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Revision as of 15:46, 10 January 2006 editUrthogie (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users15,196 edits please do not remove this, and read the rules at Misplaced Pages:External Links. It is hard to assume good faith when you continually break rules. The same thing will happen here as Reggaeton :)← Previous edit Revision as of 23:31, 10 January 2006 edit undo68.159.20.189 (talk) External links: rvNext edit →
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==External links== ==External links==
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==See also== ==See also==

Revision as of 23:31, 10 January 2006

Latin rap is not a homogeneous musical style but rather a term that covers all hip-hop music recorded by Latinos, as in Chicano Rap, Hip Hop Latino, and Hip Hop en espanol.

The first bilingual ("Spanglish") rappers were a group from Bronx, New York by the name of Mean Machine. They put out the very first bilingual rap song in 1981 on Sugarhill Records. The record was called "Disco Dream". The emcees were Mr. Schick, DJ Julio, Mr. Nice, and Jimmy Mac. Nuyorican DJ and producer Tony Touch also mentions (in an interview on blackmagazine.it) the track "Spanglish" by Spanish Fly & The Terrible 2, which came out in the same year on Enjoy Records. Other early Puerto Rican rap pioneers from NY include Rubie Dee and Prince Whipper Whip of the Fantastic Five, DJ Charlie Chase of the Cold Crush Brothers, Master OC and Devastating Tito of the Fearless Four.

Later in the decade came L.A.'s Kid Frost (Mexican-American) and Mellow Man Ace (Cuban-American), followed by Cypress Hill featuring Mellow's brother Sen Dog. On the East Coast, Puerto Rican rappers Big Pun, Hurricane G and Fat Joe followed. The Beatnuts first appeared as producers but soon recorded their own material. Their track "Off tha Books", which featured Big Pun, was also included on Big Pun's second posthumous album. Their song "Watch out Now" was also used by Jennifer Lopez for her song "Jenny from the Block". Proyecto Uno, also from NY, started mixing hip hop with merengue.

In the course of the 1990s, rappers from Latin America and Spain dropped their first records, e.g. Control Machete from Mexico, DJ Kun from Argentina and 7 Notas 7 Colores from Spain. In Texas and Miami, bass rappers DJ Laz and Jonny Z created a new style (Latin bass); Jonny Z also teamed up with Mexican gangster rapper Carlos Coy AKA South Park Mexican from Texas, on the track "Puro Latin Bass" (itself based on Rodney O & Joe Cooley's West Coast classic "Everlasting Bass"). SPM also managed Dope House Records, a conduit for other upcoming artists. New artist have gone mainstream on the contemporary scene such as Fat Joe and Pitbull.

In Puerto Rico and Panama a new style was created, inspired by hip hop: Reggaeton. While Puerto Rican rappers from the US like Big Pun and Fat Joe made their mark in the American industry of hip hop, hip hop was merged with Caribbean music, electronic styles and raggamuffin into a new style in many Latin American countries. Some of the reggaeton rappers are MC Ceja, Lito "MC Cassidy", Polaco, Tempo, the popular contemporaty artist Daddy Yankee, and a rapper who is active in both the fields of reggaeton and hip hop per se, Tego Calderon.

This very popular movement have caused a lot of controversy in PR for the explicit lyrics of the aforementioned topics and the very explicit music videos produced. Among the most famous "rap singers" of this genre are O.G. Black and Master Joe, Nicky Jam, Ranking Stone, Don Omar, Ivy Queen, Plan B and Wisin y Yandel. Actually, reggaeton music has reached international acclaim and some videos and parties are actually made in US. However, because of the popularity of this new genre, some really talented rappers are faded. Some day perhaps, track masters like DJ Black, DJ Ecko and DJ Dicky will reach international status and credit.

Latin Rap is a type of music that has been influential to youngsters of Latin American countries as well as those of Hispanic background who reside in the United States, since the middle to late 1980s and the early 1990s.

Latin Rap has been a hit specially in countries with a large number of migrators to the United States. In Puerto Rico, for example, where many of its residents have moved to New York, Miami and Chicago, Illinois over the years, Latin rap was jumpstarted by a wave of singers that included Ruben DJ and Vico C. Ruben DJ's hit, La Escuela, (The School) and Vico C's hit, La Recta Final, (The way to the End) received considerable radio time during the late 1980s.

It should also be noted that a number of East Coast rappers usually identified as African American have Latin ancestry as well, usually from the Dominican Republic or Puerto Rico. This list includes Noreaga (N.O.R.E.), Lloyd Banks, Kane & Abel, Joe Budden, AZ, Juelz Santana, and Fabolous.

Italian rappers such as Sa Razza, La Fossa, Rookie and even Articolo 31 were inspired by Latin rap. Italy's first and most important hip hop magazine was called Alleanza Latina, the Italian translation of Latin Alliance.

Noted Latino rappers and hip hop DJs

External links

See also

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