Tucson Humanities Festival – 'Crushin' It: Untold Stories From Hip-Hop's Founding Days'

When: October 12, 2018 6:00pm

In the late 1970s, DJs and MCs in the Bronx began attracting crowds with innovative new sounds that sparked a cultural phenomenon and transformed popular music. Part of the original Mean Machine crew, DJ Rockin' Rob would set up turntables and speakers at Clark Park, spinning records until 3 a.m. as he perfected skills like needle dropping and covering up labels on his records so nobody could copy his beats. Meanwhile, DJ Tony Tone put together the Cold Crush Brothers, known for stage-stomping performances as they battled other groups for hip-hop supremacy, earning a reputation as one of the strongest underground crews in history.

Join these two early pioneers of hip-hop for turntable demonstrations and untold stories of hip-hop's founding days. 

Tickets are required for this event. Register for free at Eventbrite using the link below.

This presentation is part of the Tucson Humanities Festival, presented by the UA College of Humanities. For more information about the festival, visit the links below.

Sponsored by: Loud Republic and Tony Crush Entertainment.


Audience: All
Audience size: Large (101-500)

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Address

Contact info & links

Contacts

Eric Swedlund College of Humanities

Requests for disability-related accommodations should be directed to the event's primary contact: Eric Swedlund