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Dj Zulu Boy

12.12.2020
The Number One B-boy
Born
OccupationB-boy
Years active1968 - 1977
StyleFunk & Hip Hop

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A1 B-boy Sasa is an African American street dancer credited as the first number one B-boy dancer of Hip-Hop [1] at DJ Kool Herc parties in 1973. It was Kool Herc who coined the term toot and B-girls for the African American teenage Funk dancers that attended his earliest parties. Sasa along with the first generation B-boys, Trixie, Wallace, The Legendary Twins, DJ Clark Kent, Chip The Mad Hatter and a few others from Kool Herc's parties, set the foundation for the B-boy dance style in Hip-Hop taking it to the floor, performing acrobatic moves.[2] Originating from the music of James Brown records and breakbeats, along with many other funk hits. The 3rd generation of dancers later introduced the B-boy dance as (Breakdancing) into the mass media, because of the popularity of Hip-Hop becoming a mainstream genre in the early 1980s.

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Biography[edit]

Early life[edit]

Sasa was born in Manhattan New York City and raised in the West Bronx. From childhood he grew up dancing to R&B, soul and funk music, early on he began getting recognition from his school peers for his fine dancing skills at school parties and later in his teenage years. Many of his friends began inviting him to house parties where he made a name for himself on the dance floor with his unique style, especially at Kool Herc parties where the best dancers from all over the Bronx and Harlem went to get down, and even dancers from Brooklyn. The best B-boy dancer was given the title '(A1)' Sasa, like most of the 'first generation originals,' stopped B-boy dancing by 1977. He retired undefeated never losing a B-boy battle. The style was carried on by the original (1975–77) Zulu King's B-boys crew, with new acrobatic innovations that expanded the dances popularity and influence.

References[edit]

Dj Zulu Software

  1. ^Hip Hop: The Complete Archives
  2. ^Neal Anthony Mark. That's the Joint!: The Hip-hop Studies Reader. Routledge/Taylor & Francis group New York 2004 ISBN0-415-96918-2
  • Neal Anthony Mark. That's the Joint!: The Hip-hop Studies Reader. Routledge/Taylor & Francis group New York 2004 ISBN0-415-96918-2
  • Hager Steven. Hip Hop: The Complete Archives. CIPP New York 2014 ISBN150-3-28158-2
  • Universal Hip Hop Museum - Member of the B-boy Committee
  • HIP HOP'S FIRST M.C. Coke La Rock explaining who was the first number one B-boy dancer in Hip Hop SASA on YouTube

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Dj Zulu Software

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