THE HISTORICAL ROOTS OF HIP HOP

Similar documents
SAMPLING: THE FOUNDATION OF HIP HOP

THE FINE LINE BETWEEN CREATION AND THEFT: AN EXPLORATION OF ORIGINALITY IN DIGITALLY MANIPULATED MUSIC

CONSIDERING THE FUTURE OF ROCK AND ROLL

THE RISE OF DISCO ESSENTIAL QUESTION. How did Disco relate to the sentiments and social movements of the 1970s? OVERVIEW

SAY IT LOUD: THE RISE OF BLACK PRIDE

SEVENTIES SOUL: THE SOUNDTRACK OF TURBULENT TIMES

ALL OVER THIS LAND: THE EMERGENCE OF FOLK ROCK

GOSPEL MUSIC AND THE BIRTH OF SOUL

GIVING AMERICA BACK THE BLUES

THE ROOTS OF HEAVY METAL

THE GROUNDBREAKERS ITALIAN-AMERICAN VOCALISTS BEFORE ROCK AND ROLL

Famous Things. Hip Hop and Rap. Hip Hop and Rap. Pre-Reading Warm Up Questions COMPREHENSION

DYLAN AS POET ESSENTIAL QUESTION. How did Bob Dylan merge poetry with popular music? OVERVIEW

THE EARLY YEARS: BRINGING A ROCK AND ROLL ATTITUDE TO FOLK

The Evolution of a New Style 1. A new musical style is born 2. The style is rejected by the status quo as non-music 3. The style is mocked through

RITCHIE VALENS AND THE BIRTH OF LATINO ROCK

THE ROOTS OF PROGRESSIVE ROCK

The Latin Rhythms of Despacito

THE MUSICAL ROOTS OF THE SURF SOUND

CHUCK BERRY ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Why is Chuck Berry often considered the most important of the early Rock and Rollers? OVERVIEW

ARETHA FRANKLIN: SOUL MUSIC AND THE NEW FEMININITY OF THE 1960S

THE INFLUENCE OF LATIN MUSIC IN POSTWAR NEW YORK CITY

THE INFLUENCE OF RHYTHM AND BLUES

BEATLEMANIA ESSENTIAL QUESTION. What were the factors that contributed to the rise of Beatlemania? OVERVIEW

DAN PENN ESSENTIAL QUESTION

FUNK ASSERTS ITSELF: BLACK ART FOR BLACK AUDIENCES

THE MUSIC OF MACHINES: THE SYNTHESIZER, SOUND WAVES, AND FINDING THE FUTURE

SEVENTIES SOUL: THE SOUNDTRACK OF TURBULENT TIMES

YOUTH, MASS CULTURE, AND PROTEST: THE RISE AND IMPACT OF 1960S ANTIWAR MUSIC

THEMATIC LESSON: LOVE SONGS

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN

MAINSTREAM METAL, PARENTAL ADVISORIES, AND CENSORSHIP

THE AMERICAN BLUES IN BRITAIN

INTRODUCING GLAM ROCK

THE MUSICAL ROOTS OF DOO WOP

THE NEW YORK CITY UNDERGROUND

DAN PENN ESSENTIAL QUESTION

THE SAN FRANCISCO SCENE, 1967

HUMANITY S BEATS: HOW RHYTHMS REPRESENT PEOPLE AND PLACE

The Impact of Motown (Middle School)

LITTLE KIDS ROCK LESSON MEMORY, HOPE, AND CHARLIE PUTH S SEE YOU AGAIN

The History of Rap and Hip Hop

THE BLUES AND THE GREAT MIGRATION

Curtis Blues: The Roots of Rock and Rap - Rhythm and Lyrics in Acoustic Delta Blues

THE BEATLES: MULTITRACKING AND THE 1960S COUNTERCULTURE

LITTLE KIDS ROCK LESSON ALESSIA CARA S HERE : PERSPECTIVES ON FUN, PEER PRESSURE, AND ANXIETY

13 Matching questions

ASSEMBLING HITS AT MOTOWN

COURSE WEBSITE. LAB SECTIONS MEET THIS WEEK!

WORD BANK. History & Genres - Examples of Latin American Music 1. Salsa 2. Tejano music 3. Reggaetón 4. Merengue 5. Cumbia

[PDF] On The Record: The Scratch DJ Academy Guide

How to use this handout:

MOVING FASTER THAN THE IMAGINATION: THE EVOLUTION OF SOUND RECORDING

FROM ILLUSTRATED SONGS TO THE MUSIC VIDEO: A HISTORY OF SOUND AND IMAGE

The Impact of Motown (High School)

*SOME SOURCES FOR RESEARCH ON MUSIC AND DANCE AVAILABLE AT THE MESA COLLEGE LIBRARY*

Possession of this publication in print format does not entitle users to convert this publication, or any portion of it, into electronic format.

Art/STEAM Lesson: Designing Album Covers and Fashion Using Color Theory

Extended Common Core Social Studies Lesson Plan Template

Common Core State Standards Alignment for Jacob s Ladder Level 5

Chapter 1 Music of the Hispanic Caribbean Text: Robin Moore Instructor s Manual: Sarah J. Bartolome

LESSON 1: COURSE OVERVIEW Study: Why Study Music? Learn about the various components of music study, including history, theory, and performance.

100 Years of Dance ESSENTIAL QUESTION. Why might people dance, and how have dance trends changed in America since the 1920s?

Second Grade Art Curriculum

On Musical Preference. Kendrick K woczalla. Ball State University

Contents. How to Use This Book...6 FUNDAMENTALS PART 1 Unit 1 THE SCIENCE OF SOUND... 11

Second Grade: National Visual Arts Core Standards

Meanwhile, folk artists from the Caribbean Islands were also telling stories in rhyme.

Chapter 6 Bacchanal Time

Music Appreciation UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC APPRECIATION. Core

Making of a Musical Gumbo: The Essential Ingredients and Stylistic Diversity in Contemporary Jazz

Music Appreciation UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC APPRECIATION. Core

HOW TO STUDY ROCK AND ROLL

Resources. Composition as a Vehicle for Learning Music

The Music of Motown (High School)

Program Title: SpringBoard English Language Arts

THE MEMPHIS SOUND: A CASE STUDY OF MUSIC AND INTEGRATION IN MID-CENTURY AMERICA

INTERDISCIPLINARY LESSON: BLOWIN IN THE WIND

High School Photography 1 Curriculum Essentials Document

Program Title: SpringBoard English Language Arts and English Language Development

1. Analysis, through compare and contrast, of music performances and compositions using detailed criteria and vocabulary

Middle School Music Curriculum Map

Art: Tom Slaughter, Photo: Colin Brennen

Grade 2 General Music

Grade 2 General Music

Incandescent Diffusers Deflectors Photo boxes

From the Gutter, Not the Garbage: Why Hip Hop is a Legitimate Oral Poetic Form

Marching through War

Second Grade Music Curriculum

Drum Kit. 08/15 Imprint

Hip Hop Loses It's Godfather James Brown by Davey D

Running head: COMMUNITY ANALYSIS. Community Analysis: Wheaton Public Library Sarah Breslaw Towson University

With prompting and support, ask and answer questions about key details in a text. Grade 1 Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.

Adjust oral language to audience and appropriately apply the rules of standard English

Orchestra Responding Unit, Proficient Level

HANDEL TO HIP HOP GRADE 6. THE EWING PUBLIC SCHOOLS 2099 Pennington Road Ewing, NJ 08618

Language and Style in Buck

Quantitative Emotion in the Avett Brother s I and Love and You. has been around since the prehistoric eras of our world. Since its creation, it has

MUSIC DEPARMENT LONG BEACH CITY COLLEGE MUSIC OF MULTICULTURAL AMERICA MUSIC 35

CURRICULUM FOR INTRODUCTORY PIANO LAB GRADES 9-12

Transcription:

ESSENTIAL QUESTION What are the historical roots of Hip Hop? OVERVIEW OVERVIEW Hip Hop emerged directly out of the living conditions in America s inner cities in the 1970s, particularly the South Bronx region of New York City. As a largely white, middle-class population left urban areas for the suburbs in the 1950s and 1960s a phenomenon known as white flight the demographics of communities such as the Bronx shifted rapidly. The Bronx, one of New York City s five boroughs, became populated mainly by Blacks and Hispanics, including large immigrant populations from Caribbean nations including Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago, and others. Simultaneous with the white flight, social and economic disruptions abounded. Construction on the Cross Bronx Expressway, which began in the postwar period and continued into the early 1970s, decimated several of the minority neighborhoods in its path; city infrastructure was allowed to crumble in the wake of budget cuts, hitting the less privileged parts of the city most directly; and strikes organized by disaffected blue-collar workers crippled the entire metropolitan area. Amidst the higher crime and rising poverty rates that came with urban decay, young people in the South Bronx made use of limited resources to create cultural expressions that encompassed not only music, but also dance, visual art, and fashion. In music, Latin and Caribbean traditions met and mingled with the sounds of sixties and seventies Soul, Disco, and Funk. The venues for the emerging art of Hip Hop were public parks and community recreation centers, sheets of cardboard laid out on city sidewalks became dance floors, and brick walls were transformed into artists canvases. Turntables became laboratories for musical experimentation as old sounds were remixed in new ways. The spirit of invention was particularly vibrant against a backdrop of empty lots, boarded-up windows, and burned-out buildings. In a borough where poverty and an eroded infrastructure meant very limited access to instruments and music education, young music makers created with what they could find. DJs assembled their own sound systems and built extensive record collections by searching BOOK 3: TRANSFORMATION

OVERVIEW (CONTINUED) secondhand stores for old Soul, Funk, and Rock and Roll albums; they used their collections to provide entertainment within their communities. Sounds taken from these records from James Brown s drum breaks to Parliament Funkadelic s funky bass lines provided the raw materials for creative work: beats to be mixed and modified. On top of that, MCs (short for Master of Ceremonies) rapped. While early Hip Hop was often dance music, the genre also picked up where certain 70 s Soul left off, serving as a vehicle for social commentary. Stylistically, MCs drew on a number of influences, including Jamaican toasting, a style of lyrical chanting over a beat that was brought to New York by the burgeoning Caribbean immigrant community. The role of the MC expanded over time while the raps themselves blended influences from a variety of marginalized populations, reflecting the circumstances of an evolving urban America. In this lesson, students will examine raw documentary footage, demographic charts, television news stories, and song lyrics to connect the sounds of early Hip Hop to the substandard living conditions in American inner cities in the late 1970s, particularly the Bronx in New York City. Students will compose their own verses to Grandmaster Flash s The Message, to be followed up with a research-driven writing assignment to further explore the urban environment depicted in the landmark song.

Upon completion of this lesson, students will: OBJECTIVES 1. KNOW (KNOWLEDGE): How early Hip Hop reflected the social and economic conditions of America s inner cities, particularly the Bronx in New York City Important events in the history of New York City in the 1960s and 1970s, including the construction of the Cross Bronx Expressway, high crime rates, and a major transit strike The contributions of early Hip Hop artists including DJ Kool Herc and Grandmaster Flash Key vocabulary relating to the rise of Hip Hop, including such terms as scratching, rapping, MC and DJ 2. BE ABLE TO (SKILLS): Make connections between artistic movements and the social and economic conditions from which they emerge Connect song lyrics to contemporary events Identify musical sources from which early Hip Hop was created Students will integrate information from maps and data charts with texts and videos to make thematic connections and create deeper understandings (CCSS Reading 7; CCSS Speaking and Listening 2) Students will apply knowledge of language to understand how word choice can evoke meaning and style (CCSS Language 3) ACTIVITIES MOTIVATIONAL ACTIVITY: Show ABC News clip of the South Bronx in the late 1970s. Discuss as a class: What do you notice about this neighborhood? What do you think has taken place there? What means do you think people living in this environment would have to express themselves artistically? This video clip was left without any sound. If you were to compose music to accompany this footage, what would that music sound like? What feelings or emotions might you try to convey through your music?

PROCEDURE: 1. Explain to students that the place shown in the clip is an area of New York City known as the Bronx, a place considered to be the birthplace of Hip Hop. Distribute Handout 1: Map of New York City. Ask students: New York City is broken up into five sections, called boroughs. What are each of these five boroughs named? What famous landmarks do you notice on this map? In which borough are most of these landmarks located? Display photo of the Cross Bronx Expressway. Explain that the expressway was constructed between 1948 and 1972, and was one of the first highways to be built directly through a crowded urban environment. While technologically innovative, its construction deeply affected the communties through which it passed by dividing neighborhoods, lowering property values, and hastening the rate of urban decay in many sections of the Bronx. Where is the Bronx in relation to Manhattan, where many of the famous landmarks are found? 3. Direct students back to map. Ask students: What is the proximity between 1520 Sedgwick Avenue and the Cross Bronx Expressway, and how might that affect life at that address? [Students should see that the expressway is right up next to the apartment building.] 2. Guide students to the point on the map marked 1520 Sedgwick Avenue and display image of the building. Explain that this is the address of an apartment building in the Bronx where some of the earliest Hip Hop performances occurred, including several house parties emceed by DJ Kool Herc, a resident of the building. Ask students: Are there any roads or highways demarcated on the map? [Students should find the Cross Bronx Expressway.] 4. Distribute Handout 2: Bronx Demographics 1960-2000. Ask the students to answer the following questions about the socioeconomic conditions in the Bronx based on the information in the two charts: The population of which racial/ethnic group increased the most in the Bronx between 1960 and 2000? Which population decreased the most? What happened to the poverty rate of the total population of the Bronx between 1970 and 2000? What percentage of the total population was in poverty in 1980? What overall conclusions can you draw from these charts about the socioeconomic conditions in the Bronx while Hip Hop was developing there in the 1970s?

PROCEDURE: (CONTINUED) 5. Show video clip from an interview with Hip Hop pioneer Grandmaster Flash. Explain that this news story was produced in 2000, but examines events that occurred in the late 1970s. Discuss as a class: Where was early Hip Hop performed? Who was in the audience? What equipment did Grandmaster Flash use to build a new musical sound? How did he utilize this equipment in an innovative way? What are the breaks to which Grandmaster Flash is referring? What is scratching? What about the way Hip Hop DJs played this music made it original? How does Grandmaster Flash describe the role of the Master of Ceremonies, or MC at a Hip Hop performance? 6. Divide class into small groups of 3 4 students. Distribute Handout 3: New York City Timeline 1960s-1970s, and Handout 4: The Message Lyric Excerpts; to each group. 7. Show video excerpt of the song The Message by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, recorded in 1982. Inform students that they will work in their groups to analyze the way the song reflects the social conditions of New York City in the 1960s and 1970s. Students should underline specific lines in the song and connect them to specific events from the timeline. [Note to teacher: The video and song lyrics of The Message contain some explicit language. The teacher is advised to assess whether or not these materials are appropriate for their students. Also note that the video clip ends before the third verse, but students should be able to complete the assignment using the lyrics on the handout.] 8. Discuss in groups: Why do you think this song was titled The Message? What is its message? What are the images in the song that reflect life in the city in the 1970s? (e.g. broken glass, vermin, etc.) 9. Poll sample answers from different groups. 10. Reconvene the class and discuss: Why do you think Hip Hop became so popular with the people in urban communities such as the Bronx? How did The Message reflect the social and economic conditions of the Bronx in the 1970s? Think about both the equipment that was needed to produce it and the themes reflected in its lyrics. [Teacher can emphasize the idea that early Hip Hop required few resources: a turntable or two, speakers, existing records, and a DJ with a lot of imagination; students can compare this to the instruments, equipment, and resources needed to form a rock band.]

SUMMARY ACTIVITY: Ask students to select one or more events from the timeline not already evoked in the song and write an additional verse for The Message to reflect those events and their moment. WRITING PROMPTS: Students will select an event from the New York City timeline and conduct further research into it, producing an argumentative essay to demonstrate an historical understanding of that event and how it affected New York City in the 1960s and 1970s. Students should include a clear thesis statement declaring the importance of that event in comparison with other events on the timeline, followed by research-based evidence to support the thesis. Be sure to also explain why the event was important enough to warrant a lyrical mention by Grandmaster Flash in The Message. EXTENSIONS: Show video of Grandmaster Flash on ABC s Nightline in 2012. Discuss as a class: What specific musical sources does Grandmaster Flash point to as influences? What did he find inspiring about these musicians and records? STANDARDS COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS College and Career Readiness Reading Anchor Standards for Grades 6-12 for Literature and Informational Text Reading 7: Integrate and evaluate content presented in diverse formats and media, including visually and quantitatively, as well as in words. College and Career Readiness Writing Anchor Standards for Grades 6-12 in English Language Arts and Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science and Technical Subjects Writing 2: Write informative/explanatory texts to examine and convey complex ideas and information clearly and accurately through the effective selection, organization, and analysis of content. Writing 3: Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, well-chosen details, and well-structured event sequences.

College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards for Speaking and Listening for Grades 6-12 Speaking and Listening 2: Integrate and evaluate information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually, quantitatively, and orally. Speaking and Listening 6: Adapt speech to a variety of contexts and communicative tasks, demonstrating command of formal English when indicated or appropriate. College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards for Language for Grades 6-12 Language 3: Apply knowledge of language to understand how language functions in different contexts, to make effective choices for meaning or style, and to comprehend more fully when reading or listening. SOCIAL STUDIES NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR THE SOCIAL STUDIES (NCSS) Theme 1: Culture Theme 2: Time, Continuity, and Change Theme 3: People, Places, and Environments Theme 7: Production, Distribution, and Consumption Theme 8: Science, Technology, and Society National Standards for Music Education Core Music Standard: Responding Analyze: Analyze how the structure and context of varied musical works inform the response. Interpret: Support interpretations of musical works that reflect creators and/or performers expressive intent. Evaluate: Support evaluations of musical works and performances based on analysis, interpretation, and established criteria. Core Music Standard: Connecting Connecting 11: Relate musical ideas and works to varied contexts and daily life to deepen understanding.

RESOURCES VIDEO RESOURCES Grandmaster Flash The Message (1982) Grandmaster Flash Musical Influences (2012) Grandmaster Flash Inventing a Hip Hop Sound (2000) South Bronx, New York City Late 1970s FEATURED PEOPLE DJ Kool Herc Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five HANDOUTS Handout 1: Map of New York City Handout 2: Bronx Demographics 1960-2000 Handout 3: NYC Timeline 1960s-1970s Handout 4: The Message Lyric Excerpts