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Cornell U Acquires Hip-Hop Collection; Bambaataa Hosts Roundtable

Thursday, October 23, 2008 2:46 PM | 15 comments
By Tai Saint Louis

Cornell University’s Ithaca, New York campus is set to host two days of performances and discussions with some of Hip-Hop’s pioneers next week, to mark the school’s historical acquisition of a collection of documents from Hip-Hop’s early days.

 

The collection, titled “Born in the Bronx: The Legacy and Evolution of Hip Hop,” was recently presented to the school library’s Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections as a gift from author and collector Johan Kugelberg.

 

It consists of almost one thousand sound recordings, textile art, books and magazines, as well as the archives of Bronx photographer Joe Conzo, Jr. and more than five hundred original flyers designed by pioneering flyer designers like Buddy Esquire and others.

 

The “Born in the Bronx” collection will serve as the foundation for Cornell’s growing Hip-Hop collection.

 

The two-day conference and celebration will kick off Friday afternoon (October 31) with a roundtable discussion led by pioneering DJ and artist Afrika Bambaataa.

 

Bambaataa will be joined by other pioneers, including Grandmaster Caz, Grandwizzard Theodore, Popmaster Fable, Tony Tone, Disco Wiz, and Kool Lady Blue.

 

Other speakers at the event will include author Jeff Chang and Conzo, who, along with Bambaataa, contributed to Kugelberg’s 2007 book Born in the Bronx: a Visual Record of the Early Days of Hip-Hop.

 

“By paying tribute to those who laid the foundation, we tell our own history,” said Bambaataa of the event. “Preserving Hip-Hop’s early years will help future generations understand the places they come from.”

 

The discussions will be held from 3 - 6:30 pm at Bailey Hall, with performances by a select group of artists starting at 8:30 pm on Friday evening.

 

Additional performances will be held on Saturday (November 1) from 9:15 am to 3:30 pm. All events are free and open to the public.

 

“We want the community at large to celebrate Hip-Hop’s contributions to American culture through a better understanding of its origins, which are the focus of this unique collection,” added Katherine Reagan, curator of Rare Books & Manuscripts at Cornell University Library.

 

The Cornell celebration comes just in time to usher in Hip-Hop History Month, which is recognized by the Universal Zulu Nation as the entire month of November.

 

It is so designated in recognition of the official birthday of the Universal Zulu Nation, founded by Afrika Bambaataa on November 12, 1973.

 

November 12, 1974 is also recognized as the official birthday of Hip-Hop.


Comments

 

Haughville said:

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if you see a hater point'em out!
October 23, 2008 2:57 PM
 

Eight Mile Road Music News » Cornell U Acquires Hip-Hop Collection; Bambaataa Hosts Roundtable said:

October 23, 2008 3:07 PM
 

MRGODBYROAD said:

WOW!!! WISH I COULD BE THERE!
October 23, 2008 3:08 PM
 

MRGODBYROAD said:

WOW!!! WISH I COULD BE THERE!
October 23, 2008 3:09 PM
 

Cephas said:

its good to see that Americas ivy league institutions arent as narrow minded as the people the produce.
October 23, 2008 4:00 PM
 

poe said:

October 23, 2008 5:27 PM
 

Cornell U Acquires Hip-Hop Collection; Bambaataa Hosts Roundtable | FuckTheSource.com | Hip-Hop 2.0 said:

October 23, 2008 6:13 PM
 

TRUTHFROMDABOOT said:

Cephas said:
its good to see that Americas ivy league institutions arent as narrow minded as the people the produce.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Slow down most ivy league graduates are liberal democrats with very open minds!!!!
October 23, 2008 7:30 PM
 

bigscosha115 said:

corprate take-over......hip hop is truly dead right now and cornell just stuck the dagger in the heart.......
October 23, 2008 9:13 PM
 

ejlpceo said:

Hip Hop has been corporate for a long time


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October 23, 2008 9:39 PM
 

Tye-Banks said:

Hip Hop forever.


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October 23, 2008 10:14 PM
 

QBoogieSSP said:

That's a good look for the culture/community overall ... http://www.myspace.com/sspsoundz
October 23, 2008 10:28 PM
 

WhatIsReallyreal said:

@bigscosha115, you said "hiphop is truly dead right now and cornell just stuck the dagger in the heart"

What the fuck are you talkin about?? Whether you like Cornell or collegiate institutions or not is up to you, but by doing this they are HELPING to preserve the culture, not hurting or erasing it. I fail to understand why their decision to save portions of hip-hop's past and treat them as artifacts worthy of respect and study is sticking a dagger in the heart of anything....If they collected and burned these things, then yeah, it would be a problem, but they are doing the exact opposite....

While it could be argued that placing them in an institution of higher learning is somehow isolating them and divorcing them from the very culture that created them, I don't buy that. Most people, including hip-hop fans, have no idea who Afrika Bambaataa is or what he meant to hip-hop/rap culture. Cornell is respecting this dude and the earlier movements of hiphop.

Your "corporate takeover" talk is uninformed and misguided. This isn't the same thing as MTV,BET, and Viacom perpetuating black stereotypes, discourage artistic ingenuity, and generally polluting the way hip-hop is viewed and practiced....

October 24, 2008 1:09 AM
 

cheeto said:

good to see respect for the elders



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October 24, 2008 5:20 AM
 

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October 24, 2008 6:36 AM
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