The
Week of April 2nd, 2006: IN BLACK
HISTORY
DJ
MARLEY MARL
CELEBRATE
BLACK HISTORY
EVERYDAY
One
of hip-hop's first (and finest) superproducers, Marley Marl was
an early innovator in the art of sampling, developing new techniques
that resulted in some of the sharpest beats and hooks in rap's
Golden Age. As the founder of Cold Chillin' Records, Marl
assembled a roster filled with some of the finest hip-hop talent
in New York: MC Shan, Big Daddy Kane, Biz Markie, Roxanne Shanté,
Kool G Rap & DJ Polo, and Masta Ace. His production work for
those and many other artists generally boasted a bright, booming,
and robust sound that -- along with his ear for a catchy sample
-- helped move street-level hip-hop's sonic blueprint into more
accessible territory.
Most
important, though, were his skills as a beatmaker; Marl
was among the first to mine James Brown records for grooves and
also learned how to craft his own drum loops through sampling,
which decreased hip-hop's reliance on tinny-sounding drum
machines and gave his '80s productions a fresh, modern flavor.
Marl
was born Marlon Williams on September 30, 1962, and grew up in
the Queensbridge housing project in Queens, NY. He became
interested in music through local talent shows and neighborhood
parties and became an accomplished DJ during rap's early days.
He did mixing work on a number of singles for the old-school hip-hop/electro
label Tuff City and started up his own Cold Chillin' label, which
he initially ran out of his sister's apartment in Queensbridge.
Marl set about recruiting for what became one of rap's first
talent collectives, the Juice Crew. He caught his first big
break in 1984 when he produced Roxanne Shanté's "Roxanne's
Revenge," one of many answer singles inspired by U.T.F.O.'s
underground smash "Roxanne, Roxanne"; luckily, "Roxanne's
Revenge" was the biggest and it put artist, label, and producer
on the map. Marl trumped it by helming "The Bridge,"
an ode to Queensbridge by his cousin MC Shan that became the unofficial
Queens rap anthem and inspired a spirited feud with Bronx native
KRS-One. With Marl's success came the opportunity to produce artists
outside the Cold Chillin' stable, which he did with the monumental
Eric B. & Rakim single "Eric B. Is President," as
well as full-length albums by Heavy D & the Boyz....read
more from VH1.com
Andrea
Lee Oliver Woodson aka "Andy" aka "Mother"
Lucy Curry , Dot
Talley, Bertrand "Goocher" Frye, Irma Woodson,
Russell Woodson,
Nora Moorehead-Dixon, James Dixon, Anthony
"Torry" Dorsey,
Ross "Booper"
Thomas, Termain "Butter" Woodson, Dorothy Jean Lee
Ransom,
John Martin Moorehead,
Jr., Donna Ann Davis, Patrice "Trice Ball" Howze
Copyright
2005 Brotha Ash Productions. All Rights Reserved
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