Monday, May 21, 2007
Essay 3056
From The New York Times…
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Will Gentrification Spoil the Birthplace of Hip-Hop?
By DAVID GONZALEZ
Hip-hop was born in the west Bronx. Not the South Bronx, not Harlem and most definitely not Queens. Just ask anybody at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue — an otherwise unremarkable high-rise just north of the Cross Bronx and hard along the Major Deegan.
“This is where it came from,” said Clive Campbell, pointing to the building’s first-floor community room. “This is it. The culture started here and went around the world. But this is where it came from. Not anyplace else.”
O.K., Mr. Campbell is not just anybody — he is the alpha D.J. of hip-hop. As D.J. Kool Herc, he presided over the turntables at parties in that community room in 1973 that spilled into nearby parks before turning into a global assault. Playing snippets of the choicest beats from James Brown, Jimmy Castor, Babe Ruth and anything else that piqued his considerable musical curiosity, he provided the soundtrack savored by loose-limbed b-boys (a term he takes credit for creating, too).
Mr. Campbell thinks the building should be declared a landmark in recognition of its role in American popular culture. Its residents agree, but for more practical reasons. They want to have the building placed on the National Register of Historic Places so that it might be protected from any change that would affect its character — in this case, a building for poor and working-class families.
[Click on the essay title above to read the full story.]
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2 comments:
The fact that the West Bronx is gentrifying is the most interesting part of the story to me.
Another opportunity lost: the prewar apartments on the Grand Concourse made it the "Park Avenue of the Bronx" back in the day. Knew it was a matter of time till it would get discovered.
hiphop has been gentrified since the mid '90s... why not the birthplace?
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