Pioneering documentarian protects hip hop's memory box


By AGENCY

Historian, pioneering hip hop documentarian and historian Ralph McDaniels speaks among his archives of footage spanning 40 years, in Elmont, New York. Photo: AFP

In the basement of a suburban home on Long Island lives thousands of tapes of footage documenting the origins of hip hop, the dominant music genre of our time.

Brooklyn native Ralph McDaniels was among the first figures to film the rap scene in New York, the city that gave birth to the genre, documenting its evolution on his show Video Music Box, where soon-to-be legends including Nas and Jay-Z made their early appearances.

"We were on this low-power TV station that everybody had, there was only 10 of them," McDaniels said of his show's early days in New York.

"We were the last one - channel 31... Kids got out (of school) at 3pm, they ran home and sat down and watched whatever the latest thing was - whatever was new, I played it."

"Diddy, Jay-Z, all these guys would come to me and be like, can you get it on today?"

McDaniels also directed hundreds of music videos, including C.R.E.A.M. from the Wu-Tang Clan and It Ain't Hard To Tell from Nas.

"The music video became super important for hip hop artists because very often, we didn't get radio airplay, especially in the 1980s," said McDaniels.

"It was late night mix shows, you only heard it there."

"When I came on in 1983, people saw LL Cool J" speak on-camera for the first time, he explained - Video Music Box was the first to air an interview with the rapper, who was one of the earliest to achieve commercial success.

McDaniels' floor to ceiling archives of footage spanning 40 years. He been working since 2017 to digitise some 20,000 hours of footage contained in his mammoth personal archive. Photo: AFP McDaniels' floor to ceiling archives of footage spanning 40 years. He been working since 2017 to digitise some 20,000 hours of footage contained in his mammoth personal archive. Photo: AFP

"MTV wasn't playing any Black artiste at that particular time, other than like, Michael Jackson," he said. "Michael Jackson was cool, but he ain't the hood. He's not who represents everybody."

"But Run-DMC and LL Cool J, this is what New York looked like."

In his basement studio McDaniels, scrolls through footage of LL as well as deejay Grandmaster Flash, donning dark shades and a glittering, disco-esque outfit in 1985.

"We had Ralph McDaniels, that's the only thing we had," Jay-Z summed up in the Nas-produced documentary You're Watching Video Music Box," which came out on Showtime in 2021.

'Tells the culture'

McDaniels' also has some of the earliest footage of Missy Elliott, as well as Mary J. Blige, filmed at the moment when so many teen girls wanted to be just like her.

His dream?

"Forty years from now, 100 years from now, this stuff will be in some archives somewhere that somebody can go in and look at and say, 'Tell me about Mary J. Blige,' McDaniels said. "And you'll be able to go in and look at Mary J. Blige in her time - and it was archived by the people that were there."

Today McDaniels' official title is Hip Hop Coordinator at the Queens Public Library, and the microphone box he used on his show is in the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture.

He's also been working since 2017 to digitise some 20,000 hours of footage contained in his mammoth personal archive.

"We have to treat it like it's important," he said of the images. "It is important, because this is what is telling the story of our culture, and you can't just throw it away."

He noted that a lot of soul music archives, for example, have been sacrificed to time: "As a teenager when I first got into the business, I realised that a lot of these things were lost. And I said, 'That can't happen to our stuff', at least the stuff that I shoot."

He's been a regular on 2023's event circuit that's celebrating half-a-century of hip hop throughout the city.

McDaniels laughs that by the time hip hop's 51st birthday rolls around, "corporate will go away," but that it's still important to mark the genre's milestone anniversary and acknowledge the mammoth influence it's had.

"To be celebrating 50 years is amazing, because there was no value on this when we first started," he said.

"Nobody was interested in hiring a hip hop deejay, or getting an emcee to get on the mic, or getting some breakdancers to come out and perform on a stage or using graffiti on a library card like we did today," he added, referring to a special commemorative design that recently debuted on library cards in the New York borough of Queens.

"We're going to make sure that this is available to everybody," he said of his footage. "And it will play its role in libraries, museums, and archives around the world."

"This tells the culture." - AFP

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