1980's: Hip Hop and House Music In Chicago
Sam Collins, Gilles Brown and Gerard were my hip hop high
school freshman homies. Gilles, Gerard and I were in the same home room, and
Sam was in Blythe’s Room. We lived in different parts of the city also: Gilles
lived near Sox Park, in a small row house development. I wasn’t exactly sure
where Gerard lived, Sam was on the North side, and I lived on the West side of
Chicago. I was a girl-crazy freshman if
there ever was one, but I was far from a Cassanova: I attempted, and failed
miserably at getting to know Kelly Bellford. Kelly was a short, studious girl
who wore glasses that weren’t exactly bifocals, but thick enough to make her
eyes look small. She wasn’t the most stylish girl on campus, she wore mostly
skirts and off brand tennis shoes, but she had a great future behind her! She
hung out with a tall, skinny Asian girl named Pria-she was cute but built like
a twelve year old boy. They both lived north near Edgewater, I believe. Kelly
wasn’t rude to me, but I don’t remember her being especially warm either. I
took a chance and approached her in the school library one afternoon anyhow.
I must’ve had a bad
cold at the time because I remember being on the verge of telling her how I
felt about her before sneezing, and discharging a large amount of snot from my
nose! Completely embarrassed, I darted out of the library and I didn’t look back-LOL!
My buddy Gilles Brown wasn’t having the best of luck with
girls either. He was crazy about Quilla, who was in the same algebra class as
Gilles and I. My sister, Quilla and Dana Piler were good friends who always
showed up together for class so, one afternoon as Gilles was grabbing some things
out of his locker, and Quilla walked by he tried the worst line on Quilla that
I have ever heard. As Quilla walked by, Gilles very casually said to her:
“Jungle love baby…” My impression of Quilla was that she was very sure of
herself, a sharp, cunning girl with a good sense of humor, but she wasn’t
flattered by Gille’s advances. Looking him square in the eyes, she snarled at
him: “What about it?” I don’t think Gilles said anything else to her for the
rest of his high school career.
If only for a brief
moment, I did manage to get the attention of a pretty junior named Velma
Robertson. Velma transferred into Metro from a private school, along with her
brother Vernon, who played basketball on the school team. As a requirement for
all incoming students, we had to enroll into a course titled, “Intro
to Metro.” Velma was a tall, light complexioned, quiet girl, very preppie. She
was always dressed in plush, wool argyle crewneck Ralph Lauren sweaters, with a
mallard print turtleneck underneath, pearl earrings and necklace, jeans or long
skirts, jodhpurs with suede inner knee
patches, riding boots, a Gucci purse. Her hair was short, but always
immaculately styled. She was a Southside girl. She lived somewhere south of 79th
Street on Eberhart. I had a thing for chicks that seemed like they attended
exclusive boarding schools, had undergone Jack-n-Jill training, but some were
incredibly shallow, and dismissive of people who were not of the same
upbringing. They all seemed to know one another, as if there were a factory
someplace (on the Southside of course) that doled out to each the same list of
“attributes” churning out pretty, seemingly studious, light-skinned, cold, vapid
girls. Velma had a soft shrill voice, but she was very well spoken, highly
intelligent, a scholarly individual. Maybe I mistook her kindness for flirtation, but she gave me her number one afternoon. I seemed to find myself in
situations with girls like her, where their interest in me would come and go in
the blink of an eye. I would instantly feel like I had the stench of my former
situation as a homeless child in L.A. on me which would send these chicks
running. I called Velma one evening as I was putting the finishing touches
on my poster for freshman class president. Our conversation was going quite
well, her voice arousing me, throwing me into a state where I had to constantly
remind myself to be cool, and not act like who I was: a giddy high school
freshman-A NERD! I couldn’t believe this fine junior-chick who dressed
impeccably was interested in talking with me! Then all of a sudden, the line clicked.
I looked up, and it was my Grandmother-she hung up on the conversation. I was
furious! How was it that my sister could receive calls, and visits from boys
but I couldn’t have one telephone conversation with a girl?
I didn’t get an
opportunity to call her back until a few weeks later, on a Sunday when Grandma
was at church but by that time, ol’ Velma had gone cold on me. No more
enthusiastic smiles in class, no flirtatious energy, no more telephone calls.
She may have gotten tired of waiting for me to say or do something to prove my
interest. I’ve always been slow to respond out of caution if not being
downright oblivious to the advances of the opposite sex. I knew what time it
was a few months down the line, when I spotted her one afternoon walking through
the hall with Antwon Roman, a junior and fellow DJ. They were carrying large
Carson Perie Scott shopping bags, my guess is that they were going to prom
together. There was no way that I could compete with that.
After my freshmen semester, Velma Roberts transferred out of
Metro, never to be seen again. Her brother Vernon continued the following
semester, and graduated the following year. I vaguely remember asking him about
her, but I don’t recall his answer. Before my pretentious flirtation with Velma
came undone, I had an epiphany while hanging with my freshmen homies one
afternoon. We were occupying a classroom, playing a boom box while Sam Collins,
and a couple other guys were practicing their breakdancing routines, and the
rest of us were working on our graffiti styles in notepads. I was always
looking for (positive) ways to become more noticeable with the female student
body, so when I happened to spot two of the finest senior girls walk by, glance
inside the classroom and I heard one of them say: “I don’t know why anyone
would want to spin on their head?” I knew that it was time to distance myself
from these guys.
It
became blatantly obvious to me one day that my friends and I were virgins, and this
graffiti/breakdance stuff wasn’t making matters any better. Everyone in school
hated graffiti. It was the one of the only issues on campus where the staff, and
upper-classmen were willing to present a united front against: tagging. In
those days, there weren’t many desirable chicks into Hip Hop culture. Back in
those days in Chicago, most young adults could appreciate Run DMC, Kurtis Blow and the Fat
Boys, but not many chicks found a guy writing on trains or, dusty Puma-suit
wearing dudes, doing windmills on a linoleum mat for change in a cup, to suburban
onlookers, appealing. We were into the entire culture, not one element of it. Not only were we freshmen who were into breakdancing, but a couple of the guys participated in a score card game that involved comic book
superheroes called the Marvel Comics Secret Wars-some straight-up nerd shit!
Hell No! Cutting the crowd off didn’t help my situation any more or less
because I was still a virgin with no real prospects but, for all that wasn’t
blossoming with girls in school, I was picking up the beat-matching skills of
deejaying rather rapidly, and I was eager to embark upon all that was happening
with the scene: Rush Street, Oak Street Beach and the Muzic Box.
I still had half a foot in my Hip Hop endeavors: I joined a
north side graffiti crew called Out to Rock, or OTR for short. Style-wise, I
wasn’t the tail end of the crew, but I wasn’t out in front either; I was
somewhere in the middle. That’s because I didn’t accompany the crew to many bombing sessions if any at all: my
handwriting was nice when I took my time, but tagging requires you to be fresh,
and quick at the same time. I could’ve worked to that end, but my interest
waned: I wasn’t trying to get caught up with the police and have my mother
burdened with picking me up from an arrest. I took my chances with staying out
late, but I wasn’t trying to go any deeper than that.
I would meet my OTR Crew members in a small neighborhood park
on the north side, or at the Loyola train stop of what was known as “The Old
EL” or the Red Line today. We would show off our style booklets, records
anything related to the culture that we could share, or show off. There were a
bunch of graffiti crews in town but in my opinion, some of the livest were my crew of course, OTR, ACW
(All City Writers) and TCP: The Crowd Pleasers. I only met one member that I
can recall: his graff name was Stane. All ACW and TCP members were nice with
their tags, and throw-ups. All had dope writing styles. You could almost tell that
these guys had been at it long before the films Beat Street, and Breakin’ were
released. On a hunt for music at Record Exchange, I stumbled upon a record by the Rock Steady Crew, which depicted all crew members in a cartoon character-type style: I remembered seeing image before: Sam showed it to me, but with TCP members! TCP had totally bit that concept! I showed the record cover to Sam at a crew meeting once, and he didn't want to acknowledge it. He didn't want to believe that TCP would do such a thing. Sam Collins was without a doubt, the leader of OTR. He was so
prolific with it! I fed from Sam stylistically: whenever I or anyone would come
close to his lettering style, dude would flip it to another level on you: right
when you’re close, he’ll hit turbo and lose you. I was inspired by him.
I was into Hip Hop culture during the years 1982-1985. Back
then, lines were firmly drawn between Hip Hop and House Music in Chicago. I’m
sure that a lot of the chicks who frowned at Sam, Gerard and I in our Puma
sneakers in 1984 were in the passenger seats of the many brand new Mercedes
Benz, and Chevy Blazers that were rolling through many of the streets of
Chicago’s black ghettos during the Crack era: it took outlaw culture, and making
dope money, to popularize rap music in Chicago.
Looooove this keep them coming Sa'Rah and Queen
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