Hip house

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Hip House
Stylistic origins
Cultural origins
Typical instruments
Mainstream popularity Significant, particularly late 1980s and early 1990s United States, United Kingdom and Australia.
Derivative forms Rave - Drum N Bass - Breakbeat
Subgenres
Chicago - Electro
Other topics
Notable artists and DJs - Styles of house music - Ghetto house

Hip-house, also known as house rap, is a musical genre that mixes elements of house music and hip-hop. The style rose to prominence during the 1980s in New York and Chicago. However, the first officially credited hip house track was 1988's Rok Da House by UK producers the Beatmasters featuring British female emcees the Cookie Crew.

Minor controversy ensued when a U.S. record called "Get Busy" by Tyree featuring Kool Rock Steady claimed it was the "first hip house record on vinyl." The Beatmasters disputed this fact, claiming that "Rok da House" had originally been written and pressed to vinyl in 1986 . The outfit responded by releasing "Who’s in the House?" featuring British emcee Merlin, containing the diss "Watch Out, Tyree—we come faster, this is the sound of the true Beatmasters." More claims to the hip-house crown were subsequently laid down in tracks by Fast Eddie, Mr. Lee and Tony Scott.

[edit] Hip house chart and club successes in the UK

After successful releases by the Beatmasters, Deskee, Tyree, Doug Lazy, and Mr. Lee, hip-house became popular in nightclubs and garnered substantial chart success. The style complimented sample-based records of the period, produced by artists such as S-Express, Bomb the Bass, and M/A/R/R/S.

Hip house's major crossover success would eventuate in the form of one ground breaking record: "I'll House You" by the Jungle Brothers. "I'll House You" is generally seen as a collaboration between New York house-music producer Todd Terry and the Jungle Brothers (an Afrocentric hip-hop group from New York).

There were several further successful releases, most notably Technotronic's "Pump up the Jam," which reached number 2 on the U.K. charts and the Top 10 on the U.S. Pop chart. The genre achieved massive popularity during the period 19881991 and was catalyst for the fusion of hip-hop vocals in dance music. By 1991, the KLF achieved success with "What Time is Love," which built on hip-house's foundation by featuring emcee Ricardo da Force performing hip-hop vocals over an electronic backing track. There was also a short period in the late 1980s and early 1990s when traditional emcees featured a single hip-house track on their albums, which usually often placed second-to-last in the track listing.

Hip-house tracks featured on popular dance compilations including Telstar's compilation series and was championed by disc jockeys such as 2 Cool Chris and Chad Jackson.

[edit] List of notable hip-house tracks

  • "It's Like That"-Run-DMC Vs. Jason Nevins
  • "The Power"-Snap!
  • "Turn up the Bass"—Tyree featuring Kool Rock Steady
  • "Let It Roll"—Doug Lazy
  • "Kid Get Hyped"—Deskee
  • "Yo Yo Get Funky"-Fast Eddie
  • "That's How I'm Living"-Tony Scott
  • "Don't Scandalise Mine"-Sugar Bear
  • "So Damn Funky-"Rhythm Mode D
  • "Who's In The House?"-Beatmasters
  • "Blame it on the Bassline"—Beats International
  • "Stomp"—K-Yze
  • "Get Busy"—Mr. Lee
  • "For Those Who Like to Groove"—Twin Hype
  • "This Beat is Technotronic"—Technotronic featuring MC Eric
  • "Pain"—Lee Marrow
  • "Easy"—Ice MC
  • "This Beat is Hot"—B.G. the Prince of Rap
  • "Crash (Let's Have Some Fun)"—TKA
  • "Devotion (I Wanna Give You)"—Nomad featuring MC Mikee Freedom
  • "The Power"-Snap!
  • "I Can't Stand It"—Twenty 4 Seven
  • "Pump up the Jam-Technotronic
  • "Boom Boom Boom'-Outhere Brothers
  • "Wiggle It"-2 In a Room
  • "Ou Ee Ou"-DFS
  • "To Go crazy"-Lee Coombs (also another version was done by Lee Marrow
  • "Gonna Make Ya Sweat-C+C Music Factory
  • "DJ Sumpreme"-DJ Supreme

[edit] List of artists