Post on 04-Apr-2018
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Pre history...
The history of Beatboxing is blurry. It appears, like graffiti, to have begun it's life as an urban art form.
The beginnings of hip-hop are well known - DJs spinning the breakbeats in records with MCs rapping
over the top. When MCs starting to rap over drum machine (beat box) beats, in the ghettos such as the
Bronx, drum machines and synthesisers could not be afforded (samplers were at this time well out of
the reach of even well-paid musicians). Necessity is the mother of invention, and without machine-
supplied beats to rap over, a new instrument was created - the mouth - and thus human beatboxing was
born.
Travelling right back, we uncover the troubadours (poet-musicians) of Southern France the 1200 and
1300s. These were travelling French minstrels who would roam the streets singing either
unaccompanied or with only the accompaniment of a lute, the precursor to the modern acoustic guitar.
Their music seemed to try and be different and featured courtly lyrics or religious themes. By the late
1400 and 1500s, groups would sing together, much like barbershop, harmonising to one single voice. To
give their music depth, they would interchange short sharp notes, call and responsive in the melodies,
making it sound like a whole band was playing with them. These French gypsies, were in fact the earliest
recorded signs of vocal percussion in history.
As medieval became baroque, baroque became classical, classical became romantic, human percussion
was lost momentarily. As music swung towards Bach and Beethoven with oratorios and symphonies
comprising dozens of violins and violas, the use for the human voice lost all but one purpose, to sing.
However, more recent composers such as Medtner and Rachmaninov used wordless 'vocalised' sounds
in their classical compositions. For example, Rachmaninov's composition for voice and piano called
'Vocalise', written in 1912, features a pure melody that unfolds over gently changing wordless vocal
harmonies.
Beat boxing in Indian music
North Indian music has for centuries (and perhaps millennia) used something called 'vocal bols' that
sound very similar to the sounds played on percussive instruments such as the tabla. The most common
bols are Dha, Dhi/Dhin, Ti/Tin, Ra, Ki, Ta, Na, Tin, and Te. Bols are combined and arranged in 4-beat
patterns called thekas to provide the rhythm or tal. For example, "Ta Dhin Dhin Dha". These are still
used today by a wide range of artists and bands such as Alms For Shanti on their track SuperBol (spot
the pun?). Although not a direct ancestor of modern beatboxing, this parallel will no doubt find itself
fused with beatboxing in the future.
From Africa to America
African ritualistic music had traditionally used body sounds to maintain rhythm, such as clapping and
stamping. Loud in-and-out breathing called 'over breathing' was also used as both a two-beat rhythm
and to induce a trance like state in the performers. Vocal percussion patterns were also used such as,
"hup, hup, hup, hup" and "Ch Ka Ch Ch". Today, West African music still uses techniques such as giving
the voice an intentionally raspy or buzzy quality as well as featuring glissandos, bends, and swoops.In
the 17th Century, African slaves were taken to plantations in Jamaica and the Americas where the
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African music was blended with European folk and brass band music to spawn new forms of music -
namely jazz and blues.
Independent artists
In the late 1880s, black groups (usually quartets) would sing a capella, that is, using only their
harmonized voices to make music. They would hold long, low notes that resemble what we hear as bass
sounds in modern beatboxing. Vocal percussion was used by these quartets to help their music keeptime, such as clicks of the tongue and taking a sharp breath in. Yes, more then a hundred years before
Kenny Muhammad, black barbershop singers mastered the inward snare. Even though vocal percussion
was only the background to this style of music, it no doubt set the stage for the oncoming craze of
scatting and bass humming in the wave of jazz, blues, and swing music that was just a few years away.
Blues and Vocal Percussion
When blues was brought about by black slaves telling the heart ache of life, there wasnt usually
instruments at hand. Musicians would improvise with what little they had, their body and their voices.
Claps and clicks became the drums, and low hums became the double bass; the two back bones of blues
and jazz music. One would hum, one would clap, click and hit things as the drums, and one would sing.
This would eventually evolve into imitating many sounds, such as the 'shhchh' of a soft snare and the
'tssa' of the hi-hat being played with brushes. Blues groups found a way to make their music with
nothing but their voices. As blues became more and more mainstream, scatting and bass humming
became well known. Higher range singers would wail long, joined notes, taking the place of the trumpet
in solos. Immediately, this form of vocal percussion became a staple of urban culture, that is, culture of
the street. Poor artists would roam the streets, or gather on street corners, imitating trumpets and
saxophones outside jazz halls.
Today
Today, beatboxing and vocal percussion is as alive as ever. One only needs to lend an ear to the
Australian charts to hear Joel Turner using beatboxing as the drums to an entire album. Joel has since
claimed national glory, and multimillion dollar record deal and mainstream exposure. The formation of
such groups as the Beatbox Alliance, who has major corporate backing, makes us realise beatboxing is
now a card carrying member of the hip-hop community. In 2000, Rahzel made beatboxing famous in the
mainstream by covering the now deceased Aaliyahs song 'If Your Girl Only Knew'. Rahzel has since been
credited as the first person to conquer the art of simultaneously singing and beatboxing at the same
time, a feat that has become a staple of the beatbox community
World records
According to the Guinness World Records, the current record for the largest human beatbox ensemble
involved 1,246 participants and was achieved by Vineeth Vincent and Christ University (India) in
Bangalore, Karnataka, India, on 5 February 2011.
This record was beaten by Google Employees on November 14, 2011 in Dublin with 2081 people
participating. It was achieved by Shlomo and Testament.
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Beatbox machines used
Wurlitzer Sideman
Used with kind permission The Keyboard Museum
The first time beat box was used to refer directly to a rhythm machine was in the 1970s with the ELI
CompuRhythm CR-7030 Beat Box.
ELI CR-7030
Used with kind permission The Keyboard Museum
And here is the staple of hip-hop music, the coveted Roland TR-808 drum machine released in 1982.
Roland TR-808
Used with kind permission The Keyboard Museum