The Ghetto Brothers

THE GHETTO BROTHERS
 
 
The Ghetto Brothers  were a gang (or club) and music group founded in New York City’s South Bronx in the late 1960s.  The gang eventually spread to much of the Northeastern United States.  Like the Young Lords, they were involved in Puerto Rican nationalism, including, in the case of the Ghetto Brothers, an association with the then-new Puerto Rican Socialist Party.  This gang had political motivation to uplift young Latino and Black men in the community.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
Hip hop culture predates the development of rap and hip hop music by nearly a decade.  From Wikipedia:  “Hip hop is a subcultural movement that was formed during the early 1970s by African-American and Puerto Rican youths residing in the South Bronx in New York City. . . .  It is characterized by four distinct elements, all of which represent the different manifestations of the culture:  MCing (oral), turntablism or DJing (aural), b-boying (physical), and graffiti art (visual). . . .  The origin of hip hop culture stems from the block parties of the Ghetto Brothers, when they plugged in the amplifiers for their instruments and speakers into the lampposts on 163rd Street and Prospect Avenue and used music to break down racial barriers, and from DJ Kool Herc at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, where Herc mixed samples of existing records with his own shouts to the crowd and dancers.  Kool Herc is credited as the ‘Father of Hip Hop’.  DJ Afrika Bambaataa of the hip hop collective Zulu Nation outlined the pillars of hip hop culture, to which he coined the terms:  MCing or ‘Emceein’, DJing or ‘Deejayin’, ‘B-boying’ [break dancing], and graffiti writing or ‘Aerosol Writin’.”
 
(September 2016)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021