Hip-Hop History Month: A Tribute To East Coast DJs Who Set The Standard

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STAT 411 Birth Of The Boom - Hip Hop Festival

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Hip-hop originating in The Bronx will always make the East Coast a focal point of the culture, especially when discussing the pillar of DJing. Even at its roots with late NYC club king Francis Grasso, credited as being the godfather of beatmatching and the club mix during the 1960s, the origins for any disc jockey will always trace back to the Atlantic Coast.

1520 Sedgwick Avenue Is Recognized As Official Birthplace Of Hip-Hop

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Photo of FURIOUS 5 and GRANDMASTER FLASH & THE FURIOUS and GRANDMASTER FLASH

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Funkmaster Flex And Kool DJ Red Alert Appear In New York

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Performs At The Marquee in New York City

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DJ Kool Herc, looking through his records, DJing, Blackpool, UK 07.10.2000

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East Coast DJs have a place in the culture from the very beginning, starting with that 1973 community room party at 1520 Sedgwick Ave hosted by the “Father of Hip-Hop” himself, DJ Kool Herc. Through his invention of “the break,” rap culture elevated in ways that provided the b-boys and b-girls at the helm of the movement something to, well, move to. One b-boy in particular, GrandMixer DXT, went on to mix things up even further as the first DJ to use a turntable as a musical instrument. The classic 1983 film Wild Style perfectly illustrates this era in hip-hop to a tee.

Salt-N-Pepa

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Ron Galella Archive - File Photos 2009

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Pete Rock & CL Smooth on the set of music video filming...

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Eric B & Rakim On 14th Street

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Kool G Rap and DJ Polo

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DJ Jazzy Jeff And The Fresh Prince Perform On Long Island

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From there, pioneers like Grandmaster Flash, DJ Grand Wizard Theodore, Kool DJ Red Alert and DJ Scratch were each creating core techniques to the craft — record scratching, punch phrasing, breaking the barrier of broadcast radio and even defining what a mixtape was were all part of the plan. As we moved from the late ’80s into the 1990s, a proverbial gold rush of DJs hailing from the East Coast enter the conversation and further pushed the genre forward. DJs are impacting the music industry in a huge way at this point, with legends like DJ Jazzy Jeff, the late Jam Master Jay, DJ Polo, Eric B., Pete Rock and DJ Spinderella each lending their turntable skills to the Billboard hits of Will Smith, Run-D.M.C., Kool G Rap, Rakim, CL Smooth and Salt-N-Pepa, respectively.

Big Daddy Kane Music Video Party

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Dana Dane Shoots

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Yung Wun Video Shoot

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Solo stars also found a way to highlight the DJ in their own way: Mister Cee got his own song on Big Daddy Kane’s debut album, Kid Capri lended heavily to the chorus of the late Big L’s debut single, Swizz Beatz gave DMX the “anthem” that jumpstarted his much-too-short career and the recently departed DJ Clark Kent helped Dana Dane strike gold on his debut LP. Others got in the game as artists themselves, primarily with DJ Premier and the legacy of Gang Starr. Red Alert’s reign on radio led to other impactful DJs that followed suit, including DJ Chuck Chillout and the inescapable signature bomb effects of Funkmaster Flex. DJ Stretch Armstrong took it a step further and brought college radio into the conversation during his days at Columbia University.

Portrait of DJ Premier of Gang Starr, 2008

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Patrick McMullan Archives

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Funkmaster Flex Portrait Session

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In a similar fashion, successors of Scratch elevated the mixtape era to peak levels: DJ Clue, DJ Green Lantern, DJ Whoo Kid, Statik Selektah, Tony Touch and the late DJ Kay Slay each had a tape series that kept the streets in a chokehold. Actually, the work each of these guys put in during the early to mid 2000s set them up to be the new age legends to those shaping their DJ careers in the East Coast today.

MTV2's 2$Bill Concert Series Presents Fabolous & Clipse with special guest N.E.R.D's Pharrell

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Magic Convention Tour

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Joey Bada$$ In Concert

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Scion and URB Magazine Present Ignition LA - Introducing a New Automotive Experience

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DJ Whoo Kid Performs at Pine Ridge Ski Resort Opening

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DJ Kay Slay's Birthday Party

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With the influx of rising East Coast DJs coming into the game today, from Austin Millz out of Harlem and Jam Master Jay’s son T.J. Mizell carrying on the legacy of both his father and the borough of Queens to the DMV’s own DJ B-Hen and genre-bending siren Suzi Analogue, let’s just say the art of mixing is in good hands.

They don’t call it the Beast Coast for nothing!

F1 Grand Prix of China

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MPTF's Annual NextGen Summer Party

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Diet Coke Flavor Room Hosted By Claudia Oshry (@GirlWithNoJob)

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Flipper's Roller Boogie Palace x adidas Originals 'Evening Dedicated To The Spectacular 70's' In London

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Enjoy this special Hip-Hop History Month salute to East Coast DJs with a selection of music below inspired by the mixmasters mentioned above:

Kool Herc

GrandMixer DXT

DJ Grand Wizard Theodore

Grandmaster Flash

Kool DJ Red Alert

DJ Scratch

DJ Chuck Chillout

DJ Jazzy Jeff

DJ Jam Master Jay

Spinderella

Mister Cee

Kid Capri

DJ Clark Kent

DJ Premier

DJ Polo

Swizz Beatz

Funkmaster Flex

DJ Stretch Armstrong

DJ Kay Slay

DJ Clue

DJ Green Lantern

DJ Whoo Kid

Tony Touch

Austin Millz

B-Hen

Suzi Analogue

T.J. Mizelll

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