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From cardboard to the world stage....

3/29/2020

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You don’t have to be a Kinesiologist to understand that HipHop music makes you move. 


Since kids started repurposing cardboard boxes in the late 70’s and early 80’s, HipHop was the thing to do. HipHop was raw. And for breakers, it was a challenge, with levels of difficulty and mastery. This new art form was the ultimate exercise. 


While Jane Fonda was aerobicizing disco on VHS,  the urban districts of greater NYC were demonstrating fitness in rhythmic agility and mental acuity, in step with the culture as a whole. Driven by attaining the respect of fellow breakers, the admiration of small crowds, and reaching new personal heights. And for b-boy crews, it was survival of the fittest. 


Acrobatic skills, speed and strength displayed in step to the rhythm of Planet Rock, Rockit, and the Message. On the daily, without video footage, movements were born screaming loud, live on the street. And by the next break beat, the movement was twisted and turned, tweaked and added to, until forms styles and moves became signatures.


Until, the music changed.... Breakers truly became more like Olympic athletes, and while breaking could never be a fad, it went beyond any conventional undertaking. Into a new realm of being, where only the masters can dwell. There's no karaoke equivalencies for backspins and windmills, for beginners to rockit.


What caused these prolific artists to go beyond what could be first imagined?
What was it about HipHop that created space for the brilliance of the breakers?


Scientifically speaking....
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