Saturday, 22 July 2023

Hickey's On Your Ass


Dick Fontaine's 1984 documentary Beat This: A Hip-Hop History is very much the Beat Street to Style Wars' Wild Style: a corny companion-piece made by outsiders which still captures the magic of early 80s New York. Endure Gary Byrd's dad-rap narration and Afrika Baambaataa with 2 studded belts wrapped around his noggin so you can enjoy such highlights as a DJ cuttin' up Black Grass while the Rock Steady Crew strut their stuff, Kool Herc driving around the Bronx in a droptop Cadillac with gigantic speakers propped up in the back seat, DJ Jazzy Jay on the decks at a basketball court block party, graffiti artist Brim crossing the tracks of an elevated station like he's James Bond to the sound of Jonzun Crew's Space Is The Place, and the Cold Crush Brothers dressed like Rick James' Band doing a live routine over Jeckyll & Hyde's Gettin' Money. There's even an interview with the infamous N.Y vandal squad coppers Hickey & Ski who were later immortalised as Fred Flintstone & Barney Rubble on one of Seen's whole car trains.
Malcolm McLaren also pops up to talk about being in New York with Bow Wow Wow and ending up going to a block party deep in the rubble of the South Bronx where he met Afrika Baambaataa. This, of course, lead to McLaren importing Hip-Hop kulcha to Europe via his Buffalo Gals single/video. Back in the late 2000s ya boi Martaveli went to a screening of Dick Fontaine's 1988 follow-up documentary Bombin' hosted by Fontaine where he said he regretted including McLaren in Beat This because ol' Malcolm was "a culture vulture opportunist". O rly? You say opportunistic, we say gave the opportunity to Trevor Horn & Anne Dudley and The World's Famous Supreme Team to record classics like Buffalo Gals, D'ya Like Scratchin'?, World's Famous, and Hey DJ. Malcolm In The Middle™ of greatness: music which could have never existed without his galaxy brain impresario vision of putting Horn & Dudley with two New York radio DJs. Plus, if we're talkin' posh English blokes accusing each other of being "culture vulture opportunists" then what did Dick Fontaine ever do for Hip-Hop other than those two documentaries? Name 3 Ultramagnetic MC's songs, m8!

Needless to say, some of the Beat This scenes featuring that nonce Afrika Baambaataa have NOT aged well, particularly the one where he meets some young lads in a dark room and then takes them away with him. Cash Money was an army, Zulu Nation was a grooming gang.

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

Rap media rule 4082: Everybody is a culture vulture except you.

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

😄 Realest comment of the month.

Spartan said...

Hey DJ and World Famous are musical perfection.

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

Truly.

Dream Rap collaboration: 1985 MC Ricky D single over two Trevor Horn & Anne Dudley productions.

Anonymous said...

Seen is the goat graffiti artist.

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

He's definitely up there.

Yohan said...

Considering your love for early 80s rap (which is remarkable because the rap internet will have you mistakenly believe the early 80s in particular didn't produce anything of value which has aged well), I'm here to once again plug this excellent book: https://www.amazon.com/Early-Days-Hip-Hop-1982-84/dp/1916359825

Manages to capture the backdrop to all these amazing records and stories exceptionally well yo imho.

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

Oh yeah I still need to pick that up. Cheers for the reminder.

David said...

Have you seen "Big Fun in the Big Town"? Incredible early rap doc. (im going to post abt it on my substack soonish)

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

I have. Schoolly D live footage 😍

What's your Substack?

Anonymous said...

ddrake.Substack.com

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

Great Larry Smith post. Though I always think of him as less an auteur and more a partnership with Davy DMX. There's a postscript to be written about how their productions now seem to be more beloved in California than New York.

Big fan of him & Davy tailoring the Sucker M.C's drum pattern to the specifications of the other people they produced for in 1983: making it less stark for
Starski Live At The Disco Fever; adding some melody for Spoonie Gee's The Big Beat; slowing the tempo down slightly for Fearless Four's F-4000.

David said...

Good observation, I prolly should have mentioned Davy DMX more explicitly in the context of the Larry Smith formula but I am planning on revisiting Larry & doing Davy DMX posts as well as a part of the wider series of posts abt the era & pseudogenre CYBERFUNK

Kelvin Mack10zie said...

Can't wait for the post honouring Egyptian Lover as a #Cyberfunk pioneer 🤖