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Beat This: A Hip Hop History (1984)

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    (police sirens)
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    ♪ ("Renegades of Funk" by Afrika Bambaataa
    & Soulsonic Force) ♪
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    ♪ From a different solar system
    many, many galaxies away ♪
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    ♪ We are the force of another creation ♪
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    ♪ A new musical revelation ♪
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    ♪ And we're on this musical message ♪
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    ♪ To help the others listen ♪
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    ♪ Improve momentum and ♪
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    ♪ seek the electronic chance ♪
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    ♪ - Like
    - Astrology ♪
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    ♪ - Like
    - Technology ♪
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    ♪ - Like
    - God's Creation ♪
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    ♪ - Like
    - The Zulu station ♪
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    ♪ - Like
    - To the nation ♪
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    ♪ - Like
    - Destroy all nations ♪
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    ♪ - Like
    - Militants ♪
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    ♪ - (Like
    - Down in sand ♪
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    ♪ - (Like!)
    - Through changes, ♪
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    ♪ nothing stays the same ♪
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    ♪ Oh renegades ♪
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    (music)
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    "The Renegades of Funk," Afrika Bambaataa
    and the Soulsonic Force.
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    Well, good evening and welcome to another
    GBE—a Gary Bird experience—
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    as the funky forces of the universe
    come together
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    for us to bring another set of
    Big Apple jams your way.
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    In a few minutes my engineer Jonathan E
    at Master Control and I gonna go
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    looking for something perfect,
    the perfect beat for you,
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    especially if you are up at Planet Rock,
    The Bronx, or the Zulu Nation,
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    as in dance formation tonight.
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    Speaking of dance, have you heard about
    he WLIB breakdance contest?
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    You have a chance
    to win a trip to the mother country;
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    the place that sent Afrika Bambaataa
    into a galaxy far, far away.
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    Who knows? You could be on your way
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    into the land of the pyramids,
    checking it all out
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    ♪ ("Planet Rock" by Afrika Bambaataa
    & Soulsonic Force instrumental) ♪
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    (voice fades in)
    ...planets, especially Venus and Jupiter,
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    can be seen in the sky
    not long after sunset.
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    With the glow of twilight
    still lingering,
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    and a dash of near-sightedness,
    and some good old human imagination,
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    and some well intentioned people
    will even claim it's "shooting off sparks—
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    it's as big as a basketball, it has
    landing lights", and so on.
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    Hard to believe? Well, the most
    frequently reported UFOs on record
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    are the planets Venus and Jupiter.
    IFOs, once you know a little about the
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    autokinetic illusion and the night sky.
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    July 24th, 1948.
    An Eastern Airlines flight is en route
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    from Houston to Atlanta, when suddenly...
    (otherworldly electronic noise)
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    The flight crew, all intelligent, trained
    observers, reported the—
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    (cut off by strange beeps
    and sounds)
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    (banging on timpani)
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    (robotic voice)
    I am the funk overlord.
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    I have come to take control
    of your life.
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    Who controlled the present,
    controls the past.
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    Who controlled the past,
    controls the future. Funk.
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    ♪ (upbeat electronic music) ♪
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    So this is how Bamb sends 'em
    to the street, hip hoppin',
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    lookin' for the perfect beat.
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    Rappin', scratchin', breakin', shakin',
    the success of hip hop is in the making.
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    On TV and on radio, you hear and
    see it, wherever you go.
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    Graffiti began on the walls, and now
    it's sold in stores and malls.
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    From uptown to Fifth Avenue,
    the journey took a heck of a crew,
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    from a neighborhood and a street scene,
    all around the world to the silver screen.
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    ♪ ("To Be Or Not To Be (The Hitler Rap)"
    by Mel Brooks) ♪
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    ♪ Well hi there, people
    You know me ♪
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    ♪ I used to run a little joint
    called Germany ♪
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    ♪ I was number one
    The people's choice ♪
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    ♪ And everybody listened to
    my mighty voice ♪
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    ♪ My name is Adolf,
    I'm on the mic ♪
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    ♪ I'm gonna hip you to the story
    of the New Third Reich ♪
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    ♪ It all began down in Munich town ♪
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    ♪ And pretty soon the word
    the word started gettin' around ♪
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    ♪ So I said to Martin Boorman,
    I said "Hey Marty," ♪
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    ♪ "Why don't we throw a little
    Nazi party?" ♪
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    ♪ So we had an election,
    well, kinda sorta ♪
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    ♪ And before you knew it,
    hello new order! ♪
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    ♪ To all those mothers in the Fatherland ♪
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    ♪ I said "Achtung baby!
    I got me a plan." ♪
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    ♪ They said "What you got, Adolf?
    What you gonna do?" ♪
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    ♪ I said "How about this one?
    World War Two." ♪
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    ♪ To be or not be ♪
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    (music fades, record scratching)
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    All that scratchin' is makin'
    me itch!
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    ♪ (mixed-up music) ♪
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    What once was in the underground
    has now, by elements, been found
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    like anywhere you see fresh meat,
    the culture vultures come to eat.
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    Now with hip hop on his lip,
    Malcolm McLaren begins his trip,
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    how he went to the Planet Rock
    and came back to Britain in future shock,
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    'cuz though he thought punk was the top,
    he found the groove was in hip hop.
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    ♪ (hip hop music) ♪
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    (Malcolm McLaren) I was, uh...
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    working with a group called
    Bow Wow Wow.
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    I came over there because they were
    selling some RCA records
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    and I was looking to put them on
    in a haul in Manhattan somewhere,
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    but the terrible thing was I was really
    stuck for a responsible
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    and interesting and exciting
    kind of opening act.
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    And there was nothing happening in
    New York at all, then a friend of mine
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    introduced me to a guy who I met on
    the street, somewhere down 5th Avenue,
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    who told me about an incredible scene
    that was happening.
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    Not in Manhattan, but out in a suburb
    known as the South Bronx.
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    And he said if I'd like,
    I could come down on a Saturday night
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    where they were holding a big party
    and I would see something
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    that couldn't possibly have
    ever existed in England.
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    And I decided to actually pitch up
    with him on Saturday night.
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    Upon arriving, the party—
    unbeknownst to me,
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    I thought it was gonna be inside
    a house—was actually
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    out in the open,
    in a wasteland,
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    surrounded by these huge
    fired out condominiums.
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    And there, in the midst of it, was about a
    thousand kids, and I couldn't believe it,
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    I was very, very worried being the
    only white guy there,
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    the cab driver giving me the signature
    that I should put my dollars in my socks.
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    (stammers, laughs) Nevertheless,
    I escorted myself across the road
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    with this guy, made my way through
    the crowd, pushing and shoving
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    until I got to the decks where
    the music was coming from.
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    Shook hands with this huge fat guy,
    who later became known to me
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    as a guy called Afrika Bambaataa.
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    And what I witnessed was a various
    group of different young kids,
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    who were popping in and out amongst
    the decks, messing about with records.
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    Now, as far as I could see, it was
    extraordinary, because the sound
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    coming out was totally inarticulate,
    it was a load of rough noises,
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    noises that sounded a little like guitar,
    but sort of like a concrete chisel
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    sound, right?
    And the sound, I realized,
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    was actually coming from the way they
    were messing around with their hands
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    on the decks, moving records backwards
    and forwards.
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    But they weren't just doing it with one
    record, they were doing it with two,
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    and they were mixing across one
    to the other.
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    In fact, it was making music
    out of other people's music.
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    ♪ (mixed music plays, repeating) ♪
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    As time went on, and I stuck around
    for an hour or so, the crowd was extremely
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    volatile, and at times would jump
    into pitch battles.
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    But at one point or another, people
    would move to the side,
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    and a group of kids would start
    freaking out in the middle,
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    doing all this incredible
    gymnastic dancing.
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    ♪ (distorted, choppy music plays
    over beat) ♪
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    What McLaren saw was called "hip hop",
    energy and motion that you could not stop.
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    Demanding all of your imagination
    if you were to share in the celebration.
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    It wasn't enough to just be good,
    you had to be super bad,
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    'cuz when you hit that floor,
    your reputation
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    was just about all you had.
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    (McLaren) I think hip hop is being
    in control of your body,
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    that's the whole art of it,
    actually understanding that
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    you're much bigger than you are.
    It's a demonstration of your prowess,
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    if you haven't got a dime in your pocket,
    the one thing you can do on
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    Madison Avenue is spin on your head
    and show all the white honkies
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    moving out of the Chase Manhattan Bank
    on their lunch time and say
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    "Beat that, and if you can't, here's
    my cap. Give me a few dollars."
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    (train moving, faint commotion)
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    But the story of hip hop doesn't
    belong in New York, LA, or London,
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    that's wrong. The true story begins in
    devastation, bad housing, gang wars,
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    and desperation. In the Bronx ghetto,
    or Planet Rock.
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    Let's take a minute and
    turn back the clock.
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    ♪ (hip hop music) ♪
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    To the first hero of the hip hop groove,
    the man who made the people move.
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    From Jamaica he came with
    a sense of rhythm,
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    and what he brought to the Bronx
    was a sound system.
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    Music he played made life work,
    and made him a legend:
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    Kool DJ Herc.
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    ♪ (hip hop music) ♪
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    When Kool Herc have a party,
    everybody be there.
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    Lot of people say I'm fun, big fun.
    That was the talk for the whole weekend
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    or the whole summer,
    "Where did you party?"
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    "I was partying with Kool Herc, man."
    Ghetto block party, you know,
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    tennis court, disco... a lot of
    other things, too.
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    ♪ ("Space Cowboy" by Jonzun Crew) ♪
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    I like to buy my records...
    right over here.
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    But now it's not there no more,
    called "Sounds and Things."
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    There used to be a ballroom up there,
    I used to play—matter of fact,
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    I play up there for the transit authority
    dinner, one time, and...
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    Mario Cuomo was there before
    becoming governor. Basically, right here.
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    A place called "Galaxy 2000."
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    They had a big shootout here one time.
    Same time I played at Bronx River.
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    I came back, I'd seen the canopy knocked
    down, the fire escape was let down,
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    and I knew something was wrong.
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    The Bronx is on the uplift.
    A lot of places are being rehabilitated.
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    I think there's still more that could
    be done. A whole lot.
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    All those unforgettable promises...
    From the South Bronx when the Carters
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    came over.
    Made out of iron, right?
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    Well, I never left the Bronx,
    and I love the Bronx.
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    I don't wanna leave.
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    ♪ (upbeat funky music) ♪
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    What Herc did was throw down the sound
    of forgotten heroes, like James Brown,
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    and separate the good stuff from the junk,
    with the emphasis on a lot of funk.
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    And in the middle of a funky sound,
    Coke La Rock, his rapper,
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    would go to town.
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    The music was hot, very loud,
    with participation to excite the crowd.
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    Then Herc would drop a mighty blast
    with a golden oldie from music past.
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    (motor rumbling)
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    Sedgwick, 1520... over 10 years ago.
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    Ooh, look at that medallion,
    what happened to that?
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    It got stolen. That was my badge,
    like a sheriff.
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    Place was packed.
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    How was it?
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    It was pretty good. Everybody showed up,
    had a good time.
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    Everybody put on their best that day.
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    All of the sudden—I don't know,
    all of the sudden...
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    Something happened, made it so that we
    didn't get into the parties no more.
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    I got injured. I got stabbed.
    Fatally stabbed, though.
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    And that just put a hole
    through the whole thing.
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    I walk right into it, and I just...
    I didn't know where the knife came from.
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    I just literally walk into it.
    I was hit four times.
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    The last of them pierced my hand,
    and it went all the way through.
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    It shouldn't have happened.
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    And that does draw me a show,
    you know?
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    I just stopped. I stopped playing for—
    I didn't accept a gig, I wasn't...
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    I was not out in the public eyes
    too much.
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    That was the rise of a lot of DJs.
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    Herc wasn't on the scene,
    this is our chance.
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    And a lot of them dashed in and
    capitalized on it.
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    DJs and the music that they used
    to come to hear at my party was
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    all over now.
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    Kool Herc is not a stepping stone,
    he's a horse that can't be rode,
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    and a bull that can't be stopped,
    there ain't a disco I can't rock. Rock on.
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    It could've been on my obituary that
    this was the guy who started this,
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    this was what he did.
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    Though he may be a fallen hero,
    all will forever say
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    that in the history of hip hop,
    he was its number one DJ.
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    You see, Herc had started something
    that not even his enemies wanted to stop.
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    Kool DJ Herc had launched the birth of
    a movement called hip hop.
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    In the middle of Savage Skulls and on
    the top of the hill with the Seven Crowns,
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    the gangs were in the Bronx
    and they were seriously getting down.
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    It was little Vietnam, where even the
    police watched out for raids,
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    and were the baddest of them all was a
    street gang known as the Black Spades.
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    And from them emerged a boy
    who became the adopted father
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    of the hip hop generation,
    a Zulu Afrika Bambaataa.
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    I got into street gangs, the Black Spades,
    a lot of other groups I was in
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    before I became a Spade,
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    I was Savage No Mans
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    and um, but Spades was one of the groups
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    that I really loves a lot.
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    There was a lot of unity in the group
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    [clears throat]. It was one of the most
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    hated groups in the whole city cause all
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    it was about was um, trouble and stuff
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    and aesthetic. But it was one of the most
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    organized Black youth groups. As for, if
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    you mess with them, they would mess with
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    you. Plus in that year, 1975, um, one of
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    the brotha's that was close to me, that
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    lived with me for about two years, by the
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    name Solsky, got shot by the police on
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    Pelham Bay, along with some other members
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    of the Spades. And um, he died and this
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    other member died and one survived.
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    ♪ (hip hop music plays in background) ♪
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    Narrator: The violent death of Bam's
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    best friend, marked for him the end of
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    the line. And he went back on a vision
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    that once had occurred in the back of
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    his youthful mind. A way to fight, yet
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    maintain peace. An impossible situation,
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    unless you could create something
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    powerful, like his memory of the Zulu
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    nation. [People chant over the sound of
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    hip hop music on TV]
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    ♪ (hip hop music plays) ♪
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    H. Rap Brown: I say violence is
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    necessary. Violence is a part of America's
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    culture, it is as American as Cherry Pie
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    American calls for Black people to be
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    violent. We will use that violence to
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    get ourselves up.
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    [voice fades to hip hop music]
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    Martin Luther King Jr.: will they be
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    able to sit down together in the name of
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    brotherhood. I have a dream. One day...
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    KKK member: Well basically, uh, my goal
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    in the clan is to bring about a
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    unification of all of the Anglo-saxon,
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    Protestant, American citizens into a
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    bond of unity to counter-act the
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    philosophies of the minority and...
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    Nelson Mandela: There are many people
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    feel that it is useless and futile for us
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    to continue talking peace and nonviolence
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    against a government whose reply is only
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    savage attacks on an unarmored,
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    defenseless people.
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    [radio static]
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    ♪ (hip hop music) ♪
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    Malcolm X: We are not human beings
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    unless we ourselves, band together and
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    do whatever, however, whenever,
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    is necessary to see that our lives
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    and our property is protected, and I
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    doubt that any person in here would refuse
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    to do the same thing, were he in the same
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    position. Or I should say, were he in the
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    same condition.
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    ♪ (hip hop music plays) ♪
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    Narrator: It was with the vision of the
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    Zulu nation, a trip to Africa, and a
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    death situation, that produced a man who
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    put on Zulu dress and began to transform
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    a violent mix.
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    ♪ (hip hop music plays) ♪
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    Bembala was always a music man,
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    a record collector who was a dj jammed.
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    Now he saw a new idea to use stand and
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    proud in his career, to put the Bronx
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    in a music trance and move from violence
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    to Zulu dance... And so it became hip to
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    hop in the land known as Planet Rock,
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    where gangs used to fight in the street
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    everyday. Now they began to compete
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    in a different way. As the dj's music
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    made the house shake, the dancers would
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    begin to break. Some electric boogie to
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    move like toys, others would spin and
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    became b-boys.
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    ♪ (hip hop beat) ♪
Title:
Beat This: A Hip Hop History (1984)
Description:

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Video Language:
English
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