Yes indeedall this gate keeping most of the planet doesn't care about![]()

Yes indeedall this gate keeping most of the planet doesn't care about![]()
Letās say that this is true, yall gate keep West Indian background blacks out of it as well. Itās just not a realistic take in NYC during that time. Either that or the argument is setting a start date for the creation of hip hop to fit a particular narrative. To my knowledge both groups had been in NYC for decades alreadyBecause it's not true. To keep it short, Hispanic came along AFTER hiphop was up and running and created by Black Americans.
I can't believe people keep circling back around to this 50/50 shyt and we still have never seen the 50% the Latinos claim they brought to the creation of hiphop.
being somewhere doesn't mean shyt. And can we please not just circle back around to these "we lived in the same city" stances? White people lived in New York too...did they create hiphop?Letās say that this is true, yall gate keep West Indian background blacks out of it as well. Itās just not a realistic take in NYC during that time. Either that or the argument is setting a start date for the creation of hip hop to fit a particular narrative. To my knowledge both groups had been in NYC for decades already
This is a very weird question. They grew up in the same environment in NYC everyone else did that was an originator. Am I understanding this question right?
Hip hop was always more than just putting lyrics over a beat in those days
White people absolutely were not in the same spaces in the same ways blacks and Hispanics were. shyt even in the 90s and 2000s when I was still in NYC, certain neighborhoods had very little white presence. So your argument already sounds a bit suspect.being somewhere doesn't mean shyt. And can we please not just circle back around to these "we lived in the same city" stances? White people lived in New York too...did they create hiphop?
Also, there are multiple interviews from the Ricans that participated back in the day where they clearly state they got it from Black Americans...meaning Black people already had it up and running and some Latino kid saw them doing it and "discovered" it that day.
Also, you can see the elements of hiphop before it was called "hiphop" all over Black American culture. We can show you people rapping in black & white or on blues jive songs in the 20s and 30s. The Jubilaires were gospel quartet rapping. There's a reason all the early hiphop pioneers names were based on words like Funky or Disco. Where were the "Salsa Six" of the "Mambo Three" type of pioneer rap groups?
Not in the late 60s/early 70s when it formed. Young(er) New Yorkers look at it like shyt is like now when it clearly wasn't. The old schoolers say it themselves, but you don't listen. Just like Math. Loud and wrong.White people absolutely were not in the same spaces in the same ways blacks and Hispanics were. shyt even in the 90s and 2000s when I was still in NYC, certain neighborhoods had very little white presence. So your argument already sounds a bit suspect.
As to the rest of your post, nobody anywhere has ever said black Americans dont have a celebrated history in music that formed the basis for hip hop, but you all are the one excluding everyone else contributions to the art form. Itās crazy bc Caribbean background people and Latinos grew up as nothing but New Yorkers. They went to the same events, same parties, etc. The hip hop scene grew with everyone involved. Itās all love, never has been this disconnect Iām seeing online.
Itās a fools errand to try and pinpoint it to just one ethnicity in my opinion. New Yorkers started hip hop, period
We're the same fukking people. This whole FBA/ADOS shyt is stupid. Go dona DNA test. I literally have family in Oakland, NY, NC, Oklahoma, Iowa, Jamaica, Cuba, UK, Nova Scota, BC, Puerto Rico...
All descendants of slavery, all have the same African origins before we got here. Mannerisms, attitudes, style, body language, all the same.
Black people created most of todays music. Island music. Spanish music. Electronic music. We, not just American, but black people around the world, created majority of todays music.
People do this all the time with EVERYTHING when it comes to us so much thatās a bonding circkejerk. Itās the glue.White people absolutely were not in the same spaces in the same ways blacks and Hispanics were. shyt even in the 90s and 2000s when I was still in NYC, certain neighborhoods had very little white presence. So your argument already sounds a bit suspect.
As to the rest of your post, nobody anywhere has ever said black Americans dont have a celebrated history in music that formed the basis for hip hop, but you all are the one excluding everyone else contributions to the art form. Itās crazy bc Caribbean background people and Latinos grew up as nothing but New Yorkers. They went to the same events, same parties, etc. The hip hop scene grew with everyone involved. Itās all love, never has been this disconnect Iām seeing online.
Itās a fools errand to try and pinpoint it to just one ethnicity in my opinion. New Yorkers in the hood started hip hop
What you mean breh something got lost in translation there.Not in the late 60s/early 70s when it formed. Young(er) New Yorkers look at it like shyt is like now when it clearly wasn't. The old schoolers say it themselves, but you don't listen. Just like Math. Loud and wrong.
I acknowledge this point. Youāre right. We always acknowledge the origins. Black Americans have a wonderful history of music. Thatās knownPeople do this all the time with EVERYTHING when it comes to us so much thatās a bonding circkejerk. Itās the glue.
Then you look deeper with certain stuff and find Black American hands all over it in the beginning, people wanna āit belongs to everyone, canāt we just get along, culture is meant to be sharedā. Itās the same script by multiple ethnic groups and races when it comes to us. Thereās a Miles Davis quote but Miles shouldnāt have just made it about white people.
1)According to your logic "they lived in the New York/the Bronx at the time" should be a good enough argument for white people to claim hiphop as their creation, why all of a sudden the change?White people absolutely were not in the same spaces in the same ways blacks and Hispanics were. shyt even in the 90s and 2000s when I was still in NYC, certain neighborhoods had very little white presence. So your argument already sounds a bit suspect.
As to the rest of your post, nobody anywhere has ever said black Americans dont have a celebrated history in music that formed the basis for hip hop, but you all are the one excluding everyone else contributions to the art form. Itās crazy bc Caribbean background people and Latinos grew up as nothing but New Yorkers. They went to the same events, same parties, etc. The hip hop scene grew with everyone involved. Itās all love, never has been this disconnect Iām seeing online.
Itās a fools errand to try and pinpoint it to just one ethnicity in my opinion. New Yorkers in the hood started hip hop