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Posts Tagged ‘hop’

Playboy: Bunny hop

Hugh Hefner has retaken control of a shrunken empire

FRESH from announcing his engagement to a “Number one Girlfriend” 60 years his junior, Hugh Hefner proved he can still get the girl in business, too. On January 10th Playboy Enterprises accepted an offer from its 84-year-old founder for the 30% of its shares he did not already own. In doing so, the company spurned a proposal from FriendFinder, an internet firm that also owns Penthouse magazine, the longstanding rival of Mr Hefner’s beloved Playboy. “The brand resonates today as clearly as at any time in its 57-year history,” claimed Mr Hefner. Perhaps, but the business is not performing like it used to, and badly needs some corporate Viagra.

Mr Hefner’s offer of $6.15 a share values Playboy Enterprises at a mere $207m, down from about $1 billion in its prime in 1999, when it briefly posed as a hot dotcom stock. In November the company reported a bigger third-quarter loss than a year earlier, as its revenues continued their seemingly remorseless decline, to $52m. …

Quantum computing: A quantum hop

Not a leap, perhaps, but two important steps on the way to making quantum computing practical

SOME technologies seem a long time coming. Their story has a familiar script: a breakthrough is hailed; overblown expectations are aroused; disappointment follows. Away from the public’s impatient gaze, however, tinkering scientists turn out incremental improvements, furtively catching up with the revolutionary rhetoric of yore. This appears to have been the case with the sequencing of the human genome. It also illustrates the recent history of quantum computing.

An ordinary computer stores and processes information using bits, which take the value of either one or zero (physically represented by different voltages of electric current). In the bizarre world of quantum mechanics, however, subatomic particles can exist in several states at once. Such “superposition” means, for instance, that the property of an electron known as its spin can be not only “up” (representing, say, one) or “down” (representing zero) but also some combination of the two. In quantum computing, such superposed values are named qubits. …

Hip Hop Beat Software – Discover How to Create The Best Beats Posted By : C.Driver

With hip hop beat software, you can truly deliver your Rap or Hip Hop beats to the masses in a short period of time (this was impossible to achieve a few years ago, all accolade to the latest of technologies) with this software. Bottom line is that your hip hop beat software should and must be able to do whatever you want it to do.

Hip Hop Legend Rakim: New Album

Hip Hop Legend RAKIM Drops New Single “Walk These Streets”

Long Awaited Album THE SEVENTH SEAL In Stores November 17, 2009

Rakim

On October 27, 2009, the man many call The God MC, Rakim Allah, or just Rakim, released “Walk These Streets,” (peep it below) the new single off of his much anticipated new album The Seventh Seal. Produced by Needlz for Dry Rain Entertainment, “Walk These Streets” features Maino and Tracey Horton. Additional guest artists featured on The Seventh Seal, which drops November 17, 2009, include Busta Rhymes, Jadakiss, Styles P, and others, including Destiny Griffin, Rakim’s own daughter. The artist’s Ra Records shares the imprint in a joint venture with Tuscan Villa and SMC Recordings and is distributed through Fontana/Universal Music Group. Rakim is currently on the road previewing the album and testing out new material at intimate venues across the United States.

Since its release, the album’s set-up single “Holy Are You” (stream below) has won praise from critics and fans alike. USA Today states, “The God MC previews his long-awaited The Seventh Seal with a lyrically adept reminder of how he earned the name,” with Billboard proclaiming “Rakim is in top form, richly merging self-mythologizing reflections on his legacy with religious imagery.”

His first full album of new material in almost a decade, The Seventh Seal is Rakim’s contemporary observation of the hip hop culture he helped define. While staying loyal to his New York roots, Rakim has created a body of work that encompasses the very best of regional, underground and mainstream styles that are reformed and delivered through his intricate lyricism and the seemingly effortless flow for which he is revered.

The artist states, “The Seventh Seal is my own revelation… my way of taking the best of what hip hop has to offer, what we as a culture and a community have to offer, putting my stamp on it and leading us forward while constantly respecting what we’ve already accomplished. When you’ve been blessed with a career like mine, you develop a deep relationship with the music, and that love is recognized by the true heads that share it with you. You’ll see us keep building as we break through each Seal… showing the best of what I can do in many forms, bringing the energy and having fun, but first I’m laying that foundation and give my longtime fans the conscious fire they expect.”

U.S. TOUR 2009:

November 3 House of Blues Houston, TX

November 4 Emo’s Austin, TX

November 6 House of Blues New Orleans, LA

November 9 Amo’s Charlotte, NC

November 11 Music Farm Charleston, SC

November 12 Lincoln Theater Raleigh, NC

November 13 Hat Factory Richmond, VA

November 14 Dragonfly Harrisburg, PA

November 15 Black Cat Washington, DC

November 17 Toad’s Place New Haven, CT

November 18 Lupos Providence, RI

November 19 BB Kings New York, NY

November 21 Asylum Portland, ME

November 22 Paradise Boston, MA


KRS-One: The Gospel of Hip Hop

THE TEACHA PUTS OUT A TEXTBOOK

KRS-One

KRS-One‘s The Gospel of Hip Hop: The First Instrument – the first book from the I Am Hop Hop/powerHouse Books imprint – is set for a November release.

The philosophical masterwork of KRS ONE, The Gospel of Hip Hop: First Instrument is set in the format of a self-help book. The 800-plus-page opus is a spiritual manual for citizens of Hip Hop Kulture that combines classic philosophy with faith and practical knowledge for a fascinating, in-depth exploration of Hip Hop as a life path. Known as “The Teacha,” KRS-One developed his unique outlook as a homeless teen in Bronx, NY engaging his philosophy of self-creation to become one of the most respected emcees in Hip Hop history.

KRS-One painstakingly details the development of the culture and the ways in which we, as “Hiphoppas,” can and should preserve its future. The Teacha also discusses the origination of Hip Hop Kulture and relays specific instances in history wherein one can discover the same spirit and ideas that are at the core of Hip Hop’s current manifestation. He explains Hip Hop down to the actual meaning and liguistic history of the words “hip” and “hop,” and describes the ways in which Hiphoppas can change their current circumstance to create a future that incorporates Health, Love, Awareness and Wealth (H-LAW).

Committed to fervently promoting self-reliance, dedicated study, peace, unity and truth, the Teacha has drawn both criticism and worship from within and from outside Hip Hop Kulture. In this beautifully written, inspiring book, KRS ONE shines the light of truth, grounded in his own empirical research over a 14-year period into the fascinating world of Hip Hop.

KRS ONE is a philosopher, activist, author, lecturer, and emcee. Since founding canonical Hip Hop act Boogie Down Productions in the mid-1980s, he has released a catalog of 19 full-length albums, along with a star-studded list of collaborations. In 1988 he founded the Stop the Violence Movement, a collective of artists, activists, educators, and entertainers exploring the roots of violence while working to promote the development of positive conflict resolution methods. He is currently producing an album celebrating the organization’s 20th anniversary, with contributions by Nelly, Method Man, Busta Rhymes, the Game, Hakiem Green, Grant Parks, Duane “Da Rock” Ramos and many others. KRS ONE is an accomplished public speaker that’s delivered lectures at over 500 colleges, universities and other venues. In addition to The Gospel of Hip Hop, he is the author of The Science of Rap (self-published, 1995) and Ruminations (Welcome Rain, 2003). Currently KRS ONE is touring the United States with Stop the Violence, urging America’s urban centers to seek non-violent conflict resolution over revenge and war.


Its Time To Let Rap Music Die

Rap is dying and the Tupac influence on rap music will be the name of this cancer. This stronghold was strengthened by glory and fame that Tupac received from his gangster tales from his music, plus his thug persona in his real life. Which helps every real life non rapping thug idolize and identify with [...]

Now for a Texas Tommy!

Britain is going crazy for a joyous dance from the 1920s called the lindy hop. So why can’t our writer get the hang of it?

In a cramped basement in central London, two dozen couples glide, bop and leap around a parquet floor. A few of the men have thin moustaches, waistcoasts and two-tone shoes, while some of the women have polka-dot dresses that billow out as they twirl around their partners in a tuck-turn, flat spin or a Texas Tommy. In the background, scratchy records play out trumpets, saxophones and horns in a combination of six-step jazz, blues and swing.

The idea of couples dancing the lindy hop seems so dated that you would think this must be a revival night – a once-in-a-while nostalgic hark-back to the 1920s, when lindy hop was emerging from the shadow of the mighty charleston as the dance for the young. But you’d be wrong. Lindy hop (also known as swing, jive and jitterbug) has been gathering a steady following in the UK for more than a decade, spurred on by the popularity of TV dance shows. All over the country, there are day courses in lindy hop, holidays, drop-in classes, club nights, competitions and even a trade in the associated paraphernalia – for men, retro panama hats, suits and spats; and 1940s prom dresses for women.

“When you go out swing dancing, you actually go dancing,” says Simon Selmon of the London Swing Dance Society (LSDS) – a lindy hopper of more than 20 years. When he first started teaching in the early 1990s, Selmon dreamed of getting 20 people in the class. “Now, we are busier than ever – we’re running more events and classes. We’re doing more corporate events and we’re getting requests from schools, partly because of the health aspects. Teachers also tell me it’s good communication between people and there’s teamwork involved.”

I started taking Selmon’s classes partly out of curiosity, but also because, with seven weddings to attend this year, I thought it would be useful to finally learn how to couple dance. I joined 150 or so beginners for his most popular class, Wild Times, on a Tuesday night. The lesson began with a stroll, which felt a bit like a jazzed-up line dance (I learned later that you should never call it a line dance in front of a lindy hopper). Ten minutes later, I was working through the basic footwork: a slow-slow, quick-quick on a six-step count. Then we headed downstairs, where more advanced dancers showed us how to do things properly.

I also tried out a smaller, more intimate class. The 52nd Street Jump, a club based in south London but named after the New York street that’s home to such jazz venues as Famous Door and Three Juices, runs 10-week foundation courses to give shy beginners the chance to screw up in front of a smaller bunch of fellow newbies. I asked instructor Steve Mason: what type of person goes along? “One minute you could be talking to a bank manager, then you’d be talking to a policeman, then you could be talking to a plasterer. How many other things in society are there where we hang around in groups of people like us? I’ve always liked the fact it’s such a mixture.”

Lindy hop dates back to 1927, when George “Shorty” Snowden was tearing up the dance halls of Harlem. He took jazz steps from the charleston, introduced fast break-outs (in which the woman is thrown out to the side, and then snapped back in) and won every competition and dance marathon going. After a win at the Manhattan Casino, a reporter asked what Shorty called the moves he was using. Shorty glanced over at a newspaper carrying a front-page report of the aviator Charles Lindbergh’s successful solo flight in the Spirit of St Louis from Long Island to Paris, which bore the headline: “Lucky Lindy hops the Atlantic”. He shot the reporter back a name: the lindy hop.

The dance spread quickly thanks to the music of Count Basie, Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller. In the 1930s, dancers introduced the “airsteps” – acrobatics in which the man throws his partner over his head or between his legs. By the early 1940s, ballrooms across America were hosting regular lindy hop competitions. Swing was the pop music of its day, and lindy hop the way you enjoyed it.

The scene changed after the second world war: the US government put a tax on dancing clubs, so tables and chairs took the place of couples on dancefloors. Rock’n'roll and bebop took over, and things only picked up again in the 1980s, in the clubs of New York. “Back then, if you’d said lindy hop, you’d have had half a dozen people who knew what it was,” says Selmon. He was learning rock’n'roll dances when, in 1986, his instructor suggested some new moves and a trip to the swing clubs of New York. On his return to London, Selmon set up the LSDS. Four years later, he was teaching so much dancing he decided to take a year off his day job buying and selling antique jewellery. “That was 19 years ago,” he says. “It’s been a very long year.”

Back in the class, Selmon starts people off on the basic footwork, and adds a few turns. It’s not that difficult to learn. “You need about three months to feel comfortable then, if you want to refine it, it probably takes about a year,” he says. “You only need a dozen steps to happily dance socially all night long.”

For the first three lessons, I stared at my feet as I jerked (I don’t want to say danced) awkwardly around the floor. For the next three weeks, I was still mouthing the names of the moves, and keeping time very consciously in my head. It took around four months before I could think about leading someone for even half a song. But many of the people who started with me progressed much more quickly; my problem was that I didn’t practise enough.

Ask anyone at the club who the best dancer is, and they will invariably point you to 83-year-old John Barnes, a regular at Wild Times. He’s been lindy hopping since the summer of 1996, though he first saw the dance in the 1940s when he played piano for a west London youth club frequented by Amercian soldiers. More than 50 years later, he started to learn the dance himself after going to a nostalgia night of swing music at the Queen Elizabeth Hall. He hadn’t intended to dance that night, he says, but when he was approached by a young woman who offered to partner him, he says he couldn’t resist.

One thirtysomething Londoner has come alone to Selmon’s class. “It’s something to do other than drinking all night,” he says. Another woman says she dragged her boyfriend along six months ago after coming to classes by herself for a few months. Now he’s also hooked, and they dance three or four times a week.

Lindy hop’s appeal is easy to understand: it’s a joyous dance. “Many of the pioneers of lindy hop grew up in the economic depression of the 1920s and 30s, and dance was escapism, a way to forget your troubles and have fun,” says Selmon. Economic depression is not, it seems, the only thing 2009 shared with the 1920s. Eighty years later, the lindy hop is no longer consigned to dance history – but may just be the social dance of the future.

To find out more about lindy hop, visit 52ndstreetjump.co.uk or swingdanceuk.com

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