As hip-hop approaches its 30th year, an album and song canon is beginning to take shape. Today we talk with author Brian Coleman and Duke University professor Mark Anthony Neal about the creation of the hip-hop canon. Also: Andy Palacio and the Garifuna Collective perform live their unique and soulful music from the Caribbean coast of Central and South America.
As hip hop reaches its 30th year, the genre is more segmented than ever, by both regional styles (East Coast, West Coast, Dirty South) and in stylistic terms (Gangsta rap, conscious hip-hop, "alternative" rap). From these many parts a canon is emerging and today we debate its meaning. Joining us is Mark Anthony Neal, associate professor of Black Popular Culture at Duke University; and Brian Coleman, author of Check the Technique.
Mark Anthony Neal's Blog
Brian Coleman's website
Andy Palacio is the musical standard-bearer for the Garifuna, a mixed-race cultural group based along the mainland coast of the Caribbean, from Nicaragua to his native Belize. Palacio and his band the Garifuna Collective play the unique, soulful music of the Garifuna live in the studio.
Andy Palacio & The Garifuna Collective on MysSpace
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