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Yes Yes Y'Allby Jim Fricke
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:Hip-hop today is ubiquitous. Like rock and roll before it, it has transformed music, art, dance, and fashion while capturing millions of listeners. But, the real story of hip-hop's birth — a cultural innovation that rose from the creativity and vision of street kids surviving in the bombed-out Bronx of the 1970s — has never been told. Until now.
Yes Yes Y'all is the first and only account of hip-hop's origins, told in the never-before-published words of its founders and stars and highlighted by hundreds of vintage photos and flyers. With over fifty of hip-hop's stars and trailblazers sounding forth, including Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa, Kool DJ Herc, Melle Mel, Busy Bee, Grand Wizard Theodore, Grandmaster Caz, Rahiem, Fab 5 Freddy, Tony Tone, Kool DJ AJ and DMC, Yes Yes Y'all crackles with vitality, humor, and menace. Documenting all things hip-hop from the influence of gang culture on the early scene to B-boy and DJ culture to its commercial breakout with the release of Rapper's Delight to its spread worldwide, Yes Yes Y'all is the most authoritative record of the genesis of b-boys, graffiti, rap, and all aspects of hip-hop culture ever assembled-the ultimate history of an urban American revolution. Documenting hip-hop's remarkable genesis for the very first time, this book tells its stories in voices that bristle with vitality, character, humor, and menace, tracing the music from DJ Kool Herc's first parties in 1973 through the release of "Rapper's Delight" in 1979 and the rise of the new school in the mid-'80s. Fricke and Ahearn weave an electric narrative from the never-before-heard accounts of over fifty of hip-hop's founders and stars, old school and new, including Afrika Bambaataa, Grandmaster Flash, DJ Kool Herc, Melle Mel, Grand Wizard Theodore, Grandmaster Caz, Rahiem, Fab 5 Freddy, Tony Tone, and DMC. A wealth of previously unseen photographs, flyers, and posters illustrate the text; noted critic Nelson George introduces it all. "The action in the Bronx was dominated by the b-boys, and the DJ's job was to keep the party going and periodically create the musical space for the b-boys to take over and do their thing. Yes Yes Y'All is a chorus of voices, a tale of artistry in the face of extraordinary adversity, and the definitive history of a revolution created with nothing more than a microphone, a turntable, and a dance floor. Review:"This is the book I've been waiting for! The real story about the real pioneers. Back to the future, before 'Rapper's Delight,' before 'Sucker MCs,' before Rap became a multi-billion dollar global youth culture. Yes Yes Y'all is the real blueprint for how it all began." Fab 5 Freddy Review:"Finally, a book that allows the creators of hip-hop culture to speak for themselves! Yes Yes Y'all captures the creative energy, artistic vitality, and urban chaos that fueled the most ingenious expressions of pop culture in the last quarter of the twentieth century. Yes Yes Y'all is a landmark book." Michael Eric Dyson, author of Holler If You Hear Me: Searching for Tupac Shakur Review:"For anyone who believes hip hop's best original school stories have already been told, Yes Yes Y'all is the funky fresh stuff epiphanies are made of; an essential b-boy document." Chairman Jefferson Mao, co-author of ego trip's Book of Rap Lists Review:"Back in the day when keepin' it real was a way of life, not a cliché, hip hop attended the old school. Yes Yes Y'all is a fly refresher course, straight from the horses' grill. Get your mind right!" Dr. Todd Boyd, author of the New H.N.I.C. and Am I Black Enough For You? and professor of Critical Studies at USC Synopsis:Hip-hop today is ubiquitous, dominating not only the music industry but also popular culture around the world. This work tells its stories, tracing the music from DJ Kool Herc's first parties in 1973 through the release of "Rapper's Delight" in 1979 and the rise of the new school in the 1980s. About the Author Jim Fricke is Senior Curator at the Experience Music Project (EMP) in Seattle, Washington. He was curator of the Hip-Hop Nation exhibit, and has been active in the Northwest music scene for more than twenty-five years. He lives in Seattle. Charlie Ahearn is a filmmaker whose 1982 landmark film Wild Style has become a hip-hop classic. He lives in New York City. What Our Readers Are SayingAdd a comment for a chance to win!
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