SPILL THE ENEMY'S BLOOD, NEVER INK.


SPILL THE ENEMY'S BLOOD, NEVER INK.

sic gloria transit mundi



Friday, April 8, 2011

The Origins of Hip Hop - Jamaican Sound System Toasting



"Freedom Train" by U Roy chanting over The Heptones version of "God Bless The Children" (released in JA 1972 on the Pressure Beat label by Joe Gibbs).

Definition: Toasting is a style of lyrical chanting which, in Dancehall music, involves a deejay talking over a riddim. Though the art of chanting over a beat is quite ancient, and found in many African-based musical traditions, toasting became quite popular in Jamaica in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and "sound systems" (traveling deejays and producers with large speakers and a library of beats and riddims) would feature toasting as part of their musical entertainment.

Toasting is not only important in Jamaican music, but also featured heavily in the development of American popular music, as it was Jamaican-born toaster DJ Kool Herc who brought the style to Queens, subsequently setting off the entire history of rap and hip-hop music.
(Via.)


U-Roy Chant Down Babylon [LIVE] at Montreal Reggae Fest 2009.


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