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Image Not Available for Chase and Tones's Anniversary Ball Featuring Kool Herc, Cold Crush Brothers, Tony Tone, Hoe Ave. Boys Club, Bronx, NY, December 12, 1982
Chase and Tones's Anniversary Ball Featuring Kool Herc, Cold Crush Brothers, Tony Tone, Hoe Ave. Boys Club, Bronx, NY, December 12, 1982
Image Not Available for Chase and Tones's Anniversary Ball Featuring Kool Herc, Cold Crush Brothers, Tony Tone, Hoe Ave. Boys Club, Bronx, NY, December 12, 1982

Chase and Tones's Anniversary Ball Featuring Kool Herc, Cold Crush Brothers, Tony Tone, Hoe Ave. Boys Club, Bronx, NY, December 12, 1982

DJ Kool DJ Herc
Guest performer Cold Crush Brothers
Host Tony Tone
Host Charlie Chase
Venue Hoe Avenue Boys Club
Date1982
Mediumink; paper (fiber product)
DimensionsOverall (HW): 8 1/2 × 5 7/16 in. (21.59 × 13.811 cm)
Credit LineMoPOP permanent collection
Object number1999.733.226
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.

Many of the original Hip-Hop parties took place at local roller rinks, community centers, parks, and clubs. Roller rinks were an important cultural site for fun in the late 70s and 80s where adults and teens would attend roller discos and Hip-Hop parties.  The space would be used as a place for DJs to spin, rappers to show their talents, and for breakers to showcase their dancing skills on the large skate floor. Community centers were another important space in the early years of Hip-Hop for youth to gather and escape their everyday life. Additionally, community centers and recreation centers were the original spaces where DJ Kool Herc would spin in his early era of DJing. The community centers such as the Bronx River Center and the PAL were usually located in the middle of the projects. But local promoters would give parties and give money back to the center for books and trips for the local kids in the community.

DJ Kool Herc is known as the founding father of Hip-Hop . Having Caribbean roots and growing up in the Bronx, Kool Herc (Clive Campbell, b. 1955) is known for cultivating the Hip-Hop genre with his DJing skills and parties that opened the space for youth parties starting in the late 1970s at 1520 Sedgwick Ave. Before becoming a DJ, he was a graffiti writer who wrote "Kool Herc."  He became popular as a DJ in the Bronx with his massive sound system that was affectionately dubbed "The Herculords." The birth of Hip-Hop ’s unique sound was Herc’s ability to enhance the sound of the speaker, connect two turn tables and used channel knobs as his mixer, an echo chamber and eight microphones so he can play music and talk to the crowd which was something people never experienced musically before. The new sonic skill that Herc emphasized during his DJ sets was the extension of the breakdown also known as the break. He began searching for disco, funk, rock, soul and Caribbean records because of the sound of their break which he then played two of the same records on the turn tables back-cueing a record at the beginning of the break that normally lasted five seconds where he began to extend them together. Kool Herc’s unique DJ style and ability to amplify speakers and having MCs on the mic revolutionized the way urban youth in the Bronx danced and listened to disco and funk music.

Cold Crush Brother’s original lineup consisted of DJ Tony Tone (Angelo King), Easy AD (Adrian Harris), DJ Charlie Chase (Carlos Mandes, b. 1959), Grandmaster Caz (Curtis Brown, b. 1960), Almighty KG (Kenneth Pounder), JDL (Jerry Dee Lewis) and Money Ray (Eric Hoskins). Whipper Whip (James Whipper) and DotA-Rock (Darryl Mason) were original members, but eventually, Whipper Whip and Dot-A-Rock left and joined the Fantastic Five, which they considered to be a more established group at the time. Soon, the group brought in Grandmaster Caz (formerly DJ Casanova Fly) who is known to be one of the top 50 MCs of all Time, and an inductee into the Technics DJ Hall of Fame and the Bronx Walk of Fame. The Cold Crush Brothers were known for their remarkable routines which included harmonies, melodies, and stage-stomping performances. The Cold Crush Brothers set the standard for emceeing. They built the reputation as the Rolling Stones of Hip Hop. Because of the attention they began to attract, many groups would try to battle them to gain rap credibility and Hip-Hop superiority.

Party flyer in black ink listing performers, location and details of event.
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/
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