Tag Archives: DJ Kool Herc

30May/26

Breaking Boundaries: How Beat Street and Breakin’ Exported Street Culture

The Phoenix of the Bronx: From 1970s Block Parties to the Olympic Games and Broadway

Sat, May 30 2026 /Mpelembe Media/ — The Origins of Street Dance Hip-hop dance originated in the 1970s as a powerful form of self-expression and community building for marginalized youth. In the South Bronx, African American and Puerto Rican teenagers developed breaking (b-boying/b-girling) as a creative outlet and a peaceful alternative to territorial gang violence. Concurrently, West Coast dancers in California independently invented “funk styles,” such as popping and locking, which were originally danced to funk music rather than hip-hop. Continue reading

14Aug/23

Hip-hop at 50: how the sights, sounds and moves of the music spread across the world

Adam de Paor-Evans, University of Plymouth

On August 11 1973, DJ Kool Herc and his sister Cindy threw the now legendary Back To School jam in the recreation room of 1520 Sedgewick Avenue in The Bronx, New York.

Herc’s party represented a coming together of music and the start of something new. The Bronx crowd did not want the dancehall sounds Herc had begun to play. They wanted soul and the tough percussion of funk. So, Herc changed up the sound and used the main switch for the lights like a strobe-light to add atmosphere. Little did they know, that his event would be commonly accepted by the hip-hop fraternity worldwide as the starting point of what was to become one of the most important creative movements of the last century.

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