1983 brought several significant developments to the world
of hip-hop. As the rap movie
Wild Style hit the big screen and Herbie
Hancock and Grandmixer D.S.T. released the jazz-hip hop fusion hit "Rockit",
Queens-based rappers Run-D.M.C. hit rap squarely over the head with the new,
hard-edged, aggressive sound of "Sucker M.C.'s" and "It's Like
That".
D.M.C. of Run-D.M.C. - Read more about them
here
When Queens-based Run-D.M.C. released "Sucker M.C.'s" / "It's
Like That", they introduced a new, hard-edged, aggressive sound (and style)
to rap. Unlike many of hip hop releases of the day, this record, wasn't funky,
there was no discernible bass line, and these guys shouted, delivering their
rhymes over a thundering beat. Run-D.M.C. tough sound found an audience among
hip hop and even rock fans, and their rise to fame over the course of the next
year coincided with the waning popularity of the old-school style.
"Rockit"
The tentacles of hip-hop reached farther into the mainstream with the Herbie
Hancock/Grandmixer D.S.T. crossover dance single "Rockit", which was
released in 1983. The first jazz-hip hop fusion, this scratch-driven instrumental
single was an enormous hit.
"Wild Style"
Directed by Charile Ahearn, the 1983 independent docudrama Wild Style introduced
hip-hop music and culture to the rest of the world. Appearing in he film were
such pioneering hip-hop artists as Grandmaster Flash, Fab 5 Freedy, the Cold
Crush Brothers, Grand Wizard Theodore and Fantastic 5. Aside from music,
Wild
Style also showcased other, equally important elements of hip-hop: the artwork,
the dancing and the-street style fashion. Taken from
Harper's Bazaar,
this magazine clipping shows that
Wild Style had successfully caught
the attention of the movie-going, music-listening (and magazine-reading) public.