原版英语RAZ 教案Roots of Rap.pdf
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1、WritingResearch an original hip-hop DJ.Write a biography describing the DJs life,influences,and what the artist is doing today.Be sure to cite your references.Social StudiesCreate a timeline showing the evolution of rap music.Include key dates and people.Research additional information,if needed.Inc
2、lude at least five events on your timeline.ConnectionsVisit www.readinga- for thousands of books and materials.Roots of RapA Reading AZ Level X Leveled BookWord Count:1,312www.readinga-Written by Randolph HeardXZ1Z2www.readinga-LEVELED BOOK Xwww.readinga-www.readinga-How has rap influenced the music
3、 that came after it?Focus QuestionWritten by Randolph Heardamplifier commentary culture defacing financial influential inspired mainstream poverty rivals turntables vinyl Words to KnowRoots of Rap Level X Leveled Book Learning AZWritten by Randolph HeardAll rights reserved.www.readinga-CorrelationLE
4、VEL XS4040Fountas&PinnellReading RecoveryDRAFront and back cover:Grandmaster Flash and his group the Furious Five were the first hip-hop act to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.Page 3:Run-DMC and the Beastie Boys pose for their tour promotion photo,1987.Photo Credits:Front cover,back
5、cover:MediaPunch Inc/REX USA;title page,page 11:Sean Pavone/123RF;page 3:Marty Lederhandler/AP Images;page 4(top):Owen Franken/Corbis;page 4(bottom):Bettmann/Corbis;pages 5(top),7(bottom),9:PYMCA/Alamy;pages 5(bottom),7(top):WENN Ltd/Alamy;page 6(top):Ted Spiegel/Corbis;6(bottom):S.I.N./Alamy;page 8
6、:Thinkstock/Stockbyte/Thinkstock;page 10:Heide Benser/Corbis;page 13:Andre Csillag/REX USA;page 14(top):courtesy of Upper Hutt Posse;page 14(bottom):courtesy of Third3ye;page 15(top):Keizo Mori/AFLO/Nippon News/Corbis;page 15(center):Carlos Cazalis/Corbis;page 15(bottom):Agencja Fotograficzna Caro/A
7、lamy3 Roots of Rap .4Born at the Block Party .6 The Four Pillars of Hip-Hop .7 The DJ .8 Breaking .10Graffiti Art .11Rap .13Rap Evolves .15The Party Doesnt Stop .15Glossary .16ContentsRun-DMC and the Beastie BoysRoots of Rap Level X4New York City in the 1970s was a tough place to live.The citys grow
8、ing financial and social problems resulted in high crime rates and soaring poverty.Not much looked bright for the future of many New Yorkers,particularly those in poor neighborhoods.Out of this poverty,however,a new style of music would rise.Hip-hop was born one afternoon in August of 1973 in the So
9、uth Bronx in New York City.A teenager named Cindy Campbell asked her 16-year-old brother Clive if he would DJ(disc jockey)a back-to-school party.Roots of RapIn the 1970s,abandoned buildings were a common part of the South Bronx landscape.Trash piled up as New York City faced big financial problems.5
10、Clive didnt have any fancy equipment.He picked out some records and hooked up two turntables to a guitar amplifier.Clive,who was nicknamed“Hercules”due to his large size,performed as DJ Kool Herc.The party was a huge success.The next day Clive was famous throughout the Bronx.Like Clive,other kids fr
11、om different backgrounds were inspired to take what little they hadbeat-up turntables,vinyl records,a microphoneand use their creativity to invent hip-hop,an entirely new musical culture.Hip-hop featured a distinct kind of performance called rapping that showcased clever rhymes and catchy beats.This
12、 new sound caught fire all over the world.DJ Kool Herc and Cindy CampbellDJ Kool Hercs success moved from block parties to nightclubs.Eventually,he was known as the Father of Hip Hop.Roots of Rap Level X6During a block party,a neighborhood closes its streets to traffic.People come together outdoors
13、to have fun.In the 1970s,block parties often took place in poor areas like the South Bronx.Here,many people could not afford to go to expensive dance clubs.They had to find creative ways to make their own entertainment.Block parties were key to the growth of hip-hop.When a person performed,their liv
14、e audience was made up of friends,neighbors,and even rivals.The audience gave honest feedback during the showgood or bad.Born at the Biock PartyGrandmaster FlashNeighborhood block parties helped develop a sense of community in cities across the country.7The original hip-hop artists knew they could b
15、ecome legendary among their peers.But they did not realize that what they were creating would become world famous.Looking back at those days,DJ Kool Herc noted that no one knew they were actually making history by creating a new culture.Grandmaster Flash,one of hip-hops pioneer DJs,turned down his f
16、irst offer to make a record.He was charging a dollar or two for local shows and couldnt imagine anyone would want to pay full price for a hip-hop record.Early hip-hop was not just music.It was a lifestyle.Since the hip-hop community had no access to performing in clubs,dancing on stages,or exhibitin
17、g their art in galleries,they took their creativity to the streets and made them their stage and the city,their audience.Early hip-hop DJs referred to the“four pillars,”or key parts,of hip-hop culture.These four elements of hip-hopthe DJ,the MC(rapper),breaking,and graffiti artwere all equally impor
18、tant.The Four Piiiars of Hip-HopAfrika BambaataaKRS-ONERoots of Rap Level X8The job of the DJ has always been to keep the party music flowing.To play music,the DJ placed a turntable needle on a groove in the record,ideally as smoothly as possible.Typically,as a song was ending on one turntable,the D
19、J used the second turntable to fade in a new song.Hip-hop DJs did something that was new and different.They took the tools made to play music and used them to make music.One of the most famous sounds of early hip-hop was called scratching.DJs created a scratchy sound by moving the vinyl record back
20、and forth with their hand while it was playing on the turntable.The DJThe first hip-hop DJs used turntables to scratch and mix music.9In 1974,a year after his sisters block party,DJ Kool Herc noticed that crowds loved a part of the record called the breakbeat.The breakbeat was a short,catchy drum so
21、lo.He used his two turntables to repeat the breakbeat over and over.His live audience went crazy.From this came the idea of sampling,which meant taking a part(or sample)of a song and reusing it to make a new song.Hip-hop DJs created their new music from records that already existed,whether they were
22、 making breakbeats,sampling catchy vocal bits or adding scratching.The creativity of early hip-hop DJs influenced music-makers outside the world of hip-hop for years to come.Competition was an important key to every creative aspect of hip-hopeverybody wanted to be the best,the newest,and the freshes
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