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Spotlight on Rap: It's Just A Ghetto Thing

Hip hop is a musical genre which developed alongside Hip Hop culture, defined by key stylistic elements such as rapping, DJing, sampling, scratching and beatboxing. Hip hop began in the South Bronx in the 1970s. The term rap is often used synonymously with hip hop, but hip hop denotes the practices of an entire subculture.

Rapping, also referred to as MCing or emceeing, is a vocal style in which the artist speaks lyrically, in rhyme and verse, generally to an instrumental or synthesized beat. Beats, almost always in 4/4 time signature, can be created by looping portions of other songs, usually by a DJ, or sampled from portions of other songs by a producer. Modern beats incorporate synthesizers, drum machines, and live bands. Rappers may write, memorize, or improvise their lyrics and perform their works a cappella or to a beat.

Creation of the term hip hop is often credited to Keith Cowboy, rapper with Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five. However, Lovebug Starski, Keith Cowboy, and DJ Hollywood used the term when the music was still known as disco rap. It is believed that Cowboy created the term while teasing a friend who had just joined the U.S. Army, by scat singing the words "hip/hop/hip/hop" in a way that mimicked the rhythmic cadence of marching soldiers. Cowboy later worked the "hip hop" cadence into a part of his stage performance, which was quickly used by other artists such as The Sugarhill Gang in "Rapper's Delight".

Zulu Nation member Afrika Bambaataa is credited with first using the term to describe the subculture in which the music belonged; although it is also suggested that it was a derogatory term to describe the type of music. The first use of the term in print was in The Village Voice, by Steven Hager, later author of a 1984 history of hip hop.

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Top 5 For Friday

We have been listening to allot of NEW music this past week and have compiled the tracks that have received the most plays on our list.  This list does not reflect the most up-to-date releases but merely what we find ourselves gravitating to whenever music is part of our atmosphere. 

Take a look at our recommendations below.





You Are A Tourist by Death Cab For Cutie
Funk Of 40,000 Years by Michael Jackson
Trouble by Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs
Close To Everything by Mickey Moonlight
Alors On Danse by Stromae

Top 5 For Friday

We have been listening to allot of NEW music this past week and have compiled the tracks that have received the most plays on our list.  This list does not reflect the most up-to-date releases but merely what we find ourselves gravitating to whenever music is part of our atmosphere. 

Take a look at our recommendations below.





Night Time by Tracey Thorn
Know How by Kings of Convenience
Finnbikkjen by Casiokids
Midnight Ciry by M83
Always On by Silver Columns

Chromeo: The Remixes


Synth pop revisionist duo Chromeo formed in Montreal in the early 21st century, a project of Audio Research honchos Dave One and Pee Thug (news flash: not their given names). Dave handled the electronics; Pee was the frequently processed vocalist. From the beginning, Chromeo made it clear that artful detachment, cheesy electro-funk breakdowns, and gleaming plastic beats -- not serious intent or aggressive musical regime change -- were the name of their well-dressed game.

This summer, the party-starting, festival-happy Montreal plastic-funk duo Chromeo returns. On August 17, they'll release Business Casual, their third album and the follow-up to the 2007 breakthrough Fancy Footwork, via Atlantic.

click any track to listen

Top 5 For Friday

We have been listening to allot of NEW music this past week and have compiled the tracks that have received the most plays on our list.  This list does not reflect the most up-to-date releases but merely what we find ourselves gravitating to whenever music is part of our atmosphere. 

Take a look at our recommendations below.




Righteous Hit by Polographia
Last Words by Clubfeet
Everything Goes My Way by Metronomy
Down by Vindahl
It's A Bubble by Beni

Top 5 For Friday

We have been listening to allot of NEW music this past week and have compiled the tracks that have received the most plays on our list.  This list does not reflect the most up-to-date releases but merely what we find ourselves gravitating to whenever music is part of our atmosphere. 

Take a look at our recommendations below.




Glad I Met You by DGookin
Power Everything by Tanlines
The Automatic Process by Home Video
Vision Of Love by Bertrand Burgalat
Berimbau by Astrud Gilberto

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