HarveyCanal"a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
Dixie Cups - Iko Iko. Not just for the sing-song lyrics but the bassline.
Big_Stacks"I don't worry about hittin' power, cause I don't give 'em nuttin' to hit." 4,670 Posts
HarveyCanal said:
Dixie Cups - Iko Iko. Not just for the sing-song lyrics but the bassline.
Hey Harvey,
So, you consider it a rap song without rhyming?
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
HarveyCanal"a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
They are rapping. In a schoolgirl, double dutch sort of way. In fact, they are snapping on what their Indian gang will do to your Indian gang. Pre Cold Crush.
HarveyCanal"a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
Okay, compared to Pigmeat, the Dixie Cups are definitely singing. But I stand by the bassline as a clear precursor to hip-hop production.
Dixie Cups - Iko Iko. Not just for the sing-song lyrics but the bassline.
Harvey don't we have recordings of Indian rhymes/songs with rhythm that pre-date Dixie Cups?
PL Big Chief? Some Folkways recordings of Mardi Gras Indian tribes?
So the question to me is what is rap?
I think the first rap song has to come out of the NYC block party scene of the 1970s.
Otherwise we get some Edison cylinder of a nursery rhyme.
HarveyCanal"a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
Dixie Cups Iko Iko is a cover of a Sugarboy Crawford song from the 50's. They say he combined the chants of 2 warring Indians. But his version is straight r-n-b whereas the same application of marching band tuba to modern bassline that makes Big Chief such a landmark was continued with the Dixie Cups Iko Iko. The foundation for both funk and hip-hop to come.
I don't care which one it was, as long as we can all agree that it wasn't "Subterranean Homesick Blues". Rockists used that one alot to "look down" on rap...
Flip Wilson stole that routine and brought it to mainstream TV.
There must be some kind of story there.
Is it common for comedians to lift routines, characters, bits from other comedians?
Do comedians or gag writers ever claim copyright infringement?
Shorty Long did a thing on Motown with HCTJ too.
Perhaps HCTJ is like Jody, just part of the folk tradition.
Comments
Hey Harvey,
So, you consider it a rap song without rhyming?
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
Although I hear the scrawling on the caves of Altamira can be interpreted as mad flow, yo.
Harvey don't we have recordings of Indian rhymes/songs with rhythm that pre-date Dixie Cups?
PL Big Chief? Some Folkways recordings of Mardi Gras Indian tribes?
So the question to me is what is rap?
I think the first rap song has to come out of the NYC block party scene of the 1970s.
Otherwise we get some Edison cylinder of a nursery rhyme.
Then there's this as well:
Again, straight r-n-b, but still.
Or, there's "The Preacher and the Bear" from 1937:
http://www.musicalepisode.com/post/111933264170/butterball-butterballs-part-1-fast-eddie
There must be some kind of story there.
Is it common for comedians to lift routines, characters, bits from other comedians?
Do comedians or gag writers ever claim copyright infringement?
Shorty Long did a thing on Motown with HCTJ too.
Perhaps HCTJ is like Jody, just part of the folk tradition.
Discuss.
Dude thanks for that. This thread is highly entertaining.
- spidey