Analysis Of From Mambo To Hip Hop

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From Mambo to Hip-Hop

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The movie ‘From Mambo to Hip-Hop’ is a great documentary about a revolution in the entertainment industry. It talks of evolution on Salsa music and Hip-Hop culture in suburbs of New York. South Bronx is a ghetto neighbourhood. The people living in the area are challenged economically. There is a record of high cases of violence that exist in the streets due to high crime rate and drugs being traded as a means of survival (Gordon, 2005). Most of the people living in the area are descendants of African immigrants who could trace their origin in the Caribbean islands with a large number Latin American population too.
South Bronx has got influence from the Caribbean culture in the beginning of twentieth century. (Gordon 2005) says immigrants greatly influenced the culture in areas they settled in America. Conga drums and …show more content…

The fact that Salsa was greatly taken by the white and Latin Americans, the black wanted something new for identification (Taylor 2005). That tussle among the Latin Americans and the blacks resulted to violence. The violence escalated to burnt property which saw many buildings go to flames. South Bronx was brought to its knees as most buildings were razed in huge fires.
The creativity in the blacks was not shuttered by the razed down buildings (Gordon, 2005). The buildings gave them an opportunity to showcase how they were suffering as a result of using music as a powerful tool to spread social and political message. They used these burnt buildings to hold dance and spoken word competition. The gangs would meet to hold break dancing champions. As the dance competitions grew to a new level, the blacks the new to invent a new music genre. According to Taylor (2005), the new music genre born out was Hip-Hop. Hip-Hop was a music build around a sense of recognition and power

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