(Full Video) Lord Jamar GOES OFF On KRS 1's Lies About Latino & Jamaicans Creating Hip-Hop

Ойын-сауық

Watch the full video of Lord Jamar setting the record straight on KRS 1's claims about Latinos and Jamaicans creating hip-hop. Don't miss out on this insightful discussion!
DONATIONS:
(Please donate whatever you can to help improve this channel.. Thank You In Advance)
Cash App: cash.me/$mikelarry16
Paypal: www.paypal.me/mikelarry1980
All Viral Access Media MERCH : my-store-cea77c-2.creator-spr...
Patreon : / ptahasar1980
Facebook: / all_viral_access_media...
Instagram: / all_viral_access_media...
Twitter: / mikelarry2010
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@allviralacces...
Rumble: rumble.com/user/MikeLarry80
Subscribe to my new channel All Viral Hip-Hop: / @lallviralhiphop80

Пікірлер: 852

  • @javierq9394
    @javierq93948 күн бұрын

    The annoying part is having a 16 year old in 2024 think he has more owness over the art than a 50 year old who was there .

  • @stylistjill
    @stylistjill9 күн бұрын

    It’s a shame that we cannot be the original creators of anything without somebody else thinking they created it. Thank you for speaking 100% facts .❤

  • @blacklight3596

    @blacklight3596

    8 күн бұрын

    No Jamaican is claiming hip hop; a genre that promotes nothing but death, degeneracy and self destruction. Grow up 😅

  • @MissRedWine
    @MissRedWine9 күн бұрын

    13:19 "how come black people aren't allowed to have anything for ourselves?" great question

  • @dadogolpeando9510

    @dadogolpeando9510

    9 күн бұрын

    Great question

  • @tadah21

    @tadah21

    9 күн бұрын

    The original man is feared by all the programming of society is becoming so obvious . Jamar is standing on his square💯

  • @YesMayhem7

    @YesMayhem7

    9 күн бұрын

    Struggle Olympics. They want any part of "Black" culture that can be monetized. They want the record contract, the out of the slum success story. At the same time they want to say we have no culture. I just finished watching a video on "Black" English. None of it makes sense to me, "I don't be got no." " I ain't be" this an that. Not a Black American in the video. Some foundation will give them money to put on "Black" Face.

  • @AlphonseWeebay

    @AlphonseWeebay

    9 күн бұрын

    Remember when they disrespected and hated on us for fist bumping? Now all the whiteboys do it

  • @lawrencepryorbey3724

    @lawrencepryorbey3724

    9 күн бұрын

    Damn it's a shame that we have to defend being the creators of Hip Hop. As a matter of fact we have to defend everything we created even building America

  • @DaOnlyMayor
    @DaOnlyMayor9 күн бұрын

    Protect this man at all cost. The truth has no friends

  • @mykerich5645
    @mykerich56459 күн бұрын

    It's about creation not participation. Hip-hop is a Black American creation like it or not. All of it's "elements" originates from Black American culture. Just because you come to the party with a dish doesn't mean you started the party.

  • @damonclark5742

    @damonclark5742

    9 күн бұрын

    BEST ANALOGY and EXPLANATION ever!!!

  • @albertdaley9093

    @albertdaley9093

    9 күн бұрын

    Jamaican music😂😂

  • @MsJay-cr1id

    @MsJay-cr1id

    9 күн бұрын

    @@albertdaley9093 - The receipts say otherwise.

  • @jerzydevoos5413

    @jerzydevoos5413

    9 күн бұрын

    @@albertdaley9093 what Mento? Lol

  • @albertdaley9093

    @albertdaley9093

    9 күн бұрын

    @@MsJay-cr1id your faje recipes

  • @Conscious_Pookie_Tee2.7
    @Conscious_Pookie_Tee2.79 күн бұрын

    Lord Jamar is needed

  • @Aion-wt1it
    @Aion-wt1it9 күн бұрын

    All of a sudden everyone was kumbayaing creating hip hop together... gtfoh!!!

  • @patricksterbeatz

    @patricksterbeatz

    5 күн бұрын

    Right. These 🇯🇲 and 🇵🇷 are very delusional. Til this day their music sucks and they can't even rap or rhyme for shit but they really believe that they helped create hip hop. I never ever in my life heard any FBA household play Jamaican or Puerto Rican music. We never got any of our style or influence from them but they get all of their style and influence from Foundational Black Americans. They had to take on our culture to be seen as "cool".

  • @James-lu4hb
    @James-lu4hb6 күн бұрын

    Lord Jamar is one of the last real ones left in the game 💯

  • @meanscorpio7999
    @meanscorpio79999 күн бұрын

    Jamaicans didn’t have anything to do with hip hop most of us barely even fucked with Yankees and never paid attention to the culture or music or fashion we was rocking fishnet shirts and listening to reggae music and into clubbing hip hop was only black Americans and Puerto Ricans was guest to the culture those mfs was break dancing i came here 1979 straight from Kingston 11 into Brooklyn Newyork then we made it into jersey straight down philadelphia i was their hip hop culture was black Americans matter of fact we wasn’t even using two turntables down Jamaica back then the first time I seen a dj or sound system use two turntables was in Newyork i give credit where credit is Due

  • @jayshah9967

    @jayshah9967

    9 күн бұрын

    Thank you sir

  • @meanscorpio7999

    @meanscorpio7999

    9 күн бұрын

    @@jayshah9967 🤜🏾🤛🏾

  • @tonyprez5837

    @tonyprez5837

    8 күн бұрын

    You a fool bwoy. Hip hop and rap is 2 different things homie. If you talking about rap, some people say thank Dr Seuss and Shakespeare for that. Hip hop music different from rap, in how the music is produce, rapping on the version.

  • @LOU1982

    @LOU1982

    7 күн бұрын

    Righteous!

  • @user-cn5yt2yc8q

    @user-cn5yt2yc8q

    7 күн бұрын

    Salute for telling the truth. I’m a few years younger than you.

  • @powerfulforce9984
    @powerfulforce99849 күн бұрын

    Lord Jamar is so right about us being cool all the time with letting other cultures in, but none of those other cultures mess with us.

  • @82Brooklyn7

    @82Brooklyn7

    9 күн бұрын

    Sad but true real talk

  • @RobAllbanks

    @RobAllbanks

    8 күн бұрын

    Facts!

  • @alphabright9138

    @alphabright9138

    8 күн бұрын

    they have nothing we wanna mess with. absolutely nothing

  • @RobAllbanks

    @RobAllbanks

    8 күн бұрын

    @@alphabright9138 I won’t argue

  • @dlightzone

    @dlightzone

    7 күн бұрын

    Na double edge sword

  • @thelight3547
    @thelight35479 күн бұрын

    Krs been a clown. He said you must protect bambatta no matter what he did.

  • @777sweet
    @777sweet9 күн бұрын

    ✔️ Logically, look into the current Puerto Rican culture hip hop doesn’t dominate there. Listen to the music that was playing at their Puerto Rican day parade. Did you hear James, Brown, r n b??? No! ✔️ West Indian parade do you hear R nB hip hop? All you hear is Soca and reggae? ✔️ Logically at that time it wasn’t too much of them around to even influence crap!! The language and accents??????? How could FBA gravitated to that. They didn’t care. FBA HAD THEIR OWN STYLE, struggles, food, music to worry about others. Immigrants had to come to USA to adapt not FBA adapting into theirs where language and dialects were different

  • @damonclark5742

    @damonclark5742

    9 күн бұрын

    Str8t Facts and underrated observation!! 💯

  • @Justintouch-nt9cu

    @Justintouch-nt9cu

    7 күн бұрын

    When you say language are you referring to English? The European invented language?.. what is the first n most relevant thing a race or group of ppl invent? Language.. even the native Americans have their own language that was almost completely stripped from them but the strength n belief in their culture is why a lot of them are currently learning that language.. the language, technology, business models hip-hop was created with n grew with is all european or at least foreign.. thing is when this debate comes up ppl only scratch the surface of what culture is.. dive deeper into culture n history. even the native Americans that witnessed Caucasians as once immigrants that overpowered them, understand that they can't completely eradicate their original language because once that happens, You could possibly lose your identity or respect as a ppl..

  • @kelcey7579

    @kelcey7579

    3 күн бұрын

    Good point and commonsense

  • @rasheensmith6908
    @rasheensmith69088 күн бұрын

    My real Puerto Ricans know blacks invented Hip Hop💯. Since the 40s

  • @brickflipper5273

    @brickflipper5273

    7 күн бұрын

    💯💯💯

  • @BLANCODABARBER79

    @BLANCODABARBER79

    5 күн бұрын

    💯🫡 and I’m Puerto Rican and I been knowing that

  • @tlgarrett3547
    @tlgarrett35479 күн бұрын

    Cognitive dissonance is a mental discomfort that arises when a person holds two or more contradictory beliefs, values, or attitudes. This can lead to a state of tension and anxiety, as the person tries to reconcile their conflicting thoughts.

  • @3kills570
    @3kills5709 күн бұрын

    Thanks for keeping it true .

  • @THETRAVELGOD410
    @THETRAVELGOD4106 күн бұрын

    This convo is needed to keep people informed! Lord Jamar is definitely Gatekeeper for Hip Hop!

  • @ceciliazanders8725
    @ceciliazanders87259 күн бұрын

    I'm a 70's child (FBA) and I'm glad that this generation is compassionate enough to do the research. Stay strong, stay healthy and young because we're going to need it❤

  • @rotweilerscholar1181

    @rotweilerscholar1181

    9 күн бұрын

    KRS 1 is from Brooklyn. He wouldn't know. His ties to the Bronx came through the homeless shelter where he met Scott in the eighties. That's why he gets his facts wrong talking about how Bam named the Zulu Nation. He said Bambatta went on a school trip to Africa. It's not the first time he is wrong nor will it be the last time.

  • @Black_unity597

    @Black_unity597

    7 күн бұрын

    Dam I’m glad somebody points this out I have been saying this forever he isn’t even from the Bronx he claims the Bronx but he is actually from BK and have been wrong about so much about this history of Black Americans so yes he will be wrong about Alot because he doesn’t come from Black Americans bloodlines so it is in his interest to push this false narrative!

  • @SIMEON2003
    @SIMEON20038 күн бұрын

    Im a Latino and HIP HOP IS A BLACK CREATION plain and simple JAZZ is a Black creation ROCK AND ROLL is a Black creation RAP is a Black Creation Reggue is a Black Creation must I go on....with NO other participants in the creation.

  • @Black_unity597

    @Black_unity597

    7 күн бұрын

    You speaking facts they try and play all these games like Reggaeton ain’t rapping in Spanish they want to act like it’s something that’s new or like it’s something they created salsa is Cuban they stole that to PR never created anything they steal and that’s just a fact they act just like their Spaniard ancestors

  • @kingstonson9627

    @kingstonson9627

    7 күн бұрын

    Reggaeton comes from Jamaican immigrants who went to Panama to work on the Panama canal almost a hundred years ago.

  • @Soufside_Slim
    @Soufside_Slim9 күн бұрын

    Crazy Legs said that breakin' was the "Morenos" on the documentary on Netflix. It's too late for him to switch up. Americans research and document too much for this Tethering of Black American culture.

  • @rotweilerscholar1181

    @rotweilerscholar1181

    9 күн бұрын

    Facts. I'm 55 and from Castle Hill-Soundview. The gang truce occurred in Dec 71. That didn't mean It was love in the streets. It just meant no more gang warfare. Those same Borica former gang members still wouldn't go to a party full of Blacks. Forget trying to breakdance or rap, they were trying to get home safe in one piece. It's no different than the Latin Kings mindset in Rikers. You think they are going to a Zulu Nation Party? 😄 People romanticize Hip Hop and the grimy gang infested South Bronx for their own selfish reasons. The Bronx had over 100 gangs in the Seventies. Check out the documentary' Rubble Kings" and then you will see why there weren't too many Puerto Ricans in the early days of Hip Hop. It took the younger generation of Borica's. Crazy Legs age who weren't former gang members. They had the freedom to go to another neighborhood without the fear of getting attacked by a gang. Crazy Legs is 58 years old. Bambatta and Herc are at least 10 years older. Puerto Ricans back then were closer to Hells Angels. They had denim and leather biker jackets and they listened to Salsa music. I heard alot of Tito Puente growing up.😁

  • @AlphonseWeebay

    @AlphonseWeebay

    9 күн бұрын

    @@rotweilerscholar1181they’ve always been white boys whipping boys. Only reason they had proximity to us is because welcomed and allowed them to participate in our shit

  • @peacepocket

    @peacepocket

    9 күн бұрын

    What’s the name of the documentary?

  • @ll51019

    @ll51019

    9 күн бұрын

    Crazy leg from don't be a menace?

  • @sultanasalmonza1560

    @sultanasalmonza1560

    9 күн бұрын

    that snow head 😂

  • @blackjesus6433
    @blackjesus64339 күн бұрын

    It's funny how 🇯🇲 don't go at 🇵🇷 for making Reggaeton. 🙏🏾

  • @blacklight3596

    @blacklight3596

    8 күн бұрын

    Nobody in Jamaica is claiming to originate hip hop (Yall silly to believe well thinking people would want to claim a genre that promotes nothing but self destruction and degeneracy 😅) Grow up and stop being ridiculed by others you think are laughing with you 😅

  • @malcolmguevara5990

    @malcolmguevara5990

    8 күн бұрын

    Reggaetons origins can be traced to Panama, P.E.A.C.E. Positive Education Always Corrects Errors

  • @onpoint357

    @onpoint357

    8 күн бұрын

    Of course they do cos its based on a popular Jamaican instrumental from the late 80s popularised by Jamaican artist shabba ranks hit song (dem bow). Search it on KZread and you'll hear the original Jamaican instrumental.

  • @mikerageous1

    @mikerageous1

    8 күн бұрын

    ​@@malcolmguevara5990 😂 are yall prepared to lie about everything at this point??

  • @LOU1982

    @LOU1982

    7 күн бұрын

    @@mikerageous1Reggaeton was created by the Panamanians and the PR stole it.

  • @The11thchapter
    @The11thchapter9 күн бұрын

    I love this. There's a African proverb, "Until the lion tells the story, the hunter will always be the hero". Others say it, sometimes we say it, that Black people don't stick together but, when I say that the majority of us (FBA) have been on code all over, making sure that others don't try to falsely claim what's ours when it comes to Hip Hop culture. We need to stay this way and be this way about everything.

  • @blacklight3596

    @blacklight3596

    8 күн бұрын

    Who would proudly claim hip hop culture tho ?

  • @The11thchapter

    @The11thchapter

    8 күн бұрын

    @@blacklight3596 Evidently people who have no claim to it.

  • @sammyo534764

    @sammyo534764

    8 күн бұрын

    ⁠@@The11thchapter the replacement is serious 🧐& ppl putting capes on for others who identify white & take, & take & treatment from all democratic shields make it no better… our FBA lineage is very serious? It’s just jealous hearted ppl really think 💭 it’s their shit, but no 👎🏿 stop ✋🏿& make ur own blueprint stay out of the real black footprint 👣 settings 🛑

  • @onthemove4623

    @onthemove4623

    8 күн бұрын

    Facts. That’s why we have to hit the hoods in our Community and give them the game. Once our people can truly understand, they will get on Code. Can’t be on Code if I don’t know what u see, know. Inform them on reparations, the financial system, immigration etc. They will be on Coded. MLK and THE Panthers did the same thing. They had the info. And Put they people on what was going on, then the strategy came cause now everyone is on Coded. Grass Roots at its Finest. Lets Finish what MLK Started with The Reparations. In 1968 He Said we coming to get OUR Check.”….. Must Get On Code. 🖤🗣

  • @Black_unity597

    @Black_unity597

    7 күн бұрын

    FACTZ!

  • @travelwithalanmichael8970
    @travelwithalanmichael89709 күн бұрын

    The God cooked on this one✊🏾🦉

  • @Pookie_Poo843
    @Pookie_Poo8439 күн бұрын

    Lord jamar hit a grand slam with his take on this video ‼️‼️‼️‼️...FBA💪🏿💪🏿💪🏿🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @litebeingimmortal7375
    @litebeingimmortal73759 күн бұрын

    This is how God's supposed to stand on their square..

  • @gew2027
    @gew20279 күн бұрын

    Rapping and brake dancing been around 90 years.Look up Brake dancing in 1930 the Mills Brothers.Its in our young brothers DNA .THE Latinos lying

  • @SpookOneMusic

    @SpookOneMusic

    8 күн бұрын

    You mean Nicholas Brothers

  • @respectlife216
    @respectlife2169 күн бұрын

    He is 100% correct and that’s the end of the conversation

  • @FBA_AllTHEWAY
    @FBA_AllTHEWAY9 күн бұрын

    Most of Pete Rock catalogue is based from FBA music. Nothing JA about his music. Hes also known as “SouL Brother” where did he get that name from??

  • @kingstonson9627

    @kingstonson9627

    9 күн бұрын

    The musical part of hip hop took music from all over the world in the begining in ng..of course soul and rnb was a heavy influence..but so was Caribbean..brazilian.african and music from the whole world...hip hop literally samples music from around the planet

  • @Asimoori

    @Asimoori

    9 күн бұрын

    @@kingstonson9627because they where digging for records 😂😂 you take what you can out of the bargains and get shit popping. However notice when we started uses our people music how the genre took off 😂😂

  • @youcantbeserious4488

    @youcantbeserious4488

    9 күн бұрын

    Hip Hop took break beats from American artists first fuck what y'all talking bout

  • @anthonywhitaker7455

    @anthonywhitaker7455

    9 күн бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@kingstonson9627Caribbean, Brazilian and African music in no way shape or form heavily influenced hip hop, particularly in its inception and does not heavily influence it now. Early hip hop artists clearly point out James Brown and his music not only as the primary influence but also as the primary inspiration. Hip Hop is a Black American cultural construct, that is why it emerged exclusively on U.S. soil not Caribbean, Latin or African soil.

  • @jerzydevoos5413

    @jerzydevoos5413

    9 күн бұрын

    @@kingstonson9627 That wasn’t Hip Hop, that was Disco tech, the sound that fueled Hip Hop’s existence was an American sound(s)

  • @drummajor101
    @drummajor1019 күн бұрын

    *Str8 Facts!*

  • @bigartone1
    @bigartone19 күн бұрын

    You broke the Hip Hop debate down to the last compound and component!!!!! Teach on!!!!!!

  • @barbaramcclary9274
    @barbaramcclary92749 күн бұрын

    TY Mike❤

  • @VSmoothTwentyTwo
    @VSmoothTwentyTwo9 күн бұрын

    Krs 1 is nuts

  • @Kingofkings1055
    @Kingofkings10559 күн бұрын

    There’s nothing new under the sun. We must understand why we are always the focus, no matter what is going on and infinite amounts of money is spent to maintain the secret. Much love and respect to the community.👑

  • @donausman
    @donausman8 күн бұрын

    The way LJ used the conception analogy...brilliant.

  • @brickflipper5273

    @brickflipper5273

    7 күн бұрын

    💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯

  • @RobAllbanks
    @RobAllbanks8 күн бұрын

    Thank you Jamar for clearing that up!!!

  • @zep1898
    @zep18987 күн бұрын

    Keep speaking the facts lord we black Americans created hip-hop and everything else that is going on in America all the genres Keep speaking the facts God

  • @jamesellis4122
    @jamesellis41229 күн бұрын

    100 % fact's thank you so much!

  • @themix3350
    @themix33506 күн бұрын

    Like I said before. Where were they when we created Blues, Rock & Roll, R&B, Soul, Funk, House, Disco, Classical, Jazz etc. They knew nothing about it because there was no MTV or internet for them to watch us create any of the dances, music, style of clothes, hairstyles, slang words. All those things come from us. Nothing personal it just is what it is.

  • @walanderson225
    @walanderson2259 күн бұрын

    Keep speaking the truth my brotha.

  • @TTSantiago821
    @TTSantiago8219 күн бұрын

    EXACTLY! Stop confusing participation with creation. Hip Hop is the #1 music genre in the world due to any and everybody's consumption and participation. HOWEVER.....THE CREATION OF IT ALWAYS WAS AND ALWAYS WILL BE BLACK AMERICAN MEN AND WOMEN...FULL STOP! You can't change what already happened lol, IDK what is wrong with folks. Hip Hop was birthed out of the black man and woman experience and narrative. How the hell can you create something you have no clue on!?!? That is also not being said, it was birthed from a place only BLACK MEN AND WOMEN had in this country. Stop the insanity. There is no more back n forth on this, the truth doesn't need defending. We are gonna say what the truth is and leave it at that!

  • @lawrencepryorbey3724

    @lawrencepryorbey3724

    9 күн бұрын

    What's understood doesn't have to be explained

  • @heads7982
    @heads79827 күн бұрын

    Even as a little child back then, I always wondered how they said the Jamaicans created hip hop but I never could feel nothing about no Jamaican culture and energy radiating out of any hip hop record. I always thought this was off. The Puerto Rico /Latino claims is insulting and must always be silenced 🔕 wherever this debate pops up.

  • @williammckinney567
    @williammckinney5677 күн бұрын

    This needs to be said.

  • @nakitaknight957
    @nakitaknight9579 күн бұрын

    100% truth, 20 more years, Eminem created hip hop 😂

  • @valtown67
    @valtown679 күн бұрын

    The god 🙌🏽 lord Jamar stood tall respect

  • @aweirdredtoad3637
    @aweirdredtoad36379 күн бұрын

    The more i read through this comment section is the more i understand that there will always be division between people of the same colour, even despite everyone and their ancestors coming from one single continent.

  • @arthurbooker110
    @arthurbooker1108 күн бұрын

    Straightening..,💪🏾👑

  • @d000e3
    @d000e39 күн бұрын

    I lost respect for Busta and KRs1 with this topic. FBA influenced everything in our proximity.

  • @jt5023
    @jt50238 күн бұрын

    Yep!!

  • @1money1st
    @1money1st9 күн бұрын

    Before I hit play I knew he was dropping facts!

  • @kippy1500
    @kippy15009 күн бұрын

    Thank You!!

  • @corygreen9110
    @corygreen91103 күн бұрын

    ✌🏽Lord, thanks for standing on your square.. 💪🏽

  • @AlphonseWeebay
    @AlphonseWeebay9 күн бұрын

    Not hard to see how the small hats were able to destroy hip hop when this is how krs1 behaves as an elder

  • @shemiyahyasharalla7695
    @shemiyahyasharalla76959 күн бұрын

    28:09 ROCK STEADY released 1/24/72 by Aretha Franklin 💪🏾 I sho nuff heard Aretha Franklin in my head!!🎼 Let's call this song exactly what it is (What it is, what it is, what it is) It's a funky and low down feeling (What it is) In my hips from left to right (What it is) What it is I might be doing (What it is)💃🏽 Y’all know the song!🎉

  • @jlove8441

    @jlove8441

    9 күн бұрын

    They steal everything from blk people & lie & say they invented it … This has been going on for centuries and it’s gotten so blatant that they just doing it with Hard proof that they’re lying.

  • @cycleduder7986
    @cycleduder79865 күн бұрын

    It’s when your forced to learn or believe something we’re not familiar with 💪🏼💯🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @leftlanehiphop6259
    @leftlanehiphop62596 күн бұрын

    Look, Latinos had nothing at all to do with hip hip, they came in when breaking and graffiti...but hip hop started with the music. Taking disco, r and b and funk records blinding them to make a new sound. Then we added drums. Drum machines. This is before sampling...before it was called hip hop. It was BugaLoo...then came the dancing, crews, graffiti. But the music came first. Yes there was always dancing...but we talking hip hop dancing...street dancing popping locking etc...I cant believe this is conversation...Latino culture had absolutely nothing to do with it.

  • @The-Lard310

    @The-Lard310

    3 күн бұрын

    lol, the DJ's even used for example Carlos Santana or Bossanova breakbeats, so it's there! And white people we're also connected, The DJ's played alot of Kraftwerk and so on.

  • @leftlanehiphop6259

    @leftlanehiphop6259

    3 күн бұрын

    @The-Lard310 This is no different then modern day sampling. This has nothing to do with Latino, or German culture...I know who Kraftwerk is. They was fire...what your more talking about the music from other culture as was used. But not their culture..

  • @oseven777
    @oseven7779 күн бұрын

    Facts!!!

  • @shemiyahyasharalla7695
    @shemiyahyasharalla76959 күн бұрын

    Shalawam&Salute Mike for the full upload 🫡 and Salute to Lord Jamar for simply speaking facts without fear! I loved how he maintained facts when folks tried to use gaslighting, disinformation, and deflection to take away from facts of the matter and KRS was the first rapper on wax with biblical truth about us being the scattered 12 Tribes so it blew my mind to see that he would make such an idiotic claim 🙌🏾💪🏾⚔️

  • @cherio70
    @cherio706 күн бұрын

    KRS-One's philosophy on the conception of Hip Hop can be compared to an interracial relationship between a black and white couple. You know racism exist but you have to PRETEND that it doesn't to keep the peace in the relationship. KRS-One has Latino and Jamaican friends in Hip Hop that he doesn't want to alienate. FBAs have to bend and fold to hold on to people who just want to EAT off of us. Our own way of thinking is why we struggle so hard financially in life.

  • @sammjones7729
    @sammjones77298 күн бұрын

    🗣YO I LOVE FOR U DIS BROGOD! 💪🏾😭

  • @huntzoneent879
    @huntzoneent8799 күн бұрын

    All Facts Gawdbrova

  • @Venamus
    @Venamus8 күн бұрын

    Yooooo itz Been Years ...Pop out At the Block Party on Lincoln place.. Bedford

  • @BeeSparrow
    @BeeSparrow8 күн бұрын

    Thank you for setting the record straight. Can't believe KRS!!!

  • @GTMASSIVE7
    @GTMASSIVE75 күн бұрын

    I'm glad I watched this. He made it clear. History is factual and not always reflective of our ideals.

  • @Rizzlyricist
    @Rizzlyricist23 сағат бұрын

    Hip-Hop will never die 🔥

  • @biglou1780
    @biglou17808 күн бұрын

    Yo, another crazy shit is that I don’t know what part of New York you grew up in. Black and Puerto Ricans roll deep together in the early 70s that I remember to the 80s and 90s I guess it’s only in the South Bronx that happens.🇵🇷🇵🇷🇩🇴🇩🇴💪🏽

  • @user-cn5yt2yc8q

    @user-cn5yt2yc8q

    7 күн бұрын

    I’m from Harlem & that’s not true B.

  • @daunknown1494
    @daunknown14945 күн бұрын

    Facts

  • @charlesdouglas7179
    @charlesdouglas71799 күн бұрын

    KRS 1 is getting paid for his Lying

  • @kelcey7579

    @kelcey7579

    3 күн бұрын

    I b thinking the same thing, to cause confusion, that how they do

  • @FrostyBee6969
    @FrostyBee69699 күн бұрын

    Bbn, U NEED 2 SEE THIS!!!

  • @reesebby3179
    @reesebby31799 күн бұрын

    U dead rite bout EVERYTHING you said💯💯‼️‼️

  • @SaniBravo
    @SaniBravo8 күн бұрын

    I’m so glad some of us are standing on business about our culture. No one would allow us to steal thier stuff it’s only right.

  • @BloodMoney-bu6bw
    @BloodMoney-bu6bw9 күн бұрын

    ‼️💯🎯

  • @KalloMoney
    @KalloMoney7 күн бұрын

  • @Doran909
    @Doran9099 күн бұрын

    FACTS

  • @user-cn5yt2yc8q
    @user-cn5yt2yc8q7 күн бұрын

    No disrespect to PR”s or Jamaicans. But some of them hate on us. Not all tho. Hip hop does bring cultures together. That’s the positive out of it. It just shows how black Americans spread love & let others in.

  • @The-Lard310

    @The-Lard310

    3 күн бұрын

    I only read hate from y'all.

  • @user-cn5yt2yc8q

    @user-cn5yt2yc8q

    2 күн бұрын

    @@The-Lard310 I remember them playing dance to the dummers beat. You know what I’m talking about?

  • @JamalJewell

    @JamalJewell

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@The-Lard310 yeah let's not act like pr wasn't calling hip hop moreno music in the beginning

  • @kingallah7911
    @kingallah79117 күн бұрын

    Peace God

  • @82Brooklyn7
    @82Brooklyn79 күн бұрын

    Lord Jamar speaking facts the 7isb always schooling people 💯

  • @johnnyjeegz
    @johnnyjeegz4 күн бұрын

    Respectfully correct me if I'm wrong you did state that they came in 1976 prior to any film being made. Therefore if the agreed upon date is 1973. The term "wildstyle" was popularized by the Wild Style graffiti crew formed by Tracy 168 of the Bronx, New York in 1974 and was named after his crew, Wild Style.

  • @rawtalkrealdeal9985
    @rawtalkrealdeal99858 күн бұрын

    ALL FACTS NO LIES TOLD!!!!!

  • @user-fd8fq9hp3u
    @user-fd8fq9hp3u9 күн бұрын

    Damn he speaking facts

  • @successafterlockdown
    @successafterlockdown9 күн бұрын

    Black Spades from the BX been breakdancing heavy since the mid 1960s until the early 1970s and they put it down because they was tired of getting dirty from dancing😂And when they put it down, the Puerto Ricans picked it up around 1975-1976.

  • @rotweilerscholar1181

    @rotweilerscholar1181

    9 күн бұрын

    I'm from Soundview. RIP Chuck Freeze from the Jazzy 5. Soundview is Black Spades and Zulu Nation territory. It's been that way since the 60's. RIP Michael Wayne from Bronxdale. He gave me the okay to do a Black Spades film before the Afrika Bambatta revelations. I have been getting it in the mud with Puerto Ricans in the BX since 77 as a 8 yr old shorty. I even have ties to San Juan and love their food. I can remember a time when Puerto Rican's didn't dress like us. This is before they started going to Jew Man on Simpson Street. My mans joked how they would end every sentence with "B" like "hey what's up B". They wore leather skinny ties and wore cheap suede boots that looked like UGGS and they wore cheap shoes from Southern Blvd. They also had their own clubs and music. Google "TKA Music Group"😄😄😄. I played basketball with Angel. The early eighties is when they made their mark. Rock Steady and the NYC breakers are some of the early pioneers. Just look at the documentary "Wild Style" and you will see the truth.

  • @TribeOfGadAkaMrOx

    @TribeOfGadAkaMrOx

    9 күн бұрын

    True💯💯💯💯💯💯

  • @stackmosayless-1669

    @stackmosayless-1669

    9 күн бұрын

    Nah my boy BX is different than anywhere else across the country. Puerto Ricans was also members of the Spades and Zulu Nation. I don't have any problems saying rapping started by American black people same as Jazz music, Rock & Roll, and changing the entire music scene for decades at a time. The contribution to American music is crazy. Instead of arguing who made hip hop the narrative should be let's preserve hip hop in its original form not to celebrate the genocide of people. I'm Puerto Rican grew up in the BX during the 80's. The question was who's the best rapper Big Daddy Kane, Kool G Rap or Rakim. That argument would cause fights. I rolled with the 18th letter we ain't have one until Big Pun. Who you think Pun idolized? Kool G Rap. G Rap said he loved Pun and said that many times.

  • @rotweilerscholar1181

    @rotweilerscholar1181

    9 күн бұрын

    @@stackmosayless-1669 Let's talk facts. Can you name names? Michael Wayne TV is a Black Spades Channel that references the Black Spades extensive history in Bronxdale and Soundview. They also speak on the DJ Mario days. Chuck Freeze from Soundview and a member of the Jazzy Five was the older head I looked up to. The earliest Borica's are Ruby Dee and Whipper Whip. Latino's are so disconnected from the history they never acknowledge their OG's. If a Borica can really face the truth, Whipper Whip and Ruby Dee would have been given their flowers.

  • @rotweilerscholar1181

    @rotweilerscholar1181

    9 күн бұрын

    @@stackmosayless-1669 Pun is from Academy Gardens in Soundview and had a great relationship with Blacks unlike Fat Joe. I knew Pun when he was 15 year old Chris Rios who worked at Bob's Pizza Shop on Cozy Korner. Pun is the one who introduced Remy Ma to Joe. He also was tight with Sunkist and Minnesota the producer from Money Boss players. Sunkist is the Half Dominican/Half Black guy who had a fair one with Fat Joe.

  • @marcushaynes1349
    @marcushaynes13499 күн бұрын

    Peace Peace Jamar!!!!

  • @eddieg8691
    @eddieg86919 күн бұрын

    Black Music ✊🏿

  • @thehynesgroup7579
    @thehynesgroup75796 күн бұрын

    WE MADE THAT SHIT BRO, 🥱JAMAICA.

  • @user-ne3kg5bi3k

    @user-ne3kg5bi3k

    5 күн бұрын

    They why didnt it pop in Jamaica lyin sack of sh*t😂😂😂

  • @djairalert422
    @djairalert4229 күн бұрын

    Thank you Lord Jamar thanks for having the heart to speak on this topic so many blacks are afraid to keep it real on.

  • @Americos4ever

    @Americos4ever

    9 күн бұрын

    We've been saying this. But, it's all about who people like. Been said for many years, now alot of tethers time is up. Go back and build up this culture where you comr from. 🇺🇸🏹Only

  • @RaymondBrown-xw4cj
    @RaymondBrown-xw4cj9 күн бұрын

    WHAT EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW ABOUT CHRONOLOGICAL BLACK AMERICAN CULTURAL HISTORY: Hip hop came directly out of The Black Power/Black Is Beautiful/ Black Arts Movement of the 1960's &1970's. This was the most culturally and politically active era in African American history. The teen contingent of the movement played out as presented on Soul Train produced by Don Cornelius beginning 1970 when the show was nationally broadcast from Chicago from 1970 to the end of 1971. He moved the show to LA, but he took several of his teen dancers with him to ensure the dance quality of the show would remain the same after the move. The TV show became our most powerful Black teen cultural influence for 36 years. Soul Train hit American popular culture like a cultural tsunami. It instantly eclipsed Dick Clark's American Bandstand in international popularity. Chicago is the capitol of African American Blues and Gospel Music. Chicago due to The Great Migration is Mississippi once removed. Chicago developed the best social dancers in Black America. Michael Jackson comes from that dance enclave. Because break dancing had been a part of the Chicago dance lexicon since the 1950's, most likely influenced by the Black dance crews seen on TV variety shows in the 1950's, the Chicago teens on Soul Train showcased break dancing as part of their dance repertoire. For the first time in or cultural history we had a national stage to spotlight Black music stars, show-off old and new Black dances, and to premiere new Black talent. Teens across this nation copied the break dancing seen on Soul Train, including The Black Spades. They sang James Brown's (who was a frequent guest on ST) "Soul Power." They personalized it by singing "Spade Power! They put their influence on break dancing to make it uniquely their own. James Brown's "Say It Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud" was the Black teen national anthem. Those who recognize James Brown as the Godfather of hip hop, rarely mention the Black Power aspect of what he was promoting, along with other Black Protest stars like Curtis Mayfield (Movin' On Up), Nina Simone (To Be Young Gifted and Black), and Marvin Gaye (What's Goin' On album sold 2M albums in 30 days) among many others, that sparked the impetus for Black teen heightened involvement. The Black Arts Movement elevated rhyming Black Protest poets like H Rap Brown, Amiri Baraka, Sonia Sanchez, Don L. Lee aka Haki Madhubuti, The Last Poets, and Mari Evans, and Oscar Brown Jr. among others, to the forefront as the rapping voices of Black Power that politicized Black American teens. This Black teen cultural revolution was televised. Neither Puerto Ricans nor Jamaicans were singing, dancing, rapping about, nor identifying with our Black Is Beautiful/Black Power/Black Arts Movement. They still don't. Their great jealousy grew out of the international excitement generated by Black American teens dancing on national TV that did not include them. Because the broadcast came out of Chicago, not NYC, it singularly showcased Black American teens only. Soul Train is the genesis of the NYC PR and Jamaican great cultural jealousy. The emergence of The Black Spades Black Power gang culture gave PRs in the Bronx a local Black cultural expression they could cosplay in their jealous quest to leech the Black American teen international pop culture spotlight. Their desire for the same fame that Black teens had, is the reason NYC PRs in mass set aside their long-standing antipathy towards NYC African Americans in order to surreptitiously enter their ranks to gain acceptance so they could cosplay Black American dance, music and style. Five plus decades later Latinos have delusionally convinced themselves that they actually created what they effetely copied. Anyone who speaks about the development of hip hop and doesn't mention the worldwide influence the Black Is Beautiful/Black Power/Black Arts Movement or the impact of Soul Train, they don't know what they are talking about. The 10 years following the assassination of MLK, Black America was politically and culturally ablaze. Hip hop grew directly out of the tenor of those times. No immigrant group was powerful enough to influence Black American teen music, dance, nor style during that Black Power period, no matter where they were located. All other teens, white American teens and white college students, American immigrant teens in and outside of NYC, and teens around the world copied the powerful music, dance, and political colloquialisms (like "Right-On" and "Power To The People!") presented by African Americans from various regions across this nation. Contemporary self-aggrandizing cultural history revisionists like Colon and certain descendants of island immigrants have chosen the most active, the most vocal, and the most recorded period in Black American history to try and hijack. All their ever-changing revisionist folklore narratives are continually being debunked by authentic Black Americans, because they have no visual or journalistic documented evidence to support their delusional wishful claims, nor do they present acceptable reasoning that ratifies Puerto Rican/Jamaican bizarre demands to force their way into African American culture that resists their irrational intrusions.

  • @stackmosayless-1669

    @stackmosayless-1669

    8 күн бұрын

    You have way too many errors in your paragraph to even be old enough to have lived during these era's. Soul Train didn't start in the 50's it started in the 70's. Soul Train Adolfo Shaba doo Quiones was Puerto Rican a Soul Train Dancer and original member of the Lockers during the 70's Rosie Perez started out a Soul Train dancer Adolfo was also in the Breaking Movie. Hip Hop has 5 elements dance, graffiti, dj ing MC ing and knowledge if you was from the South Bronx Ricans contributed twords the culture Jamaicans had dance hall DJ's and they was responsible for blending break beats they was already doing it with they own parties. MC ING Pun the best Puerto Rican Rapper but the best Jamaican rappers Notorious Big and 50 Cent. I don't get who gave individuals the right just to rewrite history. You basically mixed gibberish to support a false narrative and I'm from the South BX besides Fat Joe I never heard any Puerto Rican claim hip hop. Nas said Hip Hop is dead which it is. I wouldn't claim or even listen to New Hip Hop or Drill music. Instead of arguing who started it the real narrative should be stop making music that promotes genocide, being a whore, and pissing on graves. Is that the culture your proud to say your people started?

  • @LibraYall

    @LibraYall

    7 күн бұрын

    The Puerto Rican Young Lords were in the 60s aligned with Blk movements. A Puerto Rican was a member of the Last Poets that's who was involved with starting the Young Lords.

  • @RaymondBrown-xw4cj

    @RaymondBrown-xw4cj

    7 күн бұрын

    @@LibraYallFelipe Luciano himself stated that Puerto Ricans were not interested in the Black Power Movement until he made a name for himself by joining The Last Poets. The Young Lords were formed by PRs to imitate The Last Poets, like PRs chasing clout copy everything that Black Americans create.

  • @RaymondBrown-xw4cj

    @RaymondBrown-xw4cj

    7 күн бұрын

    @@LibraYall Felipe Luciano stated that PRs were not interested in The Black Power Movement until he made a name for himself when he joined The Last Poets. He said that they were clout-chasing and didn't trust the PR revolutionary resolve.

  • @smartmonsters9387
    @smartmonsters93878 күн бұрын

    RIGHT!!!!!!!!!

  • @lawrencecoley1652
    @lawrencecoley16529 күн бұрын

    Lord Jamar💯 killed it💯

  • @EarthAngel-ki6pq
    @EarthAngel-ki6pq4 күн бұрын

    18:18 says it all

  • @mandingosamurai6150
    @mandingosamurai61509 күн бұрын

    Black Americans Alone created Hip-Hop. Other ethnic groups were around it, witnessed it, and joined in but they had absolute nothing to do with starting it. Other ethnic groups are always trying to steal from Black American culture by taking credit for something they has no affiliation with. This is a prime reason Black Americans should stop allowing "others" to enter into our culture. In facts, in addition to Hip-Hop, Black Americans created Gospel, Jazz, R&B, Rap, Funk, Rock 'N Roll, Doo Wop, Country, Alternative, and many other genres of music. People need to do their research rather than speak recklessly on something they don't know about, though.

  • @LibraYall

    @LibraYall

    7 күн бұрын

    The Bronx was not segregated like Mississippi. Blk people didn't allow others to enter its because they lived in the same buildings. New York is not Mississippi or Alabama with that southern segregated mentality. That segregated mentality was NEVER a part of Hip Hop until Blk people from the south got their chance in Hip Hop, now they bringing that "FBA" segregated southern vibe into Hip Hop which us 100% wack!

  • @mandingosamurai6150

    @mandingosamurai6150

    7 күн бұрын

    @@LibraYall Blacks can do whatever we want with what "Our People Created." In fact, I believe it would be better if hip-hop was segregated since so many other racial groups are trying to take credit for developing it when they had absolutely nothing to do with it.

  • @big_prob

    @big_prob

    6 күн бұрын

    💯​@@LibraYall

  • @moodslingerz5209
    @moodslingerz52099 күн бұрын

    Lord Jamar Destroys KRS One….. Willie Lynch at its finest once again.

  • @successafterlockdown
    @successafterlockdown9 күн бұрын

    Puerto Ricans in the Bronx loved that Aretha Franklin record. “Rock Steady Baby!” #rocksteadycrew

  • @TheCodifiedNetwork

    @TheCodifiedNetwork

    9 күн бұрын

    EXACTLY - real one’s know where they stole that name from and the music from that very same iconic song | B1 |⭐

  • @danksinatra5977

    @danksinatra5977

    9 күн бұрын

    🧢

  • @ummeshariff

    @ummeshariff

    9 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @successafterlockdown

    @successafterlockdown

    8 күн бұрын

    @@TheCodifiedNetwork what it is! 🎵🎶✊🏾

  • @user-ne3kg5bi3k
    @user-ne3kg5bi3k4 күн бұрын

    Nobody is taking latinos seriously 😂😂

  • @Duamutef9
    @Duamutef99 күн бұрын

    Peace to the God

  • @Say-Uncle
    @Say-Uncle5 күн бұрын

    It’s not just about Creation, it’s about Organization! “Without Organization, They’ll be no Black Nation” -KRS ONE

  • @DJL609
    @DJL6099 күн бұрын

    Lord Jamar...respECT!...thnx for sharing the truth...🫡

  • @shawncisero
    @shawncisero9 күн бұрын

    I'm from Mass. and I agree with everything the god is expressing. Peace GOD

  • @tinothomas5198
    @tinothomas51989 күн бұрын

    Lol 💯 period

  • @barbaramcclary9274
    @barbaramcclary92749 күн бұрын

    Speak the truth..... Luv and Truth are two different things!!!!

  • @charlesdouglas7179
    @charlesdouglas71799 күн бұрын

    Nothing but facts 💯king keeps smashing all clowns 🤡 🤡🤡🤡

  • @MrRaidertim1
    @MrRaidertim18 күн бұрын

    I've never heard KRS say that. Is there a link?

  • @WillX2
    @WillX26 күн бұрын

    This is the Realest Fact Ever...I Dated one, Dad Didn't like me because I was Black... Wow... Speaking The Truth... Salute

Келесі