What we are gonna do is go back...wayback into time...back to 1988



I never thought that as a young teenager back in High School with a large rap tape and record collection, I would be here on the big bad interwebs telling you how incredible this year was and why in my honest opinion that this was the pinnacle year for Hip Hop some 20 years later.

If I may share a memory, I had a good friend from Maryland, Washington who was at my school and in my class and Kory H (what's good B?..it has been a minute huh?) and I became close friends through what else?...Hip Hop, this dude had the illest collection and I got so much music and knowledge through him...well one boring school day he told me got some new tapes and that I was going to flip over what he had...we went around and looked for a tape recorder, found one and four of us locked ourselves in the school's film room, and on that day Kory (aka Kool Korz) reached into his bag and played four albums I have never forgotten, we got to hear Follow The Leader, Straight Out The Jungle,He's The DJ, I'm The Rapper and Smoke Some Kill and I think that is why those albums are still so important to me.

I also fondly remember doing tapes for him and other classmates and bugging out at his music collection, I am hoping he reads this because I haven't seen the dude since the late 80's and I owe a lot to him...thanks for letting me share that memory.

This post is also dedicated to the MVC Posse, Mikey, Vee and Cam this is for you chaps :D

Creativity and rhymes that meant something dominated rap in 1988, you had heavy, political and conscious groups like Public Enemy, Jungle Brothers, Boogie Down Productions and then you had groups like Ultramagnetic MC's, EPMD and Eric B & Rakim that stayed true to the essence of what the art form was all about and you also had the poppy and artists that just wanted to make you move like Kid N Play, JJ Fad,Finesse and Synquis etc.

MC meant Master of Ceremonies and Mic Control in 88 and even the gangster rap artists were actually saying things in their rhymes, gold chains were rocked when you earned the right to rock them, Slick Rick rocked truck jewels and so did the God Rakim.

Beatsmiths like Marley Marl, Prince Paul,Hurby Love Bug,Bomb Squad,Phil Most Chill,Baby Bam,Kool DJ Red Alert, the late great Paul C,Ced Gee,L.G. (Lawrence Goodman),Hitman Howie Tee,Curt Cazal, DJ Doc,King of Chill, DJ Mark The 45 King and others were taking chances and developing exciting new styles and sounds and moving away from just looped up drums or drum machine beats and a basic 4 bar sample.




James Brown loops,stabs, horns and drums were in full effect of course, even getting to the point where two artists said enough!, Hellrazor's "No More James" and the Kings of Swing's "Stop Jockin James", it didn't stop other artists digging out for fresh JB material though and in 1988, classic breaks were often the choice for MC's to flow over more than programmed drum beats.

1988 was all about identity and style as well, think EPMD and you think of fisherman hats, think of Stetsasonic and you think of Troop clothing, think of Rakim and you think of Dapper Dan, think of NWA and think of La Raiders and La Kings caps and giant clocks when you think of Public Enemy.

1988 was also the year that

The Source magazine released it's first issue
Yo MTV Raps first aired
NWA's-Straight Outta Compton LP goes Gold
D-Word aka Te Kupu released New Zealand's first ever rap single "Etu" with the Upper Hutt Posse
Making noise in the UK was 2 Tuff,Black Radical Mark II,D 2 The K, Demon Boyz, Einstein,Hijack, Faze One,
Overlord X,Simon Harris, London Posse,Project X, Kash Da Masta, The Sindecut, Derek B, Korperayshun, MC Duke, MC Buzz B and the London Rhyme Syndicate plus more than a few others.
In Australia, Just Us from Sydney released "Combined Talent", the first Australian Hip Hop record.
The most sampled artist was James Brown
The first reggae/hip hop record known as Raggmuffin Hip Hop was recorded by Asher D & Daddy Freddy
The best ever posse rap cut "The Symphony" with Biz, Craig G, Kool G Rap and Masta Ace was recorded in 1988.

and the US had...

Ultramagnetic MC's
Steady B
Stetsasonic
Dollar Bill & Cutmaster KG
JVC Force
Level One
The 7A3
Superlover Cee and Cassanove Rud
Kings of Swing
Public Enemy
Slick Rick
Eric B & Rakim
EPMD
Salt N Pepa
RUN DMC
Chubb Rock
Boogie Down Productions
DJ Ace and Daquan
Skinny Boys
Def IV
Kool Rock Brothers
MC Don & EZ Ed
Top Choice Clique
MC Shy-D
Supermacks
Scholar 1
Two Damn Fresh
Original Concept
Phase & Rhythm
Rob Base and DJ Ez Rock
Big Daddy Kane
Biz Markie
Craig G
Tragedy
Heavy D & The Boyz
Intellectuals Of Rhyme
Don Juan
D’von & Phreedom
Classical Two
Audio 2
Alliance
MC Lyte
Positive K
Level One
Masters of Ceremony
Another Def Creation
LL Cool J
360
2 Live Crew
K-9 Posse
Lakim Shabazz
Latee
Chill Rob G
Busy Boys
Busy Bee
Butchy B
Captn G Whiz
Cool C
MC Shan
Cold Crush Brothers
Cold City Crew
DBA
Kid Flash
Fila Fresh Crew
3 The Hard Way
Dread & The Rhymesters
DJ Scratch & The God
Deuces Wild
Extra Curricular
DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince
Sirvere and DJ Critical
Spyder D
LA Dream Team
Ice Cream Tee
Funkmaster Wiz

ESP
Frozen Explosion
Mantronix
Get Loose Crew
Grandmaster Caz
Hellrazor
Special K
Known 2 Be Down
Afrika Bambaata
MC Nikke & DJ Rap-N-Scratch
The Posse
Sway and King Tech
MC Rell and The Housereockers
Ice T
Low Profile
Jungle Brothers
De La Soul
KIng Tee
King Tre
Kings of Pressure
Kool D & Technolo G
Krown Rulers
Live Squad
Levi 167
IBM Nation
Live N Effect Posse
Majestic Productions
MC Capone
MC Rajah
Doug E Fresh and The Get Fresh Crew
Schoolly D
MC Tee and Lord Tasheem
Domination
MC EZ & Troup
MC Sugar Ray
MDS Productions
Mikey D & The LA Posse
Ice T
NWA
Mr X and Mr Z
Nu Sounds
PDA In Effect
Lightnin Lee & Poppy Pee
Pre Sweet
Queen Latifah
RP Cola
Raheem
Ramel
Grandmaster Flash and The Furious 5
Raw Corp
Raw Dope Posse
Rhyme Poetic Mafia
Rich Fresh
Ringmaster
Rodney O & Joe Cooley
Royal Destruction
Seville
Sir IBU & Divine Force
Spinmasters
Spoonie Gee
Sport G & Mastermind
Sugar Bear
Stony Island
Taking Your Business
Sweet Tee
Aaron Dee and C Nice
Azie
Cool Ron
Tall Dark and Handsome
TDS Mob
Prince Whipper Whip
The Rangers
Too Kool Posse
Trouble
True Mathematics
Tuff Crew
Too Short
Witchdoctor
Sparky D
Money Earning Crew
Seando
The Jury
Ray Love
Two The Rap
TDF Connection
Toddy Tee
Bango
Donald Dee
Everlast
Roxanne Shante

and many more...

here is the first Back To 1988 compilation, many thanks to those that have helped me track down some hard to find joints.

1. level one - keep the crowd in peace (first production from V.I.C.)
2. 360 - years to build
3. audio two - hickeys (soul shock mix)
4. biz markie - pickin' boogers (original 12inch version)
5. finesse & synquis - a jam ain't a jam
6. prince lover dalu - all praise
7. trouble - i get hype
8. true mathematics - portrait of a rap star
9. tds mob - crushin' em
10. sport g & mastermind - live
11. cool c - down to the grissle
12. bdp - im still 1 (extended remix)
13. dj ace and daquan - give it up
14. lakim shabazz - pure righteousness
15. lightnin lee & poppy pee - big time chillin
16. kings of swing - microphone junkie
17. skinny boys - get pepped
19. latee - wake up
20. domination-you haven't heard nothing



http://www.megaupload.com/?d=QKME6OLK





11 comments:

Anonymous said...

TDS Mob!
This might be the best CD you've done here. Thanks to everyone that made this happen. Quite a few joints on there that I haven't heard in forever , or never heard period.

Anonymous said...

Yo Jaz, a slammin first post of the golden age period! Thanks for bring the beat back!

Pim

Anonymous said...

this is awesome. thanks!

Anonymous said...

Great stuff!

Unknown said...

Fuck aggin!!! This shit is crazy!!! I was 3 years old in 1988. Yet I have been fortunate enough to be exposed to people like Eric B & Rakim, Roxanne Shantae (the real roxanne), Grand Master Flash, De La Soul (of course), EPMD and a few more.

Yourself and Sir-Vere I have to thank for a lot of it. My fave 88 artist right now is MC Lyte. Her come back tracks of late have been awesome. Premiers Wonder Years joint is OMG. I admit I never really heard of or listened to Lyte until then. Sir-Vere told me who she was and I did some research. Awesome!!!!

This thread makes a lot of sense to the term... "yo i ain't heard that shit since '88 dunny...". 1988 sounds like one of the most crucial years for Hip-Hop in its history. God Damn!!!!

Can't wait to catch up with you soon bro. It's been way too long brotha!

Unknown said...

hehe thanks heaps Turks, check your mail at Bebo

:D

Rimoni said...

THE MAN!!!

1988 was an awesome year for Hip Hop bro. Thanks heaps for the hookup! Maria and I will be coming down to Welli in March so she can get her Munta on at the Rock gigs down there so we should try and catch up then broski.

Chur,

R

Unknown said...

Look who the cat dragged in :P

Daily Diggers said...

OH YEAH! '88 is my favourite year no doubt!!

Superbootytuff post man!!

thanks Jaz

Anonymous said...

thanks Jaz....nuthin' but dopeness!

'88 was my fave year no doubt. You've schooled me on the Domination too!

pz

Kid Dyno - Daily Diggers

Krisch said...

Thanks!

There some songs I never heard like Lightnin Lee or Prince Lover Dalu. I'm also looking forward to that Level One song, heard V.I.C. talking about that on the Deep Crates DVD.

Update

Peace The JMS blog is officially closed and I won't be returning to it, it definitely had a good 11 years or so run but it just s...