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The Book of HOV: A Retrospective on Jay-Z’s Iconic Career

Inside the library, a vast and laudatory exhibition retraces the emblematic career of the child from Brooklyn, who built his legend like a modern fairy tale: former dealer of “Marcy Projects”, the housing estate where he grown up, Shawn Corey Carter — aka Jay-Z — became one of America’s greatest rappers in the 1990s and 2000s, then a billionaire businessman at the head of an entertainment empire, Roc Nation, who designed the retrospective.

“I haven’t really visited a lot of exhibitions. So seeing this, for my favorite rapper, is pretty mind-blowing”savors Jamarly Thomas — “or Jay-T,” he smiles — a 31-year-old warehouse worker from the Bronx.

In his lifetime

“For a lot of young African-Americans who come, he (Jay-Z, editor’s note) can show them that they can become taller”adds Jamarly.

Brooklyn-born Amanda Brown, 28, appreciates that Jay-Z “get all that praise” in his lifetime.

The rapper, who forms with Beyoncé one of the most famous couples in popular culture, has multiplied the hits — “Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)”, “Izzo (HOVA)” — and crossed the borders of rap with the ode to New York “Empire State of Mind”.

He also placed during his career 14 of his albums at the top of the American reference classification Billboard 200 (only the Beatles did better, with 19).

Free, the exhibition “The Book of HOV” (one of the nicknames of Jay-Z), opened on Friday and long lines formed all weekend to visit the places or register for the library in order to collect one of the thirteen unpublished models of “Brooklyn Library” membership cards, stamped with the artist’s album covers.

In the Bronx

The tribute to the rapper precedes the inauguration, on August 2, of another immersive retrospective on the history of hip-hop at the “Hall of Lights”, the New York branch of the Culturespaces network.

Graffiti or breakdance sessions in libraries, “block parties”, concerts… many other initiatives are flourishing to celebrate the 50th anniversary of a movement born in the Bronx to escape poverty and discrimination against Afro -Americans and Hispanics, and become a phenomenon brewing billions of dollars, which inspires music, but also sports and fashion.

“Celebrating 50 years is extraordinary. Because all that had no value. When we started, nobody wanted to hire a DJ, an MC or breakdancers”points out Ralph McDaniels, hip-hop coordinator for the borough of Queens libraries, and whose TV show “Video Music Box” was a staple of the local rap scene in the 1980s and 1990s, which has shined the spotlight on future stars like Jay-Z, Nas, LL Cool J or The Notorious BIG, killed in 1997.

Auction

The birthday is set for August 11, 1973. On that day, on the ground floor of a public housing building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, in the Bronx, a DJ of Jamaican origin, Clive Campbell, alias DJ Kool Herc, innovates: by spinning the same disc on two turntables, he isolates the sequences of rhythms and percussion and makes them last in the speakers, prefiguring the “breakbeat”, an essential component of hip-hop music.

Fifty years later, on August 11, 2023, DJ Kool Herc will share the poster for a mega-concert at Yankee Stadium, where other veterans like Grandmaster Caz, Kurtis Blow, The Sugarhill Gang, pioneer Roxanne Shante, but also Lil Kim, Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg and Run DMC.

A sign of its influence, hip-hop even feeds auctions. Since Tuesday, we can afford at Sotheby’s a ring set with rubies and diamonds worn by Tupac Shakur, icon of the Californian “West Coast” – but born in Harlem – and murdered in 1996. Estimate of the jewel: 200,000 to $300,000.

2023-07-20 04:56:00
#JayZ #York #celebrates #years #hiphop

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