1984: Beat Street - The Roxy Battle - NYC Breakers vs Rock Steady Crew. I remember watching this movie a bunch of times and working on the moves. Great music, some influential hip-hop names. A snapshot of musical history!
Crossover Return! Remember last year? I did with Otis in appear in other 8 crossover franchise media. So Otis wear a costume with in on street. Then he and Lee Team up to fight bad guy.
I been a long I draw Beat Street Game just one times.
with Otis.
Not Pico or Boyfriends because they are too repetitive so they won't be around.
It Otis show.
Otis and from Pico's Cousin/Newgrounds (Magna)
Lee from Beat Street Game/Lucky Kat Studios
Wait you mean you’re telling me these are the actual cassettes from back in the day?! #strictlybusiness #beatstreet #scienceofhiphop https://www.instagram.com/p/Cj3p1V7LB6K/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Threatening Thursday turned out to be a beautiful night #thestarlingbar #slickmahoneys #cargodistrict #truebluebutcherandtable #beatstreet (at The Cargo District) https://www.instagram.com/p/Chdk7YgLFB7/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Lullaby, soft, swap, B3, genderbent, OG, hellbeats, Neo, Cg5, alien and minus alien, mearest,happy tree friends, rat, D side, and b side, sarv gf, Trollage, pibby, crystal, agent, beatstreets, mermaid, normal Trollage, and c side
With "What I'm Talkin' About", the Jazz Spastiks deliver a jazzy boombap beat that celebrates the 90s vibe of the "Golden Era" with heavy drums and a skillful selection of samples. East Coast flavor, smoove saxophone samples and New Jersey rawness meet the significant bass-heavy underground style of the two UK producer legends.
Beneficence and Phantasm rap with their own laidback flow about the struggle to get noticed as young rappers from the suburbs. They describe the era when "Beatstreet" and "Wildstyle" were in the movies and rap was just about to make the leap from underground to mainstream. It's about the time when Blondie & Fab Five Freddy found worldwide attention ("Rapture"), RUN DMC was the first hip hop group to be booked to play in front of 98,000 people at LiveAid in 1985 and live recordings of a hip hop concert (Fresh Fest) were broadcast via Music Video Box for the first time.
At the same time, the song is a salute to the NY rap pioneers who paved the way for the subsequent MC's and the hip hop movement in general: UTFO, Howie Tee, Chubb Rock, Sepcial Ed, Big Daddy Kane, Heavy D, etc.
A tribute to hip hop and how it has made its way from its cradle in the South Bronx to the remotest suburbs of the world. There is no better way to honor the 50th anniversary of this culture. I think you know "what I'm talking about".