandmaster Flash, Melle Mel, “The Message” (1982); video w/lyrics (close caption)
- Melle Mel explains why “The Message” was the single most important song in hip hop” (part 4) (VLAD TV, 3/21/2021; 3:10)
- How We Made: Jiggs Chase and Ed Fletcher on The Message (The Guardian, 5/27/2013)
- Bassist Doug Wimbish on “The Message“
- Afrika Bambaataa, “Planet Rock” (1982) and Kraftwerk, “Numbers” (1981) sample
- Roxanne Shante
- “Roxanne’s Revenge” original street version (with samples); UTFO, “Roxanne Roxanne“
- In Big Fun in the Big City (12:35)
- Marley Marl recreating MC Shan’s “The Bridge“; “The Bridge” samples
- Eric B. and Rakim
- “Eric B. is President” sample sources
- Marley Marl recreates
- “Microphone Fiend” (AWB “School Boy Crush” sample)
- Rakim talks musical upbringing (jazz saxophone)
- Rakim interview (atlantic.com, 4/23/2012)
- Salt -N- Pepa
- “My Mic Sound Nice” (live 1987); lyrics
- “Push It” (1986)
- Public Enemy
- “Fight the Power” sample sources
- “Fight the Power” music video
- Do the Right Thing opening credits (full); partial;
- Do the Right Thing: racist stereotypes (clip)
- Spike Lee Vaccinate the Block commercial (2021)
- “How Public Enemy Crafted the Athem ‘Fight the Power’” (Rolling Stone, 6/30/2014)
- A Mississippi Rapper Claims Biggie Copied His Song to Make “Juicy.” Here’s Why It Could All Be a Big Coincidence. (7/26/2022)
- The Roots, “What They Do”
- Kendrick Lamar
- interview (Breakfast Club Power 105, 11/4/14): on his white audience (6:10), on Eminem (20:33)
- Kendrick Lamar And J. Cole Talk About Eminem (2014)
- Eminem
- Surprise concert, MSU 2002 (MTV Jammed)
- 8 Mile Rap Battles; w/English subtitles (interpretation of lyrics on rapgenius.com)
- Eminem Blows Up (Rolling Stone, 1999)
- The Slim Shady LP at 20 (The Ringer, 2019)
- Miles Davis on Bill Evans (from Davis’s autobiography)
- L L Cool J workout on The View
- The Zunguzung melody (Yellowman) in hip hop
- Online hip hop lyrics archive
- understandrap.com
- Rapping baby (Alim Kamara’s nephew Khalil)
- 27 styles of rapping (Mac Lethal)
- Cleverlys covers:
DJs
- Ultimate Breaks and Beats track listings: on Wikipedia, with LP covers
- Second Hand Songs (database of covers and samples)
- the-breaks.com (database of samples)
- whosampled.com (examples of hop hop recordings and the samples that went into them)
- waxpoetics
- Kool Herc
- djkoolherc.com
- Birth of hip hop in Cedar Park, Bronx
- The Bronx’s Hip Hop Boulevard (VV, 3/1/2016)
- 1520 Sedgwick Ave., Hip Hop Blvd. (google maps)
- Afrika Bambaataa
- “A Recent Interview w/ Afrika Bambaataa: History, Influence & Direction” (Davey D, 2010)
- Afrika Bambaataa on the roots of hip hop; Bambaataa’s 40,000 piece vinyl collection
- “Finding Hip-Hop’s Beginning in Afrika Bambaataa’s 40,000-Deep Record Collection” (Village Voice, 7/17/13)
- Afrika Bambaataa Abuse Claims Spark Protest Of Universal Hip-Hop Museum Leader (Vibe, 3/2023)
-
Melle Mel: Everyone Knew about Afrika Bambaataa’s Accusations (12/2023)
- Grand Wizard Theodore
- on discovering scratching (from Scratch, 0:45)
- inventing the scratch (interview, 1:10)
- birth of the scratch (interview 9:30)
- creator of the scratch (interview, hiphopslam.com)
- at work (2010)
- a re-enactment of discovering scratching
- Grandmaster Flash
- On “The Get Down” (2016) (NY Times, 8/26/2016)
- Berklee College of Music (2004) offers course in turntable technique, NY Times article (Wesleyan access only)
- Roland TR 808 drum machine demo
- International DJs(Japan)
- DJ Kentaro
- 2002 DMC Championships
- Loop Daigakuin (bird’s eye view)
- DJ Kentaro and DJ Craze, 2015 World Finals
- DJ Izoh: 2012 DMC World Championships
- DJ Kentaro
Beatbox
Producers
Breakdance
- bboy.org
- Rock Steady Crew (featured in Style Wars, Wild Style)
- TikTok dance
- Mariebustinmoves (mother and daughter TikTok)
- The Original Renegade (NYT, 2020)
- JaQuel Knight (Dance Magazine, 2022)
- Tyla, “It’s just part of our culture” (Essence, 2023)
Graffiti
- 149st.com (click on History)
- Style Wars (1983 documentary)
- Style Wars (1983) (Skeem and his mother, 4:35)
- Downtown 81 (Basquiat, Fab 5 Freddy, Lee Quinones, 4:10)
- Lady Pink (Sandra Fabara, featured in Wild Style)
- Zephyr (appeared in Style Wars, Wild Style)
- “Graffiti Art of the City, from the Bronx to Brooklyn” (NY Times Aug. 2013)
Articles
- Hip Hop Happens [Story of Rapper’s Delight] (Vanity Fair 2005)
- Henry Louis Gates, Jr.,
- “Why the ‘Mule Bone’ Debate Goes On” (NY Times 2/10/91) (wesleyan login required)
- “2 Live Crew Decoded” (NY Times 2/19/90) (wesleyan login required)
- Kimberle Crenshaw, “Beyond Racism and Misogyny: Black Feminism and 2 Live Crew” (Boston Review 16.6, December 1991)
- Ice Cube
- Angela Davis and Ice Cube, “Nappy Happy” (1992) (wesleyan login required); video interview
- Straight Outta Compton
- Remember When Dr. Dre (gawker.com, 7/31/2015)
- Here’s What’s Missing” (Dee Barnes, gawker.com, 8/18/2015)
- NWA Tell All (rollingstone.com, 8/12/2015)
- “When NWA was Sued for Rape” (dailybeast.com, 9/2/2015)
- “Atoning For Hip-Hop’s History of Misogyny: From Dr. Dre to Kanye West” (Todd “Stereo” Williams, dailybeast.com, 8/29/2015)
- Ice Cube and Tucker Carlson (Ep. 11 Ice Cube X Tucker: the studio interview; 7/26/2023)
Misc.
Blogs
- okayplayer.com (blogs, discussion boards, home of The Roots)
Clean up Rap Campaigns
- Hip Hop Summit Action Network (Russell Simmons): 3 epithets should be banned (Washington Post, 4/24/2007)
- Enough is Enough Campaign
- Critics of Gangster Rap (thefreeradical)
Legal Issues
- UCLA/Columbia University Copyright Infringement Project
- Jay-Z Versus the Sample Troll
- George Clinton and Hank Shocklee video interview on sampling
News
- Black artists hold all top 10 pop singles chart slots (October 2003); Billboard Hot 100 chart (Oct. 11, 2003); Billboard Hot 100 chart with 8 of the top 10 pop singles by black artists (May 13, 1972)
- “Kanye is Boring Now” (theroot.com, 7/27/2014)
- “Jay-Z to Oprah: Hip Hop has done more for racial relations than most cultural icons” (video)
- Korean Disney Princess: “When we see different kinds of stories, people living different kinds of lives, it really does help build understanding with people from other cultures who look different than us”
- Highest Paid Hip Hop Acts (Forbes, 2016)
- Kendrick Lamar
- What Do Kendrick and Kanye Owe Women Listeners (Tomi Obaro, buzzfeed, 4/5/2016)
- Kendrick Lamar’s Holy Spirit (Hua Hsu, New Yorker, 5/1/2017)
- “Humble”
- Sets off natural beauty debate (papermag.com)
- Snoop Dogg: Rappers these days all sound the same
- “Rappers are Now Singers. Thanks Drake” (Jon Caramanica, NYT, 11/24/2019) (Wes access only)
- “Fans Bash NY Times for Claiming Drake Made Sing-Rap Popular” (Marisa Mendez, XXL, 11/26/2019)
- “The New York Times gave Drake credit for rap-singing. People aren’t having it” (Lisa Respers France, CNN, 11/27/2019)
- Ice Cube and Tucker Carlson (7/26/2023)
Hip Hop at 50