Rapper's Delight

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“Rapper's Delight”
“Rapper's Delight” cover
Single by The Sugarhill Gang
from the album Sugarhill Gang
Released October 1979
Format 12"
Recorded Sugar Hill Studios, 1979
Genre Hip hop, Old school rap, Rap
Length 14:37
Label Sugar Hill Records
Certification Gold
The Sugarhill Gang singles chronology
- "Rapper's Delight"
(1979)
"Eighth Wonder"
(1980)
Alternate covers
French 7-Inch single cover
French 7-Inch single cover

"Rapper's Delight" is a 1979 single by American hip hop trio The Sugarhill Gang; it was one of the first hip hop hit singles. It ranked #248 in the List of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time[1] and one critic ranked it #2 in the 100 Greatest Rap Songs, beaten by Common Sense's "I Used to Love H.E.R."[2]

While it is neither the first hip hop single nor the first successful single of the genre, "Rapper's Delight" is generally considered to be the song that first popularized hip hop in the United States and around the world.

Contents

[edit] History

"Rapper's Delight" hit #36 on the U.S. pop charts, #4 on the U.S. R&B charts, and #3 on the UK singles chart. In 1979 it became the first hip-hop single to go gold. The following year, the song was the anchor of the group's first album The Sugarhill Gang.

The word "damn" is censored when they say "goddamn".

It was the first Top 40 song to be available only as a 12-inch extended version — no 7", 45-RPM record was made.

The song inspired Blondie's 1980 hit "Rapture", which is considered by some to be the second major hip hop hit after "Rapper’s Delight". The song also inspired Las Ketchup hit "The Ketchup Song", as the chorus of the song is "Rapper's Delight" lyrics pronounced phonetically in Spanish.[citation needed]

[edit] Predecessors

Like many songs from the time, "Rapper's Delight" was performed over the breakdown section of a disco hit (played by the group Positive Force), in this case Chic's "Good Times."

Although "Good Times" is reported as being replayed by Positive Force, there is some debate among hip hop historians. The strings and piano sections on "Rapper's Delight" sound so close to the original recording that some suggest portions of the track are in fact samples taken from the Chic track. Since the recording of "Rapper's Delight" predates the advent of the sampler this would have to have happened either by editing the studio tape or by having a DJ cut them into the track.

Since the very birth of hip hop was the DJ's art (scratching and cutting), it is likely the band (represented in the form of Sylvia Robinson, the label's founder and a woman well known for her business savvy at all stages of her career) were simply contesting usage of the recording to avoid paying a fee to Atlantic Records (while remunerating Rodgers and Edwards through their publishing entities with a reported $500,000 cash).[citation needed]

Not only was this the first rap song to be based on a funk song, but this song currently holds the record of sampling a previously recorded song in the shortest period of time. After this song many other hip hop records sampled other previously recorded funk tracks; incidentally some other funk tracks sampled by later hip hop artists were newer than the Rapper's Delight song itself. Because of the persistence of hip hop sampling funk records prior to 2000], many hip hop historians think that hip hop was originally intended to be an "extension" to the funk genre.

[edit] Cover Versions

First cover of this track was made by Def Squad (Redman, Erick Sermon, Keith Murray) in 1998 on album "El nińo"

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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