Hip Hop just turned 50. For the love of rap radio, gangsta flows and low lows, visit these spots to celebrate South L.A.’s contributions to the world’s most popular culture
Large murals decorate the outside walls of the Del Amo Swap Meet in Rancho Dominguez, pictured here on Oct. 29, 2023, including a tribute to Compton rapper and co-founder of both Ruthless Records and N.W.A., Eazy-E (Eric Wright). Swap meets sold Hip Hop mix tapes and records long before commercial radio and music producers recognized L.A. artists. Eazy-E forged a special relationship with North Korean immigrant Wan Joo Kim who opened Cycadelic Records at Compton Swap Meet. Eazy-E delivered boxes of Ruthless Records’ first single “Boyz-in-the-Hood” out of the trunk of his car to Kim and other swap meet vendors throughout South L.A. Kim McGill | Warrior Life
Happy Birthday, Hip Hop. You’re #1.
Hip Hop is officially the planet’s most popular culture. By 2017, 31% of US radio listeners preferred Hip-Hop, according to Nielsen Ratings’ tracking of TV and radio use. In 2020, 23.3% of worldwide album sales came from Hip-Hop / Rap.
Respecting the Roots of Hip-Hop
There is no doubt that the East Coast gave birth to Hip Hop. Philly created popping as a dance style and tagging that soon inspired the giant piecing and All City train cars that defined NYC graffiti. The South Bronx elevated the art of DJing with breakbeats, scratching and sampling, as well as adding breakdancing to the culture. Doug E. Fresh (Douglas Davis of Harlem) originated beatboxing. Immediately, the new culture spread throughout the five boroughs and New Jersey.
The idea that “rap” alone could define such a diverse culture was quickly abandoned. Hip Hop came to be seen as encompassing four elements: MCing (also known as rhyming or rapping), DJing, breaking and graffiti. Later, people added fashion and a whole new flavor of social justice organizing into the mix.
Youth at Nickerson Gardens Public Housing Development in Watts restore the names of residents who have died on the memorial walls located on the front of the recreation center on Compton Avenue just north of Imperial Highway on August 1, 2009. The walls remind people to reflect on the many young people who have lost their lives due to street or police violence, drugs, suicide and other preventable causes. Kim McGill | Warrior Life
As Hip Hop celebrates its 50th birthday, here’s where to honor what South LA added to the culture:
Jump in your low low if you’re as lucky as Ice Cube (O’Shea Jackson) – “I gotta go, ‘cause I got me a drop-top. And if I hit the switch, I can make the ass drop.” Or grab a friend and get there however you can.
1. Reality Rap / Gangsta Rap
In Regulate, Warren G (Warren Griffin III) with Nate Dogg on the hook (Nathaniel Hale) said, “They got guns to my head, I think I’m goin’ down / I can’t believe it’s happenin’ in my own town / If I had wings I would fly, let me contemplate / I glanced in the cut and I see my homie Nate /16 in the clip and one in the hole / Nate Dogg is about to make some bodies turn cold / Now they droppin’ and yellin’, it’s a tad bit late / Nate Dogg and Warren G had to regulate
Warren G said of the lyrics, “That record was things I went through, and our friends went through. We’d witnessed that and we’d been a part of it. We just told the story.”
South LA gets credited for the creation of “gangsta rap.” But that’s not accurate. The media, cops and critics labeled the music without listening to the detailed conditions.
Gangs in LA were created out of two realities.
First, L.A. was extremely segregated, enforced by redlining, restrictive housing covenants, and racial segregation in schools and sundown towns, including Inglewood, Burbank and Glendale. These public policies existed alongside the invisible borders of neighborhoods. Black and Brown people knew not to cross Alameda Street into South Gate or Lynwood.
To protect themselves against white gangs, Black youth created their own groups in the 40s and 50s.
The second factor that gave rise to gangs was the loss of manufacturing jobs with globalization. In South LA alone, more than 70,000 living wage jobs disappeared in the 1970s and early 80s. Crumbling factories still dominate much of Slauson Avenue and Alameda Street.
Investigative journalists and Congressional hearings have exposed that drug trafficking was used by federal agencies under the Reagan administration to fund anti-revolutionary death squads in Central America. The feds then partnered with local law enforcement to flood the streets with guns and drugs to destabilize the Black and Brown power movements in US cities.
Youth who had no job prospects found themselves trapped in a deadly drug economy. Drugs and guns provided street gangs with a lethal mix.
From the start, South LA Hip Hop was neighborhood-based. It didn’t constantly bang whatever set people claimed. It documented the realities of life in specific communities.
So, yes, South LA gets credited with the creation of “gangsta rap.” But really, what South LA gave the world was “reality rap.” There were some gritty, truth-telling tracks before, for sure. But LA Hip Hop was the first to make “where you from” central to the culture and the stories people told.
As Nipsey Hussle (Ermias Asghed) said, “My life is real. I grew up in an environment where being polite was taken as a weakness. So, I just fought everybody.”
As part of the storytelling, South LA artists were also the earliest in Hip Hop to bring international attention to the issue of police violence against Black and Brown communities in US cities.
In NWA’s 1988 album Straight Outta Compton, “F—k tha Police” protests racial profiling and police violence. Ice-T’s “Cop Killer” came out in 1992, a year after four LAPD cops beat Rodney King. “Cop Killer” became an anthem for the LA Uprising that followed the officers’ acquittal one month after the song dropped. Both these tracks were released before KRS-One’s “Sound of da Police” came out in 1993.
Below are a few of the many places that turned young people into Hip Hop historians:
These are residential neighborhoods. Please be respectful and ask permission before taking any photos.
Jordan Downs Public Housing Development on 103rd Street just east of Wilmington in Watts, where many scenes in the classic film Menace to Society were filmed, featuring original Hip Hop music from MC Eiht (Aaron Tyler) and Spice 1 (Robert Greene Jr.). Many of the housing is being torn down and redeveloped, so visit soon to see any of the projects’ units as they originally looked.
Nickerson Gardens Public Housing Development in Watts is where the Bounty Hunter Bloods – that feature heavily in the creation of Death Row Records – are from. The recreation center on Compton Avenue, just north of Imperial Highway, features the names of neighborhood residents who have died.
The location where Nipsey Hussle was killed and the site of his original store – The Marathon – is located on the west side of South Central LA at 3420 W. Slauson Ave., LA 90043.
On the corner of Crenshaw and Slauson are Nipsey Hussle tribute murals in the Fatburger Parking Lot and the US Bank Building.
Take a moment to reflect on all the people who have lost their lives – or been buried alive in prisons – including all the Hip Hop artists who have been killed in LA County. More rappers have been killed here than anywhere else in the world.
2. Lowriders
As 2Pac (Tupac Amaru Shakur) said in his classic tribute to the South Side – “To Live and Die in LA” – “It wouldn’t be LA without Mexicans. Black love, Brown pride in the sets again.”
Chicano culture contributed a lot to West Coast Hip Hop.
In NYC, the subway system plays a central role in Hip-Hop, providing a perfect canvas for graffiti writers.
But, LA lost its vast Red Car transit system in the 1950s. An aggressive campaign by General Motors, Firestone Tires and Standard Oil eventually led to the destruction of the streetcars and their replacement with freeways, buses and automobiles, along with all the pollution, climate change and respiratory illness that comes with them.
Since then, LA has remained addicted to cars.
Lowriders were first built in barrios across the Southwest and Southern California in the 1940s. After rehabilitating classics, the cars’ owners and hangers-on would cruise the boulevards to show off their unique creativity and mechanical wizardry, including dropping cars as low as possible.
“Bajito y despacito, limpio y lindo – Low and slow, clean and mean.”
When cops pushed California to outlaw low riders in 1958, Ron Aguirre took Pesco hydraulics from a B-52 and installed them in his ‘57 Corvette. From then on, drivers could flip a switch to lift their suspensions and make their cars “legal” for the streets.
Car clubs formed and have remained a central part of SoCal life. Black communities admired the masterpieces Chicano hoods were rolling in and created their own car clubs and renovation efforts.
When gangsta rap jumped off in LA, lowriders were the ride of choice.
As Eazy-E (Eric Wright) said in the very first line he dropped: “Cruisin’ down the street in my ‘64 / Jockin’ the freaks, clockin’ the dough / Went to the park to get the scoop / Knuckleheads out there cold-shootin’ some hoops / A car pulls up, who can it be? / A fresh El Camino rollin’, Kilo G / He rolls down his window and he starts to say “It’s all about makin’ that GTA”
French bulldogs Swisher and Dutch pose in front of one of more than 200 classic lowriders featured at the annual Zoot Suit Riot Memorial Cruise on June 5, 2022 in Los Angeles, Calif. Chicano culture – including lowriders – have played a significant part in L.A.’s Hip Hop culture, and remain the ride of choice for many artists. As 2Pac (Tupac Amaru Shakur) said in his classic tribute to the South Side – “To Live and Die in L.A.” – “It wouldn’t be L.A. without Mexicans. Black love, Brown pride in the sets again.” Kim McGill | Warrior Life
Some of the most active lowrider clubs and events include:
@zoot_suit_riot_memorial_cruise on Instagram
Manny “Pachuco” Alcaraz and Art Zamora sponsor an annual cruise from the Eastside to Downtown LA, featuring only cars from the 1940s and 50s, to commemorate the 1943 Zoot Suit Riots. More accurately considered a sailor riot, white seamen and other soldiers roamed the streets of LA and attacked Mexican-American youth. LA area media, officials and law enforcement defended the military and criminalized the youth.
Watts Finest Car Club, @wattsfinestcc on Instagram
Watts Life Car Club, @wattslifecarclub on Instagram
Both these clubs distribute food weekly to the community on Wilmington Avenue just south of 103 St. in Watts and distribute toys in the same location at Christmas.
3. Swap Meets
As early as 1986, the mixtapes created by a young DJ, Dr. Dre (Andre Young) were a hot item, selling at The Roadium Swap Meet in Torrance.
Legend has it that the original conversation between Eazy-E and Dr. Dre (then of the World Class Wreckin’ Cru) was set up by Steve Yano, who sold music – including Dre’s mixtapes – at The Roadium.
Yano marketed Hip Hop when record stores thought it was too much of a gamble to take up precious space in their crates. While Hip Hop artists knocked on – and eventually knocked down – the doors of the music industry, they also looked to other places to hustle their music.
And they found South LA swap meets.
South L.A. residents rely on swap meets, including Rancho Dominguez Swap Meet (Del Amo Plaza) pictured here on Oct. 29, 2023, for everything from toys to tires. Globalization and American deindustrialization in the 1970s and early 80s left manufacturing sites abandoned. Korean immigrants began to establish indoor swap meets in old factory spaces throughout South L.A. based on the marketplaces in their homeland. These included Slauson Swap Meet which opened in 1983, Compton Swap Meet (officially called Compton Marketplace) in 1983, and Rancho Dominguez Swap Meet (Del Amo Plaza) in 1990. Hip Hop headz didn’t just get their music at the swap meet. It also became the place – and still is – to get all your fashion needs met: fresh white tees, long white tube socks, Dickies, Ben Davids, plaid flannels, a new pair of chucks or Nike Cortez, gold teeth, chains and medallions, or bandanas (rags, flags) in any color a hood demanded (until drama led some swap meets to discontinue the sale of “gang attire”). Kim McGill | Warrior Life
When Reaganomics led to massive outsourcing and deindustrialization, LA’s manufacturing plants were abandoned overnight. Korean immigrants began to establish indoor swap meets in old factory spaces throughout South LA based on the marketplaces in their homeland. These included Slauson Swap Meet and Compton Swap Meet (officially called Compton Marketplace), which opened in 1983, and Rancho Dominguez Swap Meet (Del Amo Plaza) in 1990.
The relationship between Korean merchants and the Black community suffered as customers were often mistreated, stores failed to hire Black staff, and merchants were also accused of having unfair pricing and inferior merchandise. Tensions escalated after the killing of 15-year-old Latasha Harlins in 1991 by Soon Ja Du, who wrongly suspected the Black teen of shoplifting in her corner market. This was one of the sparks that ignited the ‘92 LA Uprising, along with the acquittal of LAPD officers in the beating of Rodney King.
However, Eazy-E forged a special relationship with North Korean immigrant Wan Joo Kim, who opened Cycadelic Records at Compton Swap Meet. Kim got the idea when he was selling women’s hair products at The Roadium and saw Yano making a lot more sales with Hip Hop music. Eazy-E delivered boxes of Ruthless Records’ first single, “Boyz-in-the-Hood” out of the trunk of his car to Kim and other swap meet vendors.
MTV finally woke up and created Yo! MTV Raps. When they invited NWA onto the show, the group took host Fab Five Freddy on a tour of the neighborhood, including a stop at the Compton Fashion Center.
Hip Hop headz didn’t just get their music at the swap meet. It also became the place – and still is – to get all your fashion needs met: fresh white tees, long white tube socks, Dickies, Ben Davids, plaid flannels, a new pair of chucks, or Nike Cortez, gold teeth, chains and medallions, or bandanas (rags, flags) in any color a hood demanded (until drama led some swap meets to discontinue the sale of “gang attire”). The swap meets are also where many people continue to print memorial T-shirts to honor the death of a loved one.
It’s important to mention that LA’s Black O.G.s, as well as gangsta rappers, got their style of dress, some of their language, including “homies” – in addition to their loyalty to lowriders – from Chicano cholo culture.
NWA, Tupac, and Kendrick Lamar made the Compton Swap Meet a West Coast Hip Hop landmark when they featured it in their videos.
The Compton Swap Meet closed in 2015, another victim of Walmart. But The Roadium, Slauson and Rancho Dominguez Swap Meets are still open. If you only have time for one visit, make it to Rancho Dominguez, which pays tribute to the graffiti side of Hip Hop culture with its entire outside walls covered in aerosol art.
Graffiti murals cover the outside walls of the Del Amo Swap Meet in Rancho Dominguez including a tribute to Tupac Shakur, pictured here on Oct. 29, 2023. The idea that “rap” alone could define such a diverse culture was quickly abandoned, and Hip Hop came to be seen as encompassing four elements: MCing (also known as rhyming or rapping), DJing, breaking and graffiti. Later, people added fashion and a whole new flavor of social justice organizing into the mix. Kim McGill | Warrior Life
Check out these swap meets that played a significant role in the growth of Hip Hop:
The Roadium, 2500 W. Redondo Beach Blvd., Torrance
Rancho Dominguez Swap Meet (Del Amo Plaza), 2787 Del Amo Blvd.
Slauson Swap Meet (Slauson Super Mall), 1600 W. Slauson Ave., L.A.
4. Soul Train
For this part of your tour, sit back, relax and take out your phone. Search YouTube for Don Campbell locking on Soul Train.
Don Cornelius established Soul Train to give Black musicians and dancers a national platform, including Funk music, considered a precursor of Hip Hop. (James Brown and P-Funk are said to be the most sampled artists in Hip Hop music.)
When Soul Train moved to LA in 1971, the show searched the area for young, Black talent. Producers heard about LA Trade Tech College student Don “Campbellock” Campbell who originally invented locking and regularly performed it in LATTC’s cafeteria.
Locking was based on freezing a dance move with fast and exaggerated arm gestures that matched the breaks in the music. Campbell and other lockers were regularly featured on Soul Train and the dance linked with the East Coast’s popping and breaking to give Hip Hop its distinct moves.
Unlike white producers TV and radio executives, Cornelius never shied away from featuring rap music, and Soul Train brought Hip Hop MCs into homes across America. In his 2023 induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Questlove (Ahmir Thompson) of The Roots called Soul Train “a sibling, a parent, a babysitter, a friend, a textbook, a newscast, a business school and a church.”
5. K-Day Radio
Radio stations thought hip-hop was a passing fad, and MTV ignored it as amateurish and “not real music.” There were plenty of racist suppositions of record labels, radio stations and TV producers, the vast majority of whom were white men. MTV banned the first music video – Straight Outta Compton – released by NWA.
KDAY Radio went on air in 1948, licensed out of Redondo Beach at 1580 AM as a soul / R&B station. In 1983, KDAY hired Greg Mack as music director, and he made it the first full-time rap radio station in the nation. Mack brought on Dr. Dre and DJ Yella Boy as the new program’s first “mix-masters.” KDAY was so influential that it was involved in brokering a historic peace treaty among Blood and Crip sets in Watts in 1992.
Tune in to KDAY now at 93.5 on the FM dial for old-school Hip Hop classics.
You must be hungry.
To finish your tour of South LA’s iconic Hip Hop spots, eat at Fatburger. There are plenty of locations to pick from, but you could stop at the Crenshaw and Slauson spot where Nipsey Hussle’s mural is. Lovie Yancey, a Black woman who moved from Tucson to South Central, founded the original Fatburger on Exposition Boulevard and Western Avenue. Originally called Mr. Fatburger, Yancey dropped “Mister” from the name when she dropped her business partners.
As Ice Cube said, it’s a good day when you eat here – “No helicopter lookin’ for a murder / Two in the mornin,’ got the Fatburger.”
E-40, Kanye West and Pharrell have all invested in franchises.
Or treat yourself to Roscoe’s House of Chicken and Waffles – founded by Herb Hudson, another celebrated Black entrepreneur who moved to LA from Harlem – with locations close by in South Central LA, Long Beach and Inglewood.
Biggie Smalls (Christopher Wallace) rhymed that he “frequently floss hoes at Roscoe’s” in his classic track Going Back to Cali.
In Murda, Compton’s The Game (Jayceon Taylor) said, “When you eat at Roscoe’s, watch out for the chain snatchers.” The lyrics were a prophetic warning as to the fate of Philly trap legend PnB Rock (Rakim Allen), who was killed at the Roscoe’s location on Main and Manchester on Sept. 12, 2022, after his girlfriend posted their location on Instagram, showing off his jewelry.
Then, find somewhere cozy and take a long nap.
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