Site icon New York Latin Culture Magazine®

Hip Hop in New York City


Hip Hop in New York City is native. From long roots, Hip hop culture was created by Black and Latin kids in The Bronx in the 1970s.

Latin kids pumped up break dancing with the sophistication of their parents’ Palladium Ballroom mambo moves.

If you are familiar with Latin drum, song, and dance traditions like rumba, bomba, cumbia, and soundsystem; you can’t help but notice the similarities with hip hop.

In 2023, Hip-Hop celebrates 50 years since New York Jamaicans Cindy Campbell and her brother DJ Kool Herc held the first hip hop party as a back-to-school fund-raiser at 1520 Sedgewick in Morris Heights, The Bronx.

The four pillars of Bronx hip hop are:

  • DJing
  • Rapping
  • Graffiti
  • Break Dancing

Latin artists tend towards DJing and rapping. Freestyle is a popular Latin form.

In the Latin world, hip hop becomes reggaeton and Latin trap.


Latin Hip Hop News


Barclays Center is Brooklyn’s Arena

Bad Bunny Puerto Rican reggaeton pop 🇵🇷
Nicki Minaj “Pink Friday 2 World Tour” Trinidadian hip hop 🇹🇹
Luis Miguel Mexican pop 🇲🇽
New York Salsa Festival: Grupo Niche 🇨🇴
Grupo Niche Colombian salsa 🇨🇴
Chayanne “Bailemos Otra Vez Tour” Puerto Rican pop 🇵🇷
Shakira “Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour” Colombian pop 🇨🇴

PROSPECT HEIGHTS, Brooklyn

Madison Square Garden is Manhattan’s Arena

Davido “Timeless Tour” Nigerian afrobeats 🇳🇬
Aventura with Romeo Santos “Cerrando Ciclos Tour” Dominican bachata 🇩🇴
Melanie Martinez “The Trilogy Tour” Dominican Puerto Rican pop rock 🇩🇴 🇵🇷
Feid “Ferxxocalipsis Tour” Colombian reggaeton 🇨🇴
Los Temerarios “Hasta Siempre Tour” Regional Mexican grupera 🇲🇽
Sebastian Maniscalco “It Ain’t Right Tour” Italian American comedy 🇮🇹

CHELSEA, Manhattan

Le Poisson Rouge is an Eclectic Night Club

María José Llergo and Sandra Carrasco contemporary flamenco 🇪🇸
Ana Tijoux Chilean French hip hop 🇨🇱 🇫🇷
Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana Spanish flamenco tablao 🇪🇸
Combo Chimbita & Pachyman Colombian alternative cumbia & Puerto Rican reggae 🇨🇴 🇵🇷
Céu Brazilian música popular brasileira (MPB) 🇧🇷
Bebel Gilberto Brazilian bossa nova 🇧🇷
Carmen Consoli Italian pop 🇮🇹
Louane French pop 🇫🇷

GREENWICH VILLAGE, Manhattan

Lehman Center is the Performing Arts Center at Lehman College

Forever Freestyle 16: TKA, George Lamond, Judy Torres, Noel, Safire, Betty D (Sweet Sensation), Cover Girls, Cynthia, Coro, C-Bank, Two Without Hats; Puerto Rican freestyle hip hop 🇵🇷
La Sonora Ponceña, Puerto Rican salsa 🇵🇷
El Dominicano es un Chiste: Jochy Santos, Felipe Polanco “Boruga,” Cuquín Victoria, Carlos Sánchez, Juan Carlos Pichardo; Dominican comedy 🇩🇴
Masters of the 80’s: Ray de la Paz, Roberto Blades, Raulín Rosendo, and Ray Sepúlveda; Puerto Rican, Panamanian, Dominican salsa romántica 🇩🇴 🇵🇦 🇵🇷
Ángela Carrasco, Fausto Rey, Dominican pop 🇩🇴
La India, Mother’s Day Puerto Rican freestyle and salsa 🇵🇷
Hip Hop Fever: Hip Hop Fever 2024 brings hip hop legends Sugar Hill Gang, Grandmaster Melle Mel & Scorpio, Brand Nubian, Onyx, Nice & Smooth, Black Sheep, Peter Gunz, Fearless Four, MC Shan, Sweet G, Grandmaster Caz African American hip hop 🇺🇸

JEROME PARK, The Bronx

Radio City Music Hall is The World’s Largest Indoor Theater

Juanes Colombian rock 🇨🇴
Gloria Trevi Mexican pop rock 🇲🇽
Gilberto Santa Rosa “Auténtico” Puert Rican salsa 🇵🇷
Silvestre Dangond ‘Ta Malo Colombian vallenato 🇨🇴
Tony Touch “The Piece Maker Concert” Puerto Rican hip hop 🇵🇷
Hombres G 40 Aniversario Spanish pop rock 🇪🇸

ROCKEFELLER CENTER, Midtown, Manhattan


New York’s Hip Hop Scene


Hip Hop Artists in New York


Hip Hop Festivals in New York

  • Red Bull Batalla is an international Latin DJ battle.
  • Rolling Loud

Hip Hop Film and Television

  • Freestyle: The Art of Rhyme (2004)
  • The Get Down” (Netflix, 2016) by Baz Lurmann (Moulin Rouge) and New York playwright Stephen Adly Giurgis (Between Riverside & Crazy). 🇵🇷
  • Wild Style (1982)

Hip Hop Theatre in New York


Hip Hop Venues in New York


Hip Hop Museums in New York

Universal Hip Hop Museum


Hip Hop Radio in New York

WKCR 89.9fm at Columbia University


Global Hip Hop Artists


Ana Tijoux is a fierce Chilean French rapper. 🇨🇱 🇫🇷

Mala Rodríguez is one of Spain’s top rappers. 🇪🇸


Hip Hop Origins


Hip Hop in New York City (Chaoss/Adobe)

R&B, disco, Jamaican sound system culture (reggae, ska, and dancehall), Cuban & Puerto Rican trovadores (troubadours), West African Griots, and Indigenous storytellers are roots. We use our Creole speech to stretch language in interesting ways. Vico C was the first Latin rapper. Residente (Calle 13) won the most awards.

Freestyle is a popular form of rap in New York’s Puerto Rican and Italian communities since the 1980s. The Stretch and Bobbito radio show on WKCR Columbia University was a 1990s catalyst. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s (“In the Heights,” “Hamilton“) first show was Freestyle Love Supreme. He put freestyle on Broadway.

Rap crosses over into other urban musics such as reggaeton and latin trap. Rap is everywhere now.

To an island Puerto Rican, rap looks like a lot Puerto Rico’s trovadores (troubadours). A trova battle is just like a rap battle.

Some hip-hop dance moves look like bomba moves. The way a rapper stands with folded arms, throws their arms out in a circular motion, and starts a break dance in the dance circle, all look like bomba dance traditions to us.

Once you notice, the similarities are striking. We just don’t know who influenced who.

Freestyle rap started in the African American community.

Shannon’s “Let the Music Play” is the first freestyle (1983)

Nayobe made freestyle Latin.

Nayobe’s “Please Don’t Go” is the first Latin freestyle (1985) 🇵🇷

South of the border, we mix Latin rap into all kinds of fusions. Calle 13 started rapping over cumbia and other Latin traditions on their way to winning 3 Grammys and 27 Latin Grammys, more than anyone else.

Calle 13’s “Atrévete-te-te” started their rise in 2005. [We’re Bomba students of Calle 13 percussionist Héctor “Coco” Barez.]
Exit mobile version