DJ SEAN P: Rock It Don’t Stop It
DJ Sean P
Rock It… Don’t Stop It!
BBE Music
London-based, deep grooves DJ Sean P has compiled a series of early Hip Hop recordings from 1979 to 1983, an era sometimes labeled âThe Old School.â Rock It, Donât Stop It is a compilation of lesser known 12″ singles by MCs from Brooklyn to Boston, all operating in a time dominated by the smash success of âRapperâs Delightâ and Sugarhill Records at large.
Seanâs collection of recordings here are of Hip Hop in its infancy in the recording booth mind you, but not necessarily Hip Hop as a practiced form of musical expression. For true grass roots documents of Hip Hop practiced in an emerging embryonic state, check out Cold Crush Brothers vs. Fantastic Five or Kool Moe Dee vs. Busy Bee at Harlem World in 1981 for instance. It is the bootleg tapes of Hip Hop performances in the Bronx or Harlem that reveal there was a stark difference in energy and complexity between the live performances of Uptownâs pioneers and those who hit the recording booth in the early 1980s. As a result, âSugarhillâ era records are considered dubious achievements by some, as these recordings sacrificed the edge and vitality of Hip Hop performance for the profits from a one off novelty dance hit.
Enter Rock It, Donât Stop It into that debate. Does this collection enrich our understanding of early forms of rap recordings by uncovering previously unknown artists and their dynamic efforts? The answer is, yes, but it wonât necessarily end the dispute. While many Bronx pioneersâ achievements may have been unrecognized by popular audiences during the early ’80s Sugarhill era, the Rock It, Donât Stop It compilation reveals there are dozens of recorded efforts that attempted to both recapture the energy of those live performances, and in some cases, push recorded Hip Hop into a brave new future.
âBoomâ by Hardkore for instance explores a disco dub abstraction not like anything of the era. Kevin Fleetwood and the Cadillacs of Soundâs âSweat (The B Side)â is a noisy and exciting mix of new wave keyboards and disco party rhymes. âOh Yeahâ by the Jackson Two, a pair of female MCs represent well with a tight sing song delivery. Tracks such as âGolden Ruleâ and âMC Rockâ have a surprising edge that differs from most Enjoy and Sugarhill Records. âThe Peopleâs Message, Take Twoâ by Terry Lewis and Wildflower may have a wide eyed naivetĂŠ lyrically but with its sung chorus, bridges and rhythmic variation it is as compelling as anything Kurtis Blow ever recorded. And when Martin Luther Kingâs âStreet Sweeperâ speech is overlaid the beat for the songâs last four minutes, a connection between the 1960s civil rights rhetoric and 1980s Hip Hop is made long before Public Enemy or KRS ONE were recording.
A handful of tracks do nothing to convince Old School purists that mass recordings of Hip Hop in the early 1980s moved the culture forward. The title track, âRappinâ Partee Grooveâ or âAt the Place to Beâ donât cover any ground not already claimed by Treacherous Three or Spoonie Gee on wax. Rickey G. & the Everloving Fiveâs âTo the Maxâ is wholesale knock off of Fearless Fourâs 1981 hit âRockinâ It.â And it is for these reasons some believed the formulaic backing disco tracks and simplistic rhymes and cadence imprisoned the possibilities of recorded Hip Hop from 1979 to 1982. It wouldnât be the first time the record industry opportunists cynically capitalized on an emerging musical form almost at the cost of its own vitality.
But in some ways, the banality of âOld Schoolâ recordings is what makes the production on Bambaataaâs âPlanet Rockâ or Melle Melâs lyrics in âThe Messageâ in 1982 a break out from that sonic penitentiary. These ensuing records that came after much of all that is found on Sean Pâs compilation are a veritable line-in-the-sand that shaped not only Hip Hop records henceforth but pop music into the 21st century. Whatâs exciting about Rock It, Donât Stop It are the moments when we hear artists, knowingly or not, chipping away at the walls of that prison.
— Andrew McIntosh