5/24/2019

Schomburg Center Acquires Collection of Hip-Hop Pioneer Fred ‘Fab 5 Freddy’ Brathwaite

Schomburg Center Acquires Collection of Hip-Hop Pioneer Fred ‘Fab 5 Freddy’ Brathwaite


The New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem has acquired the full archive of hip-hop pioneer and pop culture icon, Fred “Fab 5 Freddy” Brathwaite.
The archive—which spans more than 120 boxes—showcases Fab 5 Freddy’s role as a hip-hop ambassador and pioneer, providing a rare glimpse into the early days of the genre, chronicling its development and inspiration, and revealing the creative processes, personal relationships, and business savvy that allowed Fab 5 Freddy to help transform hip-hop from a marginalized subculture into a mainstream and global cultural phenomenon.
“Fab 5 Freddy’s contributions to the worlds of art, music, and film—bringing hip-hop culture to the forefront—are certainly historically significant and almost too numerous to name,” said Schomburg Center Director Kevin Young. “It is not overstating to say that without Fab, hip-hop as we know it, graffiti as a visual art as we know it, and bridges between various musical genres would not exist. He is such an instrumental figure, not just as a innovator who steered the ship in the early days of hip-hop, but as an ambassador who continues to have enormous impact on the hip-hop world and beyond. We are so proud to preserve his history and work and give researchers an opportunity to gain new perspectives and information on the early and ongoing days of hip-hop.”
“Growing up in Bed Stuy Brooklyn our home was full of books and periodicals, as my dad was a ferocious reader,” said Brathwaite. “Books by and about people like, Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X, James Baldwin, J.A. Rogers and one of my favorites as a kid, a book called Harlem On My Mind filled with photos and stories on the history of Black Americans living in Harlem. My dad explained then ‘to learn more the Schomburg in Harlem was the place people go.’ So knowing my archive will be at the Schomburg, now and forever is both gratifying and very humbling.”

Highlights of the multimedia collection include:
●     Rare and otherwise lost VHS recordings of rap music videos, events, shows, and programs including, “Yo! MTV Raps,” originally hosted and directed by Fab 5 Freddy.
●     Original scripts and screenplays from early hip-hop cinema collected and developed by Fab 5 as a producer and/or actor including, “New Jack City,” “Juice” and “Wild Style.”
●     Photographs of Fab 5 Freddy's work in and as part of the hip-hop community, which includes music icons such as Snoop Doggy Dogg and Dr. Dre (from recording sessions for the “Chronic”), Queen Latifah (from her “Ladies First” video), P. Diddy, and Blondie (who referenced Fab in her song “Rapture”) are featured.
●     Notebooks with handwritten ideas, to-do lists, and more
●     Business files
●     Fab’s personal records, CD, DVD and magazine collections as well as some event and program related flyers and swag
●     An audio collection recorded live off the radio and at events by Fab 5 Freddy’s father; these tapes—which potentially resurrect previously unrecorded parts of the nation’s audio history—showcase hip-hop’s origins and inspiration, as well the way Fab 5 Freddy’s father respected and chronicled history, setting an example for Fab.
“In Fab 5 Freddy's collection, the Schomburg has acquired an archive from a hip-hop ambassador, historian, and pioneer, who saw the value in capturing those early years when so little has been preserved and available to the public,” said Shola Lynch, curator of the Schomburg Center’s Moving Image and Recorded Sound Division. “This is significant and important. Our founding curator, Arturo Schomburg, referred to his collection as ‘vindicating evidences’ of black history and culture. Fab's collection sets the same foundation for the early days of hip hop. You can feel the 1980s. You can feel the charm. It’s very real.”
The collection is currently being processed; when completed the materials will be available at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in the Moving Image and Recorded Sound Division; the Manuscripts and Rare Books Division; and the Photographs and Prints Division. Fab 5 Freddy’s collection is part of the Schomburg’s Home to Harlem initiative recognizing through acquisitions, exhibitions, and programming Harlem’s century-long history as a Black Cultural Capital, a city within a city, a nation within a neighborhood. The acquisition joins the recent additions of others with longstanding relationships to Harlem, including James Baldwin, Sonny Rollins, Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis, and Ann Petry, all revealing both personal and cultural connection to the Schomburg Center.
For more information on when the collection is open and on upcoming events related to the collection, please visit SchomburgCenter.org.

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