Stop calling my culture "Hip-Hop"

kingdizzy01

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ATX x Jersey Devil x Little Caribbean/Flatbush MF
So you ARE a bytch just looking for attention...

Word...
Well...
bytch nikka. I can tell you whatever you missing. I can point you to the post. Or I can tell you some books you can read on your own. no sense in being a bytch and ignorant.

tell me what im missing.

please point me to the post.

list the books.

you cant, because you have no idea what you are talking about. :umad:
 

Juneya

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Okay.


So now what?

Now we educate the lost brothers that think they are better than everyone else because they invented rap

Now we visit New Orleans Haiti and Cuba and we learn more of our actual history and orgins of our music.

Now we progress the music by eliminating the regional hate. By eliminated the "hip hop" purist. They can stop being so fukking annoying to everyone else. Once they let go of the UNTRUE fact that they invented our culture.

Now we travel to Congo square and we connect our history... Instead of this self hating shyt where we don't acknowledge the music types of previous generations... Mostly because they talk down and don't acknowledge the music of this generation.

Once we have a correct understanding of our history. A respect can grow. A connection can grow. Not just a generational one. But one between blacks of the US and blacks of Jamaica, Brazil... A shared culture... A united voice.
 

Taadow

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Now we educate the lost brothers that think they are better than everyone else because they invented rap

Now we visit New Orleans Haiti and Cuba and we learn more of our actual history and orgins of our music.

Now we progress the music by eliminating the regional hate. By eliminated the "hip hop" purist. They can stop being so fukking annoying to everyone else. Once they let go of the UNTRUE fact that they invented our culture.

Now we travel to Congo square and we connect our history... Instead of this self hating shyt where we don't acknowledge the music types of previous generations... Mostly because they talk down and don't acknowledge the music of this generation.

Once we have a correct understanding of our history. A respect can grow. A connection can grow. Not just a generational one. But one between blacks of the US and blacks of Jamaica, Brazil... A shared culture... A united voice.

Naw, this ain't gon' happen bruh.
 

Juneya

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tell me what im missing.

please point me to the post.

list the books.

you cant, because you have no idea what you are talking about. :umad:


Lol silly c00n.
You think we got all these pages in and I made all this up...

Book list

Third coast
Capoeria - roots of the dance-fight-game
African heritage and memoirs of slavery in Brazil and the south Atlantic world
The world that made New Orleans- from Spanish silver to Congo square
Tell my horse- by Zora Neale Hurston about Haitian rituals.
The book of Luke had a lot of history in it
Cuba and it's music - has A TON OF HISTORY


Illmaticdelta posted a bunch of videos.

I posted a couple Wikipedia quotes

Just read something nikka.
 

Juneya

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It's already happening.
But if you got 30,000 post and can't give the site you on 5 dollars to remain CAC ad free... Then I wouldn't expect you to be the type of nikka that could see black people progressing through culture and music despite...
 

kingdizzy01

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ATX x Jersey Devil x Little Caribbean/Flatbush MF
Lol silly c00n.
You think we got all these pages in and I made all this up...

Book list

Third coast
Capoeria - roots of the dance-fight-game
African heritage and memoirs of slavery in Brazil and the south Atlantic world
The world that made New Orleans- from Spanish silver to Congo square
Tell my horse- by Zora Neale Hurston about Haitian rituals.
The book of Luke had a lot of history in it
Cuba and it's music - has A TON OF HISTORY


Illmaticdelta posted a bunch of videos.

I posted a couple Wikipedia quotes

Just read something nikka.

none of that has to do with breakin. show me in what book, page, paragraph, date of publication that says breakin came from capoeria. and dont give me that competitive dance talk, we talkin about breakin specifically.

like i said, you just sayin shyt for the sake of sayin shyt. :umad:
 

Juneya

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I expect you to be some crab in a barrels type nikkas.
I expect you to be an elitist because a white man said so.
I expect you to be a hater.
I expect all that from a lot of you weak minded confused and ignorant ass nikkas.
 

Juneya

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none of that has to do with breakin. show me in what book, page, paragraph, date of publication that says breakin came from capoeria.

like i said, you just sayin shyt for the sake of sayin shyt. :umad:

Lmfao. Capoeria is African.
Where nikkas spin on there heads and do kicks. For fun.
To music beats.

Which white man do you need to tell you? I'll go request him.
 

Juneya

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Lemme go google search... FOR YOU... So a white man can tell you how similar you are to a Brazilian African. So you will believe it.
 

Juneya

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Here is one:
Capoeira and breakdancing contain similarities in their footwork, groundwork, and upside-down movements, leading some to theorize that capoeira gave birth to breakdancing. Capoeira arrived in New York City with Mestres Jelon Viera and Loremil Machado in the 1970s, around the time of breakdancing’s origin. However, the earliest bboys had little to no contact with capoeira. Instead, they took inspiration from kung-fu films and put their own personal flair into the movements. Although capoeira and breakdancing may have influenced each other when practitioners of the arts met and exchanged movements, it seems more likely that breakdancing developed on its own rather than being born exclusively from capoeira. But the two are similar in that both represent a way that people living on the margins of society have used movement, music, and creativity to deal with their situation. - See more at: Is capoeira related to breakdancing? | Capoeira Connection
 
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