Guest Editorial: Why we celebrated Hip-Hop’s 50th birthday all year long

While 50 years is a milestone for a person, business and idea alike, the world has taken the year to celebrate a half-century of Hip-Hop.

More than a musical genre, Hip-Hop has become an important part of American cul­ture, influencing fashion, literature, educa­tional courses, the church, politics, law and so much more.

LL Cool J, Queen Latifah, MC Lyte, 2 Chainz, Common, Talib Kweli, Public Enemy, leg­endary rapper and Oscar-winning actor Will Smith along with DJ Jazzy Jeff, and many more artists took to the stage for “A Grammy Salute to 50 Years of Hip-Hop,” which aired on Dec. 10 on CBS.

The star-studded event celebrated Hip-Hop’s trajectory from 1973 to today.

“Half a century ago, the revolution was not televised,” LL Cool J said, introducing the GRAMMY celebration. “Very few people would predict that 50 years later, Hip-Hop would rise to this global moment of power.”

Though the legend is Hip-Hop was born on Aug. 11, 1973, in the Bronx, New York, it has grown from unique sounds at a house par­ty, to a cultural movement that goes beyond age, race, languages and ethnicity.

“Hip-Hop is the ultimate American art form,” said Vice President Kamala Harris, at a Hip-Hop 50th celebration held at her official residence in September. “Born at a back-to-school party in the Bronx, raised on the streets of Philadelphia, Chicago, Oakland, and Atlanta, Hip-Hop now shapes nearly ev­ery aspect of America’s popular culture. And it reflects the incredible diversity and inge­nuity of the American people.”

The vice president talked about Hip-Hop’s African, Caribbean, Latin, gospel, and rhythm and blues influences, before emphasizing the culture as truly American.

“Hip-Hop culture is America’s culture,” she said. “It is a genre. It is music, and melody, and rhyme. And Hip-Hop is also an ethos of strength and self-determination, of ambi­tion and aspiration, of pride, power, and pur­pose.”

Celebrations throughout the year have in­cluded: “Hip-Hop 50 Live” at Yankee Sta­dium, the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture’s “Hip-Hop Block Party,” and a multitude of tributes during awards shows.

From the Grammys, to Yankee’s stadium, to the Vice President’s residence, the U.S. has unapologetically celebrated the importance of Hip-Hop and that’s because it’s more than a musical genre, or even cultural wave.

“Hip-Hop is a declaration of identity,” said Vice President Harris. “It says, ‘I love who I am, I represent where I come from, and I know where I’m going.’”

(Reprinted from the Washington Informer)

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