Kool
DJ Kurt reflects on the good ole days and praises more contemporary MCs like
Busta Rhymes and Eminem.
During a recent stop in Sydney, Australia as part of Kurtis Blow "s 30th Anniversary
Tour of The Breaks, the legendary NY rapper gave some insight on the past and
future of hip-hop.
He reminisced about the beginnings of genre, first explaining that living conditions
in 70s New York triggered the birth of a movement. “New York was in a
big time state of poverty during the early "70s,” Kurtis said. “Hip
Hop came out of those times, just the living conditions were really really bad
and the creative juices start to flow whenever there is oppression or just hard
times.”
Blow credited films with making the term “Hip-Hop" popular at the
time, though it began on a more grassroots level. “They started calling
it Hip Hop after the first couple of movies were being made like Beat Street,”
th legend explained. “The phrase was coined back then but we also have
the great Lovebug Starski and Keith Cowboy - R.I.P. - who were two MCs who actually
came up with the term before the records, but the name actually caught on after
the movies came out.”
Listing iconic figures like James Brown and The Isley Brothers, he recounted
the big push to make music. “We were the first rappers, so it was basically
the music during that time that inspired us and motivated us to get out and
emcee," and then gave credit to contemporary rappers for their progress.
In addition to respecting artists such as Jay-Z, Nas, 50 Cent and Eminem, Kurtis
Blow also happens to think that “Busta Rhymes is highly underrated as
a rapper.”