Skip to the content

Menu
Skip to main content
Collections Menu
A Tribute to the King of the Flyer, Buddy Esquire: with the Brothers Disco/Funky 4 + 1, at the Ecstasy Garage, Bronx, NY, February 23, 1980
A Tribute to the King of the Flyer, Buddy Esquire: with the Brothers Disco/Funky 4 + 1, at the Ecstasy Garage, Bronx, NY, February 23, 1980

A Tribute to the King of the Flyer, Buddy Esquire: with the Brothers Disco/Funky 4 + 1, at the Ecstasy Garage, Bronx, NY, February 23, 1980

Participant Buddy Esquire
Performing artist Funky 4+1
DJ Brothers Disco
Venue Ecstasy Garage Disco
Date1980
Mediumink; paper (fiber product)
DimensionsOverall (HWD): 10 3/8 × 6 1/8 in. (26.3 × 15.5 cm)
Credit LineMoPOP permanent collection
Object number1999.757.37
Text Entries

Party flyers were a staple in the early years of Hip-Hop and hard-copy invitations were the main medium for communicating information and promoting an event. The flyers symbolized many key appearances, acts, conventions, DJ performances, and contests in the Hip-Hop scene. Many flyers were created by local graffiti artists such as Buddy Esquire and Phase 2. The flyers were often presented by Hip-Hop promoters, DJs, and MCs who hosted the parties. Money was given to the artist to draw creative art and graphics for about $40-$60 for approximately 1,000 party flyers. The parks’ open public spaces have provided the perfect venues for park jams, impromptu dance-offs, DJ battles, and rap battles that established the sound, fashion, art, and message of Hip-Hop. Most of the Hip-Hop parties were a space for positivity where many of the Hip-Hop community could escape the realities of racism that included police brutality, drug abuse, and gang violence in their surrounding communities.

The Ecstasy Garage had been originally used as an after-hour club founded and owned by Arthur Armstrong (Army, Art Armstrong). Mean Gene was the house DJ and eventually became the manager of the club. The first Ecstasy was on Jerome Ave, but the second Ecstasy Garage was located on Macomb’s Road. Arthur was the house DJ and at one point and time the Grand Wizzard Theodore. Ecstasy Garage Disco was open every Friday and Saturday and occasionally on Sundays.

Buddy Esquire (Lemoin Thompson, b.1958 – 2014) is a graphic designer from the Bronx. Producing 300 graphic materials in the form of flyers, Buddy Esquire was the most well-known show flyer artist in the Bronx in the early days of Hip-Hop, from 1978 to 1982. Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaataa, Kool Herc, the Funky 4 Plus 1, and the Cold Crush Brothers were among the Hip-Hop legends whose early performances were advertised on his flyers. He was self-taught and learned drawing and typography principles from books at his local library. Graffiti, Japanese anime, superhero comics, and Art Deco architecture were among his influences. Buddy Esquire's visual styles helped to set the tone for Hip-Hop, where his work used jukeboxes and historic theater marquees as inspiration.

Funky 4 + 1 included K.K. Rockwell (Kevin Smith, b. unknown), Sha-Rock (Sharon Green, b. 1962), Keith Keith (Keith Caesar, b. unknown), Rahiem (Guy Todd Wiliams, b. unknown) until 1979 when they decided to join Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, Lil’ Rodney C (Rodney Stone, b. unknown), MC Jazzy Jeff (Jeff Miree, b. 1962) D.J. Baron (Baron Chappell, b. unknown) and D.J. Breakout (Keith Williams, b. unknown). The Funky 4 + 1 is considered a legendary Hip-Hop group emerging out of the South Bronx, forming at the end of the Disco era in 1978. Funky 4 + 1 was one of the first battle groups, the first Rap group to have a female MC, the first Rap group to be signed by a major record label, and the first Rap group to perform live on national television (Funky 4 + 1 performed ‘That’s the Joint’ on Saturday Night Live, February 1981). Their debut single was the 15-min track “Rappin and Rocking the House” released in 1979, which was the same year they signed with Enjoy Records for three months then signed with Sugar Hill Records where they released “That’s the Joint” in 1980.

Promoter and DJ for Funky Four + 1. DJ Breakout and DJ Baron are true Hip-Hop pioneers and very important to this culture era and was known as the Brothers Disco. As promoters and DJs for the Funky 4 plus 1, the Brothers had the biggest sound system playing from park to park. The Brothers Disco were not cut masters like Grand Wizard Theodore, Grand Master Flash, or Charlie Chase rather, they promoted a lot of historical early Hip-Hop Park jams.

Party flyer listing performers, location and details of event. Yellow handbill with black artwork and text.  Upper left corner is a drawing of Mickey Mouse with a paintbrush in his hand, appearing to have painted the words "Buddy Esquire".  Under the Mickey Mouse drawing is an askew rectangle with "Ecstasy Garage Disco 1476 Jerome Ave" in it.
CopyrightThis work is issued under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License. For more information, go to https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
On View
Not on view
Advertisement for Hand-Drawn and Hand-Painted Art on Clothing by Artist Buddy Esquire
Buddy Esquire
Date: c. 1980
Medium: ink; paper (fiber product)
Object number: 1999.123.5
1st Annual Speed Skating Contest, at Skate Fever, New York, NY, October 30, 1985
Buddy Esquire
Date: 1985
Medium: ink; paper (fiber product)
Object number: 1999.261.17
C.C. Productions presents: A Bus Ride to the Sonnycroft Ponderosa, Wailkill, NY, January 22-24, 1982
Buddy Esquire
Date: 1982
Medium: ink; paper (fiber product)
Object number: 1999.123.14
The Brothers Disco, DJ Breakout, DJ Baron, The Funky 4 Plus 1, at Ecstasy Garage Disco, New York, NY, January 26, 1980
Jazzy Jeff
Date: 1980
Medium: ink; paper (fiber product)
Object number: 1998.802.16
The Brothers Disco: DJ Breakout, DJ Baron, the Funky 4 MCs, at Bronx H.S. of Science, Bronx, New York, NY, February 23, 1979
Brothers Disco
Date: 1979
Medium: ink; paper (fiber product)
Object number: 1999.123.24
TICKETS