Yo Gotti went off in a recent interview with Power 106 about the current state of the rap game. “The rap game right now is semi-boring,” Gotti said. “I just feel like, since COVID, they put us in side and we never came out. The energy ain’t been the same. I feel like mentally we been inside.” Furthermore, Gotti said that he hoped his new mixtape, I Showed U So, will help rectify things. “With this tape, I tried to make the outside music,” Gotti explained.
However, he’s not the only one currently bashing the rap game. Polo G recently took aim at the state of rap on Twitter. “This rap shit got so lame and watered down. It ain’t no fun in it no more,” the Chicago rapper lamented. It appears that as hip-hop turns 50, many of the genre’s influential figures feel that something is missing from the current product.
However, while Gotti may be feeling out of sorts with rap, he is very much feeling the opposite when it comes to soccer. Gotti has been serving as owner of DC United since late 2021 and recently spoke on what the opportunity means to him. “It was a few years ago when I joined the club as an owner, part of the ownership club. I think diversifying growth as an entrepreneur, I mean, whoever thought we would own part of a professional sports team?” Gotti told Ebro Darden of Apple Music. “I try to show to the young guys in my city by action, what we can do and what we can become if we stay determined and disciplined and on top of what we’re trying to do as young hustlers and entrepreneurs.”
So far, 2023 has been one the better seasons for DC United in sometime. They currently hold the last playoff spot in the East with an 8-10-6 record and 30 points. However, the next four clubs beneath them are all within one win (3 points) of tying or surpassing United. They are currently led in scoring by Christian Benteke, the Belgian international they signed from Crystal Palace last year. He currently has eight goals this season. Hopefully Gotti can found himself back to loving rap the way he loves his soccer club.
Jermaine Dupri recently took to social media, expressing his disappointment in the large brands of Atlanta. He posted a Tweet earlier today (August 18), in which he calls brands out for failing to host any events in celebration of the 50th anniversary of hip hop. It’s clear that the Atlanta-based musician isn’t pleased with the lack of festivities, sounding off on the platform.
“Just for the record!” Dupri began his Tweet. “No brands have done any dinners or get togethers in Atlanta celebrating the 50 anniversary of HipHop. That’s Crazy!!!” he wrote. Various commenters weighed in on 2cool2bl0g‘s repost of the Tweet, with some even suggesting that Dupri put something together himself. “He has the clout to do it,” one user notes. With that being said, Dupri did pay tribute to the anniversary earlier in the summer, in his own way. “I did a hi-top fade paying respect to Hip Hop 50,” he revealed in July. “Because like, I see everybody talking about, ‘We celebrating Hip Hop 50.’”
Jermaine Dupri isn’t the only person to have noted a lack of acknowledgement amid the milestone. Recently, Ebro called out artists for failing to even mention the anniversary, claiming that it’s the least they can do considering the industry allows them to make a living. “Making all this $$$ because of HipHop and artists can’t even post a ‘Thank You,’” he wrote.
Joe Budden also appears to share a similar perspective, taking to his podcast recently to call out labels. He claimed that major record labels should be going the extra mile to celebrate the occasion, even going so far as to suggest they put together a festival. “Y’all don’t think it’s a little odd,” he begins, “that without Nas and Jesse Collins, without Mass Appeal and Jesse Collins, we don’t get a tribute?” He continued, telling labels “Y’all are the ones that was supposed to do that.””
Flo Milli continues to kill it. This summer, the Southern starlet has been consistently celebrating some of the biggest names in hip-hop as the genre turns 50 this year. Lil Wayne and Too Short are among those whose most famous songs (“A Milli” and “Blow The Whistle”) were reimagined by Flo in her fun and flirtatious fashion. This New Music Friday (August 18), she returned with another homage to one of the greats – Kelis – by rapping over her famous “Milkshake” beat for a track called “Hot Box.”
In the accompanying visual, we see the 23-year-old working a shift at her milkshake truck alongside friends who look slightly more appropriately dressed for the job than her. “He brought his b**ch to see me at Coachella / Stalking online, but in person, it’s wetter,” she rhymes over Kelis’ classic hit. “Keep pressing me, she must got a vendetta / Go ask your ni**a who’s sucking it better,” Milli confidently adds, making it clear she’s not one to fight over a man.
Prior to sharing today’s freestyle, the “In The Party” artist shared her “Fruit Loop” single earlier this month. When dropping off the music video shortly after that, Flo confirmed that her next LP, titled Fine Ho, Stay, is in the works. She preceded that with Ho, Why Is You Here? in 2020, and You Still Here, Ho? in 2022, both of which gave us many songs worth keeping in rotation for the foreseeable future.
Check out Flo Milli’s latest freestyle, “Hot Box,” on YouTube above. Which of the rap diva’s Hip-Hop 50 releases has been your favourite so far? Let us know in the comments, and tap back in later for more hip-hop/pop culture news updates.
He brought his b**ch to see me at Coachella Stalking online, but in person it’s wetter Keep pressing me, she must got a vendetta Go ask your ni**a who’s sucking it better
The Hip-Hop 50 celebrations have been a necessary reminder of the global impact of the culture. The celebrations primarily highlighted the commercialization of hip-hop, from the streets of the Bronx to a global phenomenon. However, it’s provided an incredible moment to celebrate and acknowledge the pioneers who broke through barriers to achieve such success. Still, the number of legends on a grassroots level deserves their flower, too. Rhymesayers artists Sa-Roc and Sol Messiah have undoubtedly left their mark on their culture in their own right. Sa-Roc is a formidable MC who has gone bar-for-bar with the best of ’em. This was evident in her excellent 2020 Rhymesayers debut, The Sharecropper’s Daughter. Sol Messiah is an original member of the Bronx chapter of the Rock Steady Crew. Throughout his illustrious career as a producer and DJ, he worked with legends from KXNG Crooked to JAY-Z.
The chemistry they developed over 20 years ago took center stage at Red Bull BC One Midwest Cypher in Minneapolis. Considered the largest and most prestigious breaking competition in the world, Red Bull BC One drew in a sizeable crowd at First Avenue. Hip-hop purists celebrated breaking in its purest form. Meanwhile, Sa-Roc and Sol Messiah served as the musical talent for the evening.
“Being a part of events like this kind of validates and affirms that, you know, hip hop as a culture really is a global influence around the world. And it’s here to stay,” Sa-Roc told HotNewHipHop hours before they hit the stage. Sol Messiah added, “My whole upbringing was dealing with the four facets of hip-hop. So it’s really great to see that 50-some-odd years later, it’s still being celebrated and it’s still the biggest energy that you find on Earth.”
To celebrate hip-hop’s 50th anniversary, we caught up with Sol Messiah and Sa-Roc for an in-depth conversation that dives into the past, present, and the future of hip-hop.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Sa-Roc & Sol Messiah On Preserving The Culture & Pushing It Forward
Approaching the 50th anniversary of hip-hop, how does it feel bringing all these pillars together ahead of the major milestone?
Sa-Roc: For me, it’s really dope to be a part of it. I think that my introduction to hip hop and to rhyming was being fully immersed in the culture, getting the history. So, I had a really strong foundation for the importance of what it is I was doing in terms of moving the culture forward. Being a part of events like this kind of validates and affirms that, you know, hip hop as a culture really is a global influence around the world. And it’s here to stay.
Sol Messiah: For me, it’s really important because that was one that was blessed to grow up in a culture. Initially, a graffiti artist and a B-boy, and then, eventually going into DJing. And I’m also a member of the original Rock Steady Crew, Bronx chapter, and the Universal Zulu Nation. So this is just a combination of all of that. My whole upbringing was dealing with the four facets of hip-hop. So it’s really great to see that 50-some-odd years later, it’s still being celebrated and it’s still the biggest energy that you find on Earth.
From your POVs, how would you describe hip-hop’s evolution? From where it began to see where it is today. Not just on a mainstream scale but on a grassroots level, too.
Sol Messiah: I’ll say this: for a minute, it seemed like it was going off the rails. A lot of people realize that when money came in, when the budget came in and started to hit, it was like – I was a DJ, then for a lot of MCs at the time – they would separate us. B-boys pushed to the back. Graffiti artists were not even seen for a while. And then they separated the DJ and MC and started to focus directly on rap. But luckily, the underground or the grassroots, with us who deal with the fourth facets and just the purity of it. That’s what I see.
Just like with this festival that we’re doing now with Red Bull, I liked that they bring them all back together. We still have us that tie those together. So it evolved with ‘Yeah, we got to make some money,’ it got worldwide, but it’s still a little bit – you kind of have to push to have the other elements seen. But I think the b-boys are crazy dope, DJs, graffiti artists – it’s crazy. And the MCs – the real MCs, that is. Not the rappers but the MCs are actual griots.
Sa-Roc: I have to echo a lot of what he said. I think that I think that the mass commodification of hip-hop has definitely moved it a little bit away from the foundation and the culture as a whole. But the independent artists, the actual artists that have been doing the work to maintain that the wholeness, the holistic nature of the actual culture, you know? When you travel the world and you see you randomly see b-boy and b-girl classes in Berlin. Or you go to West Africa, you hear like, people rhyming, seeing graffiti in different countries, as well. You see that it’s still alive and thriving.
So the culture itself has taken roots and maintains a consistent stronghold on the culture as a whole. But just as we do, we grow, we fall, we rise, you know? We have our ebbs and flows as humans, the culture evolves and changes and shifts in the same way. So I’m excited that we are refocusing the attention on the foundational elements of hip hop as we approach the 50th anniversary. I’m excited to see this movement reach our highest skill level in all of these elements.
Being signed to Rhymesayers, how do you feel about Minneapolis as a hub for hip-hop compared to other major cities?
SR: I think that because it’s not like one of the cities that you immediately think of like your LA’s or Atlanta’s or New York, the scene was allowed to grow and flourish in a way that was a little bit less corruptible if you could say. So the music that came out of Minneapolis – and not just hip hop – but Prince, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, and you know, Stokley from Mint Condition and all the things that Rhymesayers brought to the culture. They have left an indelible impact on the broader culture, in the nation and around the world. But it was allowed to grow and blossom and develop a strong, loyal support group and fan base outside of this machine. So that’s a really beautiful thing.
I think you can tell that in terms of the sound and the creativity and stuff and the music. The uniqueness of the music that comes out of Minneapolis. So it’s, it’s a really dope thing to kind of be a part of the imprint of Rhymesayers, and have that artistic creativity to do the same.
SM: One thing I’ll say, we travel a lot, and we go anywhere in America. Minneapolis, outside of LA, is probably the only place where you can go where it’s not a mainstream artist, he or she will have a show with DJs and MCs, and the place will be packed from front to back. I realized that when I came here about seven years ago. I was like, ‘wow, they still loving hip hop.’ It doesn’t have to be a mainstream name for it to pack out. And people love it to hear these MCs and watch these DJs. That’s what I dig about what Rhymesayers, specifically. [They] brought and keep to the culture of hip hop in America.
As a celebrated MC-DJ/Producer duo, who are your top three MC-DJ duos of all time?
SR: I would definitely say Gang Starr. I would say… I would say Pete Rock and CL Smooth. But speaking candidly, the song “T.R.O.Y,” that’s the only song I really, like, remember solidly from them. But because it’s such a classic, I’m still gonna give it to them. And what Pete Rock has done individually, obviously, it’s amazing. But then, I mean, this might be controversial, but I’m gonna have to go with Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince. I feel like in some circles, people kind of relegate them to pop and stuff like that. But think about the impact that their hip hop has had on the culture then helping to give Philly a wider stage and what they’ve gone on to do both individually and together. So yeah, I’m going to say DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince.
SM: Okay, so mine is first, DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince. And why? Not because we think of “Summertime” and all that. But if you go back and you look at their stage shows, they were together, they were a crew. You see Jazzy Jeff leading the way and he was actually [Will Smith’s] cheerleader. And they were a dope duo. Another one I would say is Gang Starr, Guru and DJ Premier. And mine, one of the top is Run DMC with Jam Master Jay, which is a crazy duo – well, trio.
Sa-Roc, you worked with [Indian music composer] GV Prakash on “Paranoid.” From your travels and your experience, how do you think the next 50 years of hip-hop will look internationally?
SR: I think, you know, definitely was just continue to develop and grow. I know, for myself, I’ve worked with a lot of international artists and done bilingual songs with different artists. And to me, it’s important to have that kind of dialogue to create this conversation of hip hop as a global influence. And I think the more artists do it, as we’re seeing with the blends of like Afrobeats, and hip hop artists in the States.
I’ve worked with artists in South America and stuff like that. So like, I think that as these musical genres start to blend, as we see amapiano gaining any more popularity and stuff like that, I think that it’s only going to get bigger. And I think it has firmly established its validity. But I think that once we recognize that there are all of these additions to the conversation all over the world, it can even it can only get better, bigger, and grow larger and even more important in the eyes of the world, you know?
Is there a specific scene or country globally that you’d like to see incorporate more hip-hop?
SM: I don’t know if Ethiopia has a poppin’ hip-hop scene but I would love to see Ethiopian hip-hop and see what they bring to the culture. I’m sure it exists, I just haven’t heard it. But as far as the next 50 years and the rise of it, as she said, hip hop language is spoken all over the world. No matter where we go. And even if you just go look it up, you’ll see hip hop, with all the elements. But, I think that being that we have the internet now, you’re gonna see more in a visible fashion. So that we’ll see brothers and sisters in India, we’ll see people in Pakistan, we’ll see the b-boys everywhere and MCs everywhere, in their language, which is crazy to me.
I’ll give you an example, we were in Mexico and we were riding down the street and it would be boys in the middle of the street to do and spins. And I was just like, what? In traffic? Hitting spins at the red light. And that just shows you how strong and how powerful the culture is for it to reach everywhere. You go around the world, they might not know what mainstream artists is but they know what b-boying is. They know what MCing is, they know what DJing is, you know? I think it’s just gonna grow, get bigger and stronger and more entrenched, which helps the people because hip hop is the people. It’s the grassroots, you know?
Sol, can you corroborate the story about JAY-Z giving Dead Prez a free 24 bars on “Hell Yeah (Remix)” in an attempt to sign them to Roc-A-Fella?
SM: We was just talking about this the other day. There is a writer and journalist named Dream Hampton. And Dream had the Dead Prez demo of the original song, “Hell Yeah.” She would take it and she played it for JAY-Z. And JAY-Z was like, “Yo, this is dope. This is crazy. Can I jump on that joint? You think they’ll let me jump on that joint?” And she was like, “I’ll ask them.” She went over and asked, “Can JAY-Z jump on this?” They was like, “JAY-Z? Of course, JAY-Z can jump on this. That would be amazing” Now, he went and did that, then after that is when he was interested in signing them. That’s how the actual story goes.
And the reason I know is I know her but she literally just wrote this up and put it online the other day. But that is what happened. Because there are two versions: there’s my version, and the original version, which is slower and mine is the remix. And JAY-Z jumped on it willingly like it was nothing.
He was just like, you know – because Dead Prez, they’re well respected worldwide. They’re one of the few groups that have a message and don’t stray away from or try to cater to the mainstream. They just do straight-up revolutionary hip hop and JAY-Z wanted to be a part of that. But you know, JAY-Z has done a lot. He works with Jay Electronica, he worked with different people that you’re like, “Wait, you’re working with them?” He is the most mainstream artist probably ever right? If you think about it. One of our first billionaires, right? But yeah, that’s how he jumped on it because of Dream Hampton.
Finally, what do you two hope and predict the next 50 years of hip-hop will look like?
SR: I think that we’re gonna see more of hip-hop in the academic space. We’ve already seen some of the leading universities incorporate Hip Hop curriculum. I’ve luckily been able to be a guest speaker in different classes and speak about my experience as an artist and my perspective as a representative of the culture. I think where we’re inevitably headed in the same way in which we talk about classical genres, you know? These artists like Beethoven and Mozart, and all the rest, are revered as this very timeless, classical kind of music.
Hip Hop has shown over and over again, it’s a classic form of music, it has a global imprint, and will continue to do so. So it will become unavoidable, especially as we bring it back to the foundation with these celebrations where, in a sense, forcing these larger media platforms to acknowledge that, you know? Acknowledge the impact, not only on music but fashion and dialogue has social and historical conversation and commentary. But that’s what we’re gonna see. We’re gonna see more and more of these classes, we’re gonna see majors being developed, because it’s unavoidable. It’s here to stay.
SM: I think that the purity of it is probably going to come back because people will kind of get tired of watching the watered-down, corny. Whether it’s guys talking about drugs and murder, or its women talking about their bodies every single sentence, or the guy’s murdered somebody every single sentence. I think it’s gonna come back to what’s actually real, the purest form, which is talking about our situations at hand and what we deal with every day.
And I just think it’s gonna come back to the beginning. Everything runs in cycles. Chuck D said, “Life runs in cycles.” I mean, it’s literally what’s going to happen. And, you know, being more respected as a way an art form where we can get – you don’t have to be a pop artist to be able to get you some money for doing what you do. It’s nothing wrong with the culture, you know, being a DJ, being an MC, being a graffiti artist. Fashion – that’s another element that we added to it, but we also added health to it. There’s an element in hip-hop. So, I think it’s gonna come back to the roots.
Earlier this week, Hot 97 host Ebro took to Twitter to explain some thoughts he had on the 50th anniversary of rap. “Making all this $$$ because of HipHop and artists can’t even post a ‘Thank You’ …” he wrote in a post. Debate among fans erupted in the comments immediately as they tried to break down what Ebro meant and how accurate his comments were. Many fans pointed out just how many events there have been celebrating the 50th anniversary of the genre while others pointed out how many majors contemporary rappers have yet to acknowledge it.
Now, Joe Budden is providing his own response. Ebro’s original comments were reposted on Instagram by 2Cool2Bl0g which is where it caught Budden’s attention. In the comments of the post, Budden responded to the situation. “Funny, i said this same thing about the labels lol,” his reply reads. In response to Budden’s comment many fans pointed out his willingness to say something that others wouldn’t. “u are probably the only person in your position that’s going to say that. Ebro isn’t going to play that game,” says one comment. “rare W for you, pal..” says another.
Joe Budden is no stranger to giving his opinions on divisive issues. He found himself in hot water recently for dismissing some of the allegations against Lizzo. The singer is facing a lawsuit claiming that she created a hostile work environment. “It felt like the accusations were coming from people who expected Disneyworld and got like regular, hip-hop music industry s**t,” Budden explained.
Joe Budden also said that he is “scared sh*tless” of the new Drake album. After hearing his recent collaboration with Central Cee, Budden was worried that Drake’s new project wouldn’t be predominately rap focused. What do you think of Joe Budden’s comment responding to Ebro? Let us know who you think is right in the comment section below.
Fat Joe says that performing at the Hip-Hop 50 Live concert at Yankee Stadium “felt like heaven.” He discussed the star-studded show with AllHipHop. The event also welcomed appearances from Run-DMC, Nas, Lauryn Hill, Lil Wayne, Snoop Dogg, Slick Rick, EPMD, as well as several Wu-Tang Clan members, and even more artists.
“It’s unbelievable, it’s unreal,” Fat Joe told AllHipHop. “It’s like heaven. You died and woke up in heaven. What was best about [the event] was young boys with they own speakers outside it. [They were outside] Yankee Stadium rapping, freestyling. Then you had bands out there playing … We in the middle of the street having fun.”
Not everyone has had such a positive response to the recent Hip-Hop 50 celebrations. Uncle Luke, for one, complained on social media about a lack of recognition for fellow Florida rappers at the events. He argued that he’s dealt with “disrespect towards Florida hip-hop” for years.
During an appearance on the AllHipHop podcast, Geto Boys rapper Willie D also took a negative opinion on the vents. He e explained: “Shit’s wack. Because a lot of it is being put on and presented by gatekeepers who don’t have the best interest of the culture at heart. And it’s a money grab for them. They’re picking and choosing who they think should receive praise, who should receive accolades.”
Rap has lost one of its last true originals in Melvin “Magoo” Barcliff, who died earlier this week at the age of 50. Best known as the rhyme partner of superproducer Timbaland, Magoo occupied a unique position in the spectrum of the genre. He was much more than a sidekick, as he shared co-billing with his do-it-all bandmate, but never actually a solo artist. He was something like a combination of A Tribe Called Quest’s Phife Dawg and Outkast’s André 3000 – but at the same time, nothing like them (or anyone else, really) at all.
I was, like most rap fans in the late 1990s, introduced to Magoo through his contributions to Timbaland & Magoo’s 1997 debut album, Welcome to Our World – especially its groundbreaking singles, “Up Jumps da Boogie” and “Luv 2 Luv U” and their eye-popping music videos. Those videos dominated the music video countdown shows in a lot of ways – while they certainly usually landed high on those lists, they also stood out because there was nothing else like them.
This was the heyday of Blackground Entertainment, as it was called then under its distribution deal with Atlantic. This was when positive word-of-mouth from Aaliyah’s 1996 sophomore album One in a Million was enough to generate buzz for practically anything Timbaland touched as a producer. Ginuwine’s Ginuwine…the Bachelor and Missy Elliott’s Supa Dupa Fly were megahits of hip-hop and R&B, and then, before going solo himself, Timbaland made sure to put on his oldest friend, Magoo, who he’d met in high school along with fellow future Virginia Beach superstar Pharrell Williams.
Back then, Tim, Magoo, and Pharrell had formed A Tribe Called Quest-esque trio called Surrounded By Idiots and recorded a demo that somehow survives on YouTube to this day. Listening to it, you can hear the formation of the lyrical chemistry between Timbaland and Magoo, the off-kilter sense of humor that could disarm and charm even the most skeptical listener. What younger readers have to understand about Magoo’s style is how unique it was at the time, and how impressive it was that he and Tim decided to do their own thing on that debut.
The year before had seen the releases of something like a dozen of hip-hop’s most pivotal albums, including but not limited to Nas’ It Was Written, Jay-Z’s Reasonable Doubt, The Fugees’ The Score, Lil Kim’s Hardcore, De La Soul’s Stakes Is High, and Redman’s Muddy Waters. Hip-hop was grimy. It was soaked in funk and soul, in gritty gangster tales and dizzying displays of internal rhyme and witty wordplay. If, in the early ‘90s, it had been a goofy teen, all bright colors and bouncy dances and The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air, by the late ‘90s, it was more of a pretentious art school student, hanging up a Boondocks Saints poster in its dorm room in an effort to be taken seriously.
And into that climate came Magoo, all nasal pitch and unadorned penmanship, whose most famed lyrical quote to this day is still a hilarious flip of The Trashmen’s “Surfin’ Bird.” Yes, Tim’s soundscapes set the projects he produced apart from what the rest of the world was doing in a huge way. But his futuristic funk was anchored by the old-school leanings of his rhyme partners, Magoo and Missy Elliott, who stripped down the hyper-verbal wording of their contemporaries and just… well, rhymed.
Magoo could catch you off guard with unexpected references, and skewed boasts like, “Offbeat and on beat, old school like Beat Street / I stink like Pop’s feet, make sweat with no heat.” His verses were always worth a listen because you never knew what he was going to say next. Over the course of their partnership, Tim and Magoo released three albums, never quite reaching the heights of their first after hip-hop finally started to catch up with them. But for a time, Magoo was one of rap’s most innovative and unique voices, paired with one of its most forward-looking producers. Magoo is an indelible part of hip-hop history, a one-of-one.
Hip Hop 50 Live at Yankee Stadium was a MOMENT. Tons of Hip-Hop legends poured into the Bronx to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Hip-Hop, including Fat Joe, who called the event “unreal.”
Speaking with Chuck Creekmur at AllHipHop, Joe said, “It’s like heaven. You died and woke up in heaven. What was best about [the event] was young boys with they own speakers outside it. [They were outside] Yankee Stadium rapping, freestyling. Then you had bands out there playing … We in the middle of the street having fun.”
Yankee Stadium was full of rhymes, beats, and pure Hip Hop energy as legendary artists and rising stars converged for a monumental celebration – Hip Hop 50 Live. A star-studded concert extravaganza honoring the 50th birthday of the iconic music genre took center stage in a historic event co-produced by Mass Appeal, Live Nation, and the New York Yankees.
The lineup read like a who’s who of hip-hop history, with the likes of Run DMC, Nas, Snoop Dogg, Lil Wayne, and Ice Cube igniting the stage. A cascade of performances kept the crowd grooving, from A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie’s modern flair to the timeless presence of Kid Capri and the lyrical prowess of Lil Kim and Remy Ma. The legacy continued with appearances by pioneers such as Grandmaster Caz, Kurtis Blow, and Roxanne Shante, creating an unforgettable fusion of past and present.
But the surprises didn’t end there. Special guests, including Senator Chuck Schumer, Governor Kathy Hochul, and baseball icon Derek Jeter added a touch of prestige to the jubilant affair. Hip Hop luminaries like Lauryn Hill, Wu-Tang, Method Man, and Wiz Khalifa ensured that the celebration resonated with true aficionados.
Hip Hop 50 wasn’t just a concert; it was Mass Appeal’s heartfelt tribute to the very essence of hip-hop. The event encapsulated the company’s deep commitment to honoring the culture through dynamic storytelling, original music, and immersive experiences. The Hip Hop 50 Universe encompassed a charitable mission intertwined with the Universal Hip Hop Museum, exemplifying the power of music to make a positive impact.
As the beats echoed through the iconic stadium, the hip-hop community came together to mark a milestone – 50 years of rhythm, rhyme, and cultural revolution. The legacy of this event will reverberate far beyond the stage, leaving an indelible mark on the history of music and the hearts of fans everywhere.
You can see images from the monumental night below and rewatch the evening above.
Yankee Stadium was full of rhymes, beats, and pure Hip Hop energy as legendary artists and rising stars converged for a monumental celebration – Hip Hop 50 Live. A star-studded concert extravaganza honoring the 50th birthday of the iconic music genre took center stage in a historic event co-produced by Mass Appeal, Live Nation, and the New York Yankees.
The lineup read like a who’s who of hip-hop history, with the likes of Run DMC, Nas, Snoop Dogg, Lil Wayne, and Ice Cube igniting the stage. A cascade of performances kept the crowd grooving, from A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie’s modern flair to the timeless presence of Kid Capri and the lyrical prowess of Lil Kim and Remy Ma. The legacy continued with appearances by pioneers such as Grandmaster Caz, Kurtis Blow, and Roxanne Shante, creating an unforgettable fusion of past and present.
But the surprises didn’t end there. Special guests, including Senator Chuck Schumer, Governor Kathy Hochul, and baseball icon Derek Jeter added a touch of prestige to the jubilant affair. Hip Hop luminaries like Lauryn Hill, Wu-Tang, Method Man, and Wiz Khalifa ensured that the celebration resonated with true aficionados.
Hip Hop 50 wasn’t just a concert; it was Mass Appeal’s heartfelt tribute to the very essence of hip-hop. The event encapsulated the company’s deep commitment to honoring the culture through dynamic storytelling, original music, and immersive experiences. The Hip Hop 50 Universe encompassed a charitable mission intertwined with the Universal Hip Hop Museum, exemplifying the power of music to make a positive impact.
As the beats echoed through the iconic stadium, the hip-hop community came together to mark a milestone – 50 years of rhythm, rhyme, and cultural revolution. The legacy of this event will reverberate far beyond the stage, leaving an indelible mark on the history of music and the hearts of fans everywhere.
You can see images from the monumental night below and rewatch the evening above.