the beat, the flow, the way of life.
I started with graffiti art 17 years ago, but the music quickly became the most important part of my hiphop experience.
I guess the main thing must have been all that 70's new york feeling that there was into it. When I was a kid in the early 90's, the few hip hop artists we had here in Italy were heavily influenced by the old stuff so that was the sound I grew to love...
I remember all the hours making beats on the glorious Fast Tracker 2 on my old PC!
there also was a place in the nearest city where all the local hiphop crowd would gather: b-boys, mc's, guys like me who made the beats would take the newest creations to provide music for both of them for dancing and freestyling on the spot, graffiti artists with their books full of pictures and so on...
it was a great bunch of people. there was this guy really into the zulu nation that tried to keep the whole thing working at its best and from time to time we all gather around and speak about how experiences, hip hop itself, random stuff and basically get to know each other better.
people who knew how to do something were always available for you if you wanted to learn something about hip hop, b-boying, mc'ing, beat production, graffiti, ...
and everything went on in the open, at the side of a street where we used to gather. we called that place "the hall". every saturday, every week, with sun, rain or snow. it was a gallery in front of a bank, with the side facing the road open, so we didn't get wet from the rain, but let me tell you, it gets COLD in the winter around here!
it was nice to see random people to stop by and ask the mc's what they were singing, or what kind of music was that, or other people to stop and watch the b-boys dancing.
near the local train station we had a subterranean passage where we went to spray some graffitis. there were really talented people at that time.
the place where I live is between Milano and this other city I'm talking about (Varese) and we have this long local railway. my home was just in front of it and everyday I could see the new graffitis on the trains. I made some of my own and I can't describe the trill to see your piece on a random train without notice!
a graffiti artist who came from new york told us it looked like NY in 70's with all those bombed trains!
mmhh... I must have moved a bit OT lol. well I guess you get what it was like to me to be part of something like that in the good old days.