Wednesday, January 19, 2005

On The Go: A bit of diggin' documentation.



Hopefully some of you idiots remember the wonderful little hip-hop publication called "On The Go" magazine put together by Philly graf artist legend ESPO and the bol Ray Hayes. This mag was on some DIY, "real hip-hop" shit and was as funny as it was relevant. Legendary Philly DJ Cosmo Baker was a contributing writer for the magazine, penning articles that explored the art of diggin' at a level that hadn't previously been documented. Around the same time, another Philly bol Soulman was doing a similar thing at another solid hip-hop publication Rap Pages. Now, for better or worse, the Philly bols Cosmo Baker and Soulman were two of the first writers to really commit digging secrets and knowledge to print. I say "for better or for worse" because previously, the art of digging was strictly a tradition that was either passed on orally through mentoring (to this day, I don't know any digger that isn't greatly indebted to a mentor who "taught [him] all [he] knows") or was an art that was learned through exposure and "paying dues." Some digging purists might find that this documentation that folks like Cosmo and Soulman were conducting watered-down and even white-washed the art a bit. These purists might read this documentation as the incipient moment of the demise of diggin' as first and foremost an oral tradition and that Cosmo and Soulman paved the way for sites like The Breaks/The Sample FAQ and Soulstrut-- sites that have clearly helped change how the diggin' game currently functions. And, let's be honest, we might not want to admit it, but it'd be rather ridiculous to argue that the internet hasn't drastically changed the diggin' game (just ask David Axelrod). But, frankly, I don't subscribe to this purist critical reading of the work that Cosmo and Soulman did. I think the work that they did was very valuable and each of them were forward thinking enough to realize that yes, perhaps writing about something like diggin' might change the game a bit, but, got damn it, who says the game is meant to be static and stagnant anyway?

Cosmo was kind enough to post scans of most of his and his postdecessor's (one Ben Velez) work in the "On The Go" column aptly titled "Diggin' in the Crates" on his website. So click right here (or any picture below) to holler at some of his writings. And, when you're done with that, go over to Soulman's World of beats and then read his shit and learn yourself somefin' you know nothing about.








-e

4 Comments:

Blogger SergDun said...

man that magazine was dope but it was hard as hell to get in arizona. I never knew cosmo wrote some shit in there. I had that represent what issue, fucking still wish I did. I had no idea it went as far back as 92. I don't think it showed up in az until maybe 96 when some graff shops started carrying them.

6:20 PM  
Blogger rio rocket valledor said...

Good lookin' to The Shrimp for directing me to Cosmo's OTG posts! I had the honor of contributing in a small way to the last wave of OTG isssues (from the ODB/Tabloid issue through to the unpublished LAST issue... I know the mag designers Jimmy Wentz and Ari Foreman have a copy of it somewhere!)... I wrote the column 'this is a remix...' (which had nothing to do with 'remixes')... and, since Cosmo kicked down the door, expect some of my old pages to surface on my blog very soon... http://riogood.blogspot.com/

8:53 AM  
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Anonymous Anonymous said...

What a wonderful invention it is, this thing we call the Internet!

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