Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Griot Tradition As Remixed Through Hip Hop

View through CrossRef
Although Hip Hop is known to come from the streets of South Bronx, New York, its origins go far deeper than that. Unconsciously, the innovative souls of the 1970s Hip Hop movement demonstrated the captivating, vibrational sound of the five regions in Africa: Northern Africa, Western Africa, Eastern Africa, Central Africa, and Southern Africa. Thus, The Griot Tradition as Remixed through Hip Hop: Straight Outta Africa fleshes out the common threads of Hip Hop’s creative genius across the African diaspora and provides an analytical rubric as a guide to a greater understanding of Hip Hop. The author, Frederick Gooding, examines why Hip Hop holds such an important place within contemporary culture in order to determine how a genre that was so controversial and marginal could become mainstream and central. Through the use of various genres, artists, styles, sounds, images, and rhetorical techniques, Gooding analyzes how Hip Hop, when seen through the lens of African connection, can be appreciated for its regenerative and connective power to create relationships between people both nationally and internationally.
Lexington Books
Title: The Griot Tradition As Remixed Through Hip Hop
Description:
Although Hip Hop is known to come from the streets of South Bronx, New York, its origins go far deeper than that.
Unconsciously, the innovative souls of the 1970s Hip Hop movement demonstrated the captivating, vibrational sound of the five regions in Africa: Northern Africa, Western Africa, Eastern Africa, Central Africa, and Southern Africa.
Thus, The Griot Tradition as Remixed through Hip Hop: Straight Outta Africa fleshes out the common threads of Hip Hop’s creative genius across the African diaspora and provides an analytical rubric as a guide to a greater understanding of Hip Hop.
The author, Frederick Gooding, examines why Hip Hop holds such an important place within contemporary culture in order to determine how a genre that was so controversial and marginal could become mainstream and central.
Through the use of various genres, artists, styles, sounds, images, and rhetorical techniques, Gooding analyzes how Hip Hop, when seen through the lens of African connection, can be appreciated for its regenerative and connective power to create relationships between people both nationally and internationally.

Related Results

Mix En Meng It Op: Emile YX?'s Alternative Race and Language Politics in South African Hip-Hop
Mix En Meng It Op: Emile YX?'s Alternative Race and Language Politics in South African Hip-Hop
This paper explores South African hip-hop activist Emile YX?'s work to suggest that he presents an alternative take on mainstream US and South African hip-hop. While it is arguable...
Rap/Hip-Hop
Rap/Hip-Hop
Rap evolved as a vernacular term used among African Americans to define a stylized way of speaking. Over the years, black radio disc jockeys, musicians, literary figures, and 1960s...
In Hip Hop Time
In Hip Hop Time
In Hip Hop Time goes beyond popular narratives of hip hop resistance to address Senegalese hip hop—Rap Galsen—as a musical movement deeply tied to indigenous performance practices ...
DXA-derived hip shape is associated with hip fracture: a longitudinal study of 38,123 UK Biobank participants
DXA-derived hip shape is associated with hip fracture: a longitudinal study of 38,123 UK Biobank participants
Abstract Despite advancements in fracture prediction tools and osteoporosis management, hip fractures remain a significant consequence of bone fragility, with a 22% one...
Báo cáo loạt ca: bướu sợi vỏ bào buồng trứng
Báo cáo loạt ca: bướu sợi vỏ bào buồng trứng
Mở đầu: Bướu sợi vỏ bào nằm trong nhóm bướu mô đệm-dây giới bào của buồng trứng, chiếm tỷ lệ thấp trong nhóm bướu tân sinh của buồng trứng. Bướu có dạng đặc và lành tính nhưng chẩn...
Sampling Myth
Sampling Myth
This chapter traces how the stories people tell through and about hip hop produce diasporic connections. It introduces two fundamental and interlinked origin myths that are central...
Producing Diaspora
Producing Diaspora
This chapter shows how palimpsestic practices of hip hop genre produce diasporic connections. It describes how hip hop practices of layering and sampling delink indigenous musical ...
Gendering Voice
Gendering Voice
Through a discussion of Gotal, a women’s collective, this chapter shows how gendered analysis problematizes constructions of hip hop as a youth music. While young urban men experie...

Back to Top