I grew up on Clark Kent, Red Alert, Q-Tip, Uncle Ralph.. seeing them on here has been a true blessing to me hearing their stories! Keep up the good work math 👏🏿🗽 I would love to see Melle, Flash, KRS, LL, Kool Herc, G Rap, Rakim, Latifah, Mecca Audio, Angie Martinez and Nas.
I’m 27 years old and I grew up listening to Red Alert. Actually I’m very good friends with him. I always tell people one of the nicest people you’ll ever meet in this music industry. Love Red to death.
I remember sitting up on Saturday nights in high school from 84 -88. With my tape on pause flipping between 98.7 and 107.5. If they went to commercial or played something I didn't like, I was rolling the dial. 🤣🤣🤣 Recording everything I thought was crazy so I could play it in school on Monday. That was a crazy Era. #memories.
A documentary needs to be created for this man. I would enjoy a podcast with him telling his stories without interruptions. Marley Marl, Mr. Magic, Chuck Chillout and the World Famous Supreme Team are icons of radio period. Without these men you would never hear live mixes on the air.
Not from NY but a huge follower of the culture. A followerer Hiphop and R&B in general but especially NY where hiphop all started. The show is really nice. Getting a view from this vantage point is needed imo for balance. Not for me so much but for the world in general. It shows that the players in the HH community are people. When I say people, I mean flesh and blood real humans with stories of struggles, strategies, lessons and advice that can be applied in all corners of life. errbody in social media out here trying to come up with the next click bait frenzy, while "My Expert Opinion" providing real sustenance. Preciate it fam! for real. it very refreshing.
Kiss FM back in the day! In competition with WBLS! This is the beginning of the golden era! Red Alert 🚨 Mr. Magik, Chuck Chillout, Clark Kent, Bobitto and Strecth, and etc
I remember recording wbls on my stereo then running upstairs to my aunt's to record kiss on Saturdays in 87.. those were the days. I wish I still had them tapes
Real Talk! Luke need to get more recognition for what he did for the culture! He is the reason for any rap artist to say what they want! Reason for the Parental Advisory Sticker!
Salute to MEO every time! Thank you for honoring our elders while they're still here. Red Alerts mark on the game is irreplaceable. I'm happy that the youngers who are unaware are able to learn through this experience.
Thank You for your Contributions to Hip Hop DJ Red Alert. We love and appreciate you. Hip Hop wouldn’t be what it is today if you hadn’t laid the foundation, or provided the blueprint for artists and DJs. 🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🫡🫡🫡
Red Alert was one of my favorite DJs. And the Red Alert at parties worked the parties wayyy differently than the radio. And he had the radio jumping. KOOOOOOOOOLLLLL DJ RED ALERT Y'ALL!!!
As always, great interview, but never forget, the influence of the culture of Hip-Hop existed before Herc. Other DJ'S were using to turntables, a few of them had MC's, not to be confused with EMCEES and we're extending the beats of popular songs of the day. U-Roy credits Jocko Henderson with toasting. In fact, U-Roy dedicated a song to Jocko called "Your Ace From Space". Machukie credits American radio for learning how to toast and purchasing Cab Calloway's book on Jive talk. Listen to "King of the Jungle by Cab Calloway. The early 1940's Black radio DJ's rhymed in between the breaks of the songs and did advertising with rap. Remember, the Whopper is a hamburger, it was just branded to be called something else just like Hip-Hop. Like Like vRed Alert said, it was made here.
Amazing to think that a style which is clearly urban and black american how anyone could even confuse its origin or even more by whom from clothing to speech to music to underground start. Remarkable imagination on others part. Oppression breeds creativity unfortunately and creates a unique opportunity for originality. In the states other countries followed suit
Question? Were you listening to cab Calloway in the club? Everyone called Kool Herc the godfather before until Busta and Fat Joe stated that Jamaicans and Puerto Ricans ushered in what we now call Hip Hop. Now it’s an issue! The style Kool Herc brought into the Bronx was coming straight from Jamaica. In Jamaica they were doing that since the 1950’s. If there were DJ’s who did it before…name them! Show me where I can find this proof on TH-cam! Also, why didn’t they get the recognition?
@@Teflong2013 No, it's not an issues. Herc deserves his just due as a DJ. Did the influence of what we call "Hip-Hop" come from Jamaica... Absolutely not. From Sir Coxson Dodd to U-Roy in their own words and in print, they point to America. Dodd points out seeing sound systems in the American South, how he encouraged to sound and play what he had witnessed. U-Roy named Louis Jordan as one of his inspiration. Listen to You Gotta Have a Beat by Jordan. See, let's be honest, it has nothing to do with Hip-Hop or Hip-Hop culture. It's clearly how we see one another as Black people, which is unfortunate. I think we all heard Busta's remarks. Black "Americans have no culture." That's personal and unfounded. Math said it best, it's all African. But again, some of us choose to be divisive. You asked if I listen to Cab Calloway. Yes, and many others who rhymed, scatted, crooned, and played instruments. My father's favorite group was the Ink Spots, a group you never heard of. When I mentioned Jocko Henderson, he took his rhymes from Hot Rod Hubert who my father use to listen to in Baltimore on the radio. So, when asking a question, don't assume what a person has not done. I have the vinyl to support my claims of what I was brought up on.
Like, @MathHoffa.... YOU HAVE ARRIVED SIR.♥️🖤💚 DJ Red Alert.❣❣❣❣ THIS is LEGENDARY Status conversation. 🙌🏾 Knowledge, Wisdom, Stories, Gems.🥰🔮🥇♥️🖤💚 Blessings to the #HoffaGang.🥰Thanks for this.❣
This one hit me in the feels, I grew up on DJ Red Alert. I was too young to go to the block parties and what not but I had a tape cassette recorder and I would make tapes of his radio show every week and those were the soundtracks to my childhood in elementary and into middle school. I am SO glad y'all had him on to give him his flowers, this episode meat a lot to me. Thanks, Math.
Math, all I can say is blessings to you fam for bridging the old with the new. This platform is so needed in our culture we call hip hop and every interview has been phenomenal. Keep going at full speed bro 💯
YO MATH PEACE KING DON'T CHANGE ANYTHING ABOUT THEME MUSIC EVERYTHING IS PERFECT BRO..I'M TELLING I AM ALMOST 40 YRS FAM I HAVE WATCHED TONS OF PODCAST THIS IS EXTREMELY UNIQUE ITS A BLEND BLEND OF BARBERSHOP TALK WITH REAL SHIT AND STREET TALK Talk And AND HIP-HOP TALK YOUR FORMULA IS PERFECT BRO VISUALS ARE SUPERB I GIVE THIS SHOW A 15 ON A SCALE OF 1 TO 10 ALL OF U GUYS ARE DOING GREAT BRO I AM A DAY ONE FAN..FAN..FACTS!!!
This was an amazing show! It took me back to my childhood days in the Bronx Rappers Felight was the first Rap song I had ever heard; and me saying "Rap" is aging myself but whateva... l just turned 58 on Aug 19 and I am and will forever be a fan of the genre . Math keep doing your thing babe you and your guys are truly changing the game. Saute to you all...Peace
Love this Show interview (School in Hip Hop) this is Classical.. Red Alert my good Brother is Actual & Factual 👈 & A real Azz Brotha! A Progenitor of Our Culture 👍 You guys gotta a great Show .. keep up the Great work Fellas 👈👊💯
To add to the segment discussing east coast gangster rappers I have to mention Just I’ve as New York’s first. He embodied gangsterism in his lyrics and actions back in the ‘80s. Keep up your ascension to the top. Peace!!!
YYYEEEEAAAAHEHEHEHEHHEHEHEHHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE BLESS BELOVED LEGEND,..The impact this man had on my brother and I growing up and the way we hear and appreciate music THANK YOU
He right BX was effed up i used to live in Concourse Village and on Burnside and Ogden Ave....only areas that looked decent back then (late 70's early 80s) was the projects and court house and shopping areas
This is one of the first interviews I looked at all the way through, no disrespect to you guy's cause y'all have dope conversation but I grew up on Red Alert and I always listened to him over Mr. Magic. Love you Red and everything you contributed to the Culture
Respect red for the politically correct answer but I believe he knows the fever that came with this comment on who started it but just wanna enjoy the interview tribalism has no place when we all getting our asses kicked by a common enemy. Respect Red 🏆
I grew up on Clark Kent, Red Alert, Q-Tip, Uncle Ralph.. seeing them on here has been a true blessing to me hearing their stories! Keep up the good work math 👏🏿🗽
I would love to see Melle, Flash, KRS, LL, Kool Herc, G Rap, Rakim, Latifah, Mecca Audio, Angie Martinez and Nas.
Angie and KRS 1000000% would be so dope including all the other ones you listed
Young hip hop heads. This is a living legend. Sit down and soak up all this information. Salute to Math and the crew
I’m 27 years old and I grew up listening to Red Alert. Actually I’m very good friends with him. I always tell people one of the nicest people you’ll ever meet in this music industry. Love Red to death.
I remember sitting up on Saturday nights in high school from 84 -88. With my tape on pause flipping between 98.7 and 107.5. If they went to commercial or played something I didn't like, I was rolling the dial. 🤣🤣🤣
Recording everything I thought was crazy so I could play it in school on Monday.
That was a crazy Era.
#memories.
THE BEST..
87-88, i was 6 7 yrs old doing the same thing lol
You took me back with this comment.. and get mad as hell when they start talking
@@MsShug12 yooooooo when they use to talk and the verse would start while they talking😳😳😳
I would be tight. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@marcoandell righhhhhhtttt !!!!!! Man hot as hell
Yo.... I got chills watching this... This legend is a national treasure, and not just in Hip Hop.....
#MYExpertOpinion
Слушать пионеров как читать книгу Бытия. Спасибо за прекрасное интервью.
A documentary needs to be created for this man. I would enjoy a podcast with him telling his stories without interruptions. Marley Marl, Mr. Magic, Chuck Chillout and the World Famous Supreme Team are icons of radio period. Without these men you would never hear live mixes on the air.
OG Red Alert bringing that COLD DESSERT!
Thank you for giving these legends their flowers, while keeping the culture educated.
🔥🔥If u didn't live in NYC in the 80's /90's -- U dont know what this ICON means to us. South-Side Jamaica Queens Salutes u 👑ALLDAY👑📀DJ Red Alert📀 🔥🔥
It's so good to see the elder KOOL DJ Red Alert
Not from NY but a huge follower of the culture. A followerer Hiphop and R&B in general but especially NY where hiphop all started. The show is really nice. Getting a view from this vantage point is needed imo for balance. Not for me so much but for the world in general. It shows that the players in the HH community are people. When I say people, I mean flesh and blood real humans with stories of struggles, strategies, lessons and advice that can be applied in all corners of life. errbody in social media out here trying to come up with the next click bait frenzy, while "My Expert Opinion" providing real sustenance. Preciate it fam! for real. it very refreshing.
Kiss FM back in the day! In competition with WBLS! This is the beginning of the golden era! Red Alert 🚨 Mr. Magik, Chuck Chillout, Clark Kent, Bobitto and Strecth, and etc
if mr Alert would sell these early tapes now, i would be interested in purchasing such tapes. just saying.
Great comment. I would love to hear that!
That’s a fact .. he should make them nft’s
Man that’s a multi million dollar idea!
The fact that you called him Mr Alert. I dig it 😂😂
Thank you for doing this! Thank you for doing this! Thank you for doing this! Red deserves this kind of light!
I never seen Bigga in-tune w/ a guest like he is w/ DJ Red Alert.
#respect
Knowledge Is King....Peace To Uncle Red ...THANK YOU for the Memories.
I remember recording wbls on my stereo then running upstairs to my aunt's to record kiss on Saturdays in 87.. those were the days. I wish I still had them tapes
Real Talk! Luke need to get more recognition for what he did for the culture! He is the reason for any rap artist to say what they want! Reason for the Parental Advisory Sticker!
HOFFA!!!! Salute to my brother 🙏🏾💯
#Legendshit 🔥
Salute to MEO every time! Thank you for honoring our elders while they're still here. Red Alerts mark on the game is irreplaceable. I'm happy that the youngers who are unaware are able to learn through this experience.
I'm on it! Salute to Uncle Red and the whole MEO! I know it's about to be crazy gems! 🙌🏾
Thank You for your Contributions to Hip Hop DJ Red Alert. We love and appreciate you. Hip Hop wouldn’t be what it is today if you hadn’t laid the foundation, or provided the blueprint for artists and DJs. 🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🫡🫡🫡
Waiting for my expert opinion interviews to drop is like waiting on a check 🤣
The other crew from Brooklyn that was running Union Square was/is Decepts
Red Alert was one of my favorite DJs. And the Red Alert at parties worked the parties wayyy differently than the radio. And he had the radio jumping. KOOOOOOOOOLLLLL DJ RED ALERT Y'ALL!!!
Thank you thank you thank you,for all the history lessons. You have the best quests out of all the podcasts that are representing this culture.
As always, great interview, but never forget, the influence of the culture of Hip-Hop existed before Herc. Other DJ'S were using to turntables, a few of them had MC's, not to be confused with EMCEES and we're extending the beats of popular songs of the day. U-Roy credits Jocko Henderson with toasting. In fact, U-Roy dedicated a song to Jocko called "Your Ace From Space". Machukie credits American radio for learning how to toast and purchasing Cab Calloway's book on Jive talk. Listen to "King of the Jungle by Cab Calloway. The early 1940's Black radio DJ's rhymed in between the breaks of the songs and did advertising with rap. Remember, the Whopper is a hamburger, it was just branded to be called something else just like Hip-Hop. Like Like vRed Alert said, it was made here.
Amazing to think that a style which is clearly urban and black american how anyone could even confuse its origin or even more by whom from clothing to speech to music to underground start. Remarkable imagination on others part. Oppression breeds creativity unfortunately and creates a unique opportunity for originality. In the states other countries followed suit
Question? Were you listening to cab Calloway in the club? Everyone called Kool Herc the godfather before until Busta and Fat Joe stated that Jamaicans and Puerto Ricans ushered in what we now call Hip Hop. Now it’s an issue! The style Kool Herc brought into the Bronx was coming straight from Jamaica. In Jamaica they were doing that since the 1950’s. If there were DJ’s who did it before…name them! Show me where I can find this proof on TH-cam! Also, why didn’t they get the recognition?
@@Teflong2013 Michael Wayne TV channel he been on it for years
@@Teflong2013 No, it's not an issues. Herc deserves his just due as a DJ. Did the influence of what we call "Hip-Hop" come from Jamaica... Absolutely not. From Sir Coxson Dodd to U-Roy in their own words and in print, they point to America. Dodd points out seeing sound systems in the American South, how he encouraged to sound and play what he had witnessed. U-Roy named Louis Jordan as one of his inspiration. Listen to You Gotta Have a Beat by Jordan. See, let's be honest, it has nothing to do with Hip-Hop or Hip-Hop culture. It's clearly how we see one another as Black people, which is unfortunate. I think we all heard Busta's remarks. Black "Americans have no culture." That's personal and unfounded. Math said it best, it's all African. But again, some of us choose to be divisive. You asked if I listen to Cab Calloway. Yes, and many others who rhymed, scatted, crooned, and played instruments. My father's favorite group was the Ink Spots, a group you never heard of. When I mentioned Jocko Henderson, he took his rhymes from Hot Rod Hubert who my father use to listen to in Baltimore on the radio. So, when asking a question, don't assume what a person has not done. I have the vinyl to support my claims of what I was brought up on.
@@tadah21 my bad, wrong person.
Like, @MathHoffa.... YOU HAVE ARRIVED SIR.♥️🖤💚 DJ Red Alert.❣❣❣❣ THIS is LEGENDARY Status conversation. 🙌🏾 Knowledge, Wisdom, Stories, Gems.🥰🔮🥇♥️🖤💚 Blessings to the #HoffaGang.🥰Thanks for this.❣
It's Hoffa!! ❤👑🌹🌹🌹
The Legend!!! Glad you posted this one. Real ones respect this!!!!! This is foundational!!!
I still have n plays a 1988 DJ Red Alert radio tape. Biz markie giving my hometown Brentwood a shoutout. 🔥
Thanks!
THANK YOU FOR THE SUPPORT!! WE APPRECIATE YOU!!! WE GOT MORE GREAT CONTENT ON THE WAY..STAY TUNED!!!
Loved this💪🏿🗽 Great hip-hop history & stories about the city then. Salute to MEO
Good drop on this beautiful Sunday along with 🏈 being played rite now.
Watched from beginning to end. Perfect interview.
I could literally sit and listen to the elders for hours, days, it's important that the stories remain stories, one love from England.
1:41:20 - ''What's the video got to do with what I hear?'' 😂 😂 😂
Happy to say I've told Kool DJ Red Alert in person thank you for his contributions to hip hop. Great interview! All the right questions were asked.
This one hit me in the feels, I grew up on DJ Red Alert. I was too young to go to the block parties and what not but I had a tape cassette recorder and I would make tapes of his radio show every week and those were the soundtracks to my childhood in elementary and into middle school. I am SO glad y'all had him on to give him his flowers, this episode meat a lot to me. Thanks, Math.
I'm a hip hop nerd so this is mad interesting. He talking about my childhood.
This interview is so legendary, Red Alert created the playlist to my childhood. Salute you fellas for bringing this to the people it was much needed.❤
This is history right here. Super important interview
Math, all I can say is blessings to you fam for bridging the old with the new. This platform is so needed in our culture we call hip hop and every interview has been phenomenal. Keep going at full speed bro 💯
Math keep doing your thing this 🔥🔥🔥🔥 my pops was a dj and used to talk about red alert this bought me back
YO MATH PEACE KING DON'T CHANGE ANYTHING ABOUT THEME MUSIC EVERYTHING IS PERFECT BRO..I'M TELLING I AM ALMOST 40 YRS FAM I HAVE WATCHED TONS OF PODCAST THIS IS EXTREMELY UNIQUE ITS A BLEND BLEND OF BARBERSHOP TALK WITH REAL SHIT AND STREET TALK Talk And AND HIP-HOP TALK YOUR FORMULA IS PERFECT BRO VISUALS ARE SUPERB I GIVE THIS SHOW A 15 ON A SCALE OF 1 TO 10 ALL OF U GUYS ARE DOING GREAT BRO I AM A DAY ONE FAN..FAN..FACTS!!!
Peace... We learned our lessons here.... Icon.... Salute DJ Red Alert... 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥✊🏿🙏🏿
Black Ultimate man !! I remember that from back in the day !
Thank you for this much needed interview!!!
DJ Red Alert is a legend!!!
yo yall stay blessed and THANKS FOR GETTING ME THRU NIGHT SHIFT 🤷🏾
this episode right here is CLUTCH! just thankful to witness this. salute MEO
Hynaken need to sit his ass down😅🤣🤣🤣🤣
Need to drop his goofy ass
EXCELLENT INTERVIEW.
THANK YOU!!!
28:01-28:07 Thanx for mentioning Mario before he was call Disco King Mario…. Very important,like you said Red,Gang era
Salute!! Great podcast & history lesson!🎧🎤🎵
This was an amazing show! It took me back to my childhood days in the Bronx Rappers Felight was the first Rap song I had ever heard; and me saying "Rap" is aging myself but whateva... l just turned 58 on Aug 19 and I am and will forever be a fan of the genre . Math keep doing your thing babe you and your guys are truly changing the game. Saute to you all...Peace
Who remembers the days when Kool DJ Red Alert was cameoing up in damn near every Hip Hop video?
This one is official Math! Salute!
When is KOOL G RAP coming on
Great show
Hip Hop artifacts with stories that glue all these elements together
Salute The Pioneers
Legend indeed
Wow. Just wow!! The icon DJ Red Alert. Salute Fellas.
I'm a big fan. Love and respect for Red Alert!
When they said everybody knows the do I think about Martin in house party hahahahah good shit fellas keep this going 😂
Coooool dj Red Alert. Really good episode.
Awesome episode. Loved the history. Please do more vides with the pioneers.
Love this Show interview (School in Hip Hop) this is Classical.. Red Alert my good Brother is Actual & Factual 👈 & A real Azz Brotha! A Progenitor of Our Culture 👍 You guys gotta a great Show .. keep up the Great work Fellas 👈👊💯
No homo something soothing about Bigga like his aura golden and honor intact wish they could get him to talk more
Yooo... I love the idea of a hip-hop almanac!! Y'all need 2 do that!!
Something is always interesting for Hynaken 😂😂😂
IN THE BEGINING!!!!! DOPE!!! HISTORY..OUR STORY!!! FOR THE CULTURE!!! THANK YOU RED!!!!!
Reading some of these comments it’s clear that People don’t realize just exactly who this guy is… and what he means to this thing of ours we so love !
Red Alert is Hip Hop royalty.
One of the best to ever do it.
Uncle Red brain sharp asf still 💯🦾🦾🦾
I'm glad these brothers are still around to share history
Man everytime that Siron came on you already know that RED is about to get busy ,and I lived in Brooklyn shout out to the KING one the one's and two's
It wuz called Mixing not Blending !!!
To add to the segment discussing east coast gangster rappers I have to mention Just I’ve as New York’s first. He embodied gangsterism in his lyrics and actions back in the ‘80s.
Keep up your ascension to the top. Peace!!!
YYYEEEEAAAAHEHEHEHEHHEHEHEHHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE BLESS BELOVED LEGEND,..The impact this man had on my brother and I growing up and the way we hear and appreciate music THANK YOU
U got the truth on here!💥
He right BX was effed up i used to live in Concourse Village and on Burnside and Ogden Ave....only areas that looked decent back then (late 70's early 80s) was the projects and court house and shopping areas
On a side note my bro Krudee Cobb's freestyle sound like Red Alerts normal speech, lol. Dope arse show!
well said Math , salute 🚨 🙌🏼
Every time Red Alert says "Here it is..." my brain is going "a grove slight transformed, a break from the norm..."😆😆😆😆
I’m proud to say I grew up with Red Alert 💪🏾
Twin Hype--Do it to the crowd had that sick house vibe
I was in Upward Bound at the University of Chicago in the early 2000’s. Definitely didn’t know they had it in New York in the 70’s
This is one of the first interviews I looked at all the way through, no disrespect to you guy's cause y'all have dope conversation but I grew up on Red Alert and I always listened to him over Mr. Magic. Love you Red and everything you contributed to the Culture
I can listen to the OG’s talk and tell these stories all day….
❤️it keep it coming King 👑💪🏿💪🏿💪🏿
Yo this is so crazy, i love y’all niggas for this man! Keep goin
YES SIRR! LET'S GO 🔥🔥🔥
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥one of the best shows out right now
When I was too young to party DJ Red Alert brought the party to my double tape deck .. finger on = button trying to blend lol
That was a beautiful interview I ❤ red alert.
Math you need a new intro... with your new cast on it....
Keep elevating MEO 🔥🔥🔥
Can’t wait till the ceasar episode it has me so hype
Said no one ever
Real talk me and me people break dance to this man tracks 👑 yea break dance hats off to yah 🌹
Math we need them "Bleep This Guy!! 🤣🤣 tees my G
MATH, I love you bro!!! But why would you drop this podcast or any podcast on a Football Sunday!?
I just thought about +He Bum:
I'm looking for myself,
on Beats , Rhymes , & Battles.
I'm on the documentary part.
Could be part 2.
The Unsigned.
Respect red for the politically correct answer but I believe he knows the fever that came with this comment on who started it but just wanna enjoy the interview tribalism has no place when we all getting our asses kicked by a common enemy. Respect Red 🏆