The Birth of Hip Hop, Disco and Punk" - How the squalid streets of '70s
New York gave birth to music that would go on to conquer the world -
punk, disco and hip hop.
In the 1970s the Big Apple was rotten to
the core, yet out of the grime, grit and low rent space emerged new
music unlike anything that had gone before.
Inspired by the
Velvet Underground, a new wave of 'punk' rock emerged in lower Manhattan
including The New York Dolls, The Ramones and the Patti Smith Group.
Meanwhile, downtown loft parties held by gay New Yorkers heralded the
birth of disco, which would eventually spawn the ultimate club for the
privileged few: Studio 54. The swanky mid-town discos were out of bounds
to black New York so in the Bronx DJs such as Kool Herc, Grandmaster
Flash and Afrika Bambaataa created their own parties, heralding the
birth of hip hop.
With David Johansen, Patti Smith, John Cale,
Richard Hell, Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa, Kool Herc, Nile
Rodgers, Chuck D, Tommy Ramone, Chris Stein, Fab 5. Freddy, Lenny Kaye,
Tina Weymouth, Chris Frantz, Syl Sylvain, Nicky Siano, David Mancuso, DJ
AJ, David Depino, Jayne County, Leee Childers, Nelson George, Victor
Bokris and Vince Aletti.
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