First things first Hip-hop ladies who changed the game

Nadirah Simmons

Book - 2024

"First Things First, hip-hop is not just the music, and women have played a big role in shaping the way it looks today. First Things First takes readers on a journey through some notable firsts by women in hip-hop history and their importance. Factual firsts like Queen Latifah becoming the first rapper to get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Lauryn Hill making history as the first rapper to win the coveted Album of the Year Award at the GRAMMYs, April Walker being the first woman to dominate in the hip-hop fashion game, and Da Brat being the first solo woman rapper to have an album go platinum, and metaphorical firsts like Missy Elliott being the first woman rapper to go to the future. Altogether, First Things First is a celebrati...on of the achievements of women in hip-hop who broke down barriers and broke the mold. So the next time someone doesn't have their facts straight on the ladies in hip-hop, you can hit them with "first things first"..."--

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Subjects
Genres
Music criticism and reviews
Published
New York : Twelve, an imprint of Grand Central Publishing 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Nadirah Simmons (author)
Other Authors
Sara Gilanchi (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
309 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781538740743
  • 1. Intro
  • "Beginnings"
  • 2. Cindy Campbell Planned and Promoted the First Official Hip-Hop Part. Yup, That One
  • 3. Millie Jackson, Rap's First "Mother"
  • 4. Some of the First Rap Records (and the Ladies Who Made Them)
  • 5. MC Lyte the First Lady of Rap Voices
  • 6. MC Trouble Was Motown's First Woman Rapper
  • "TV/Film"
  • 7. Interlude: Can Courtney Sloane Interior-Design My House?
  • 8. The Ladies In and Around the First Hip-Hop Movie, Wild Style
  • 9. Roxanne Shanté, the Subject of the First Widely Released Biopic About a Woman Rapper (and Some of the Other Ladies We Need Biopics On!)
  • 10. Dee Barnes, the First Woman to Host a Hip-Hop Program on Broadcast Television with Pump It Up!
  • 11. Leslie "Big Lez" Segar, the First and Only Woman to Officially Host Rap City
  • 12. Heather B. Was the first Black Woman on a Reality TV Show
  • 13. Sophie Bramily, the Woman Who Brought "Yo!" to MTV First
  • 14. Queen Latifah Was the First Rapper to Get a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
  • 15. Megan Thee Stallion, the First Woman to Perform a Rap at the Oscars
  • "Fashion"
  • 16. Interlude: Eve, My Personal Style Icon
  • 17. April Walker is the First Woman to Have a Dominant Hip-Hop Fashion Brand
  • 18. Lil' Kim, the First "Blueprint" for the Modern Woman in Rap
  • 19. Misa Hylton, the First Godmother of Hip-Hop Style
  • "Music"
  • 20. Interlude: What Do You Know About ESG?
  • 21. Mary J. Blige, the First (and Only) "Queen of Hip-Hop Soul"
  • 22. Missy Elliott, the First Woman in Rap to Go to the Future
  • 23. Gangsta Boo, the First Lady of Crunk Music
  • 24. Trina, Da (First and Only) Baddest B****
  • 25. Nicki Minaj, the First Woman Rapper to Completely Demolish Two Goated Men on a Track
  • "Print/Radio"
  • 26. Interlude: Danyel Smith, the First Black Person and First Woman to Be Editor in Chief at Vibe, and Many, Many Other Things
  • 27. Honey, the First Magazine to Speak to Black Women of the Hip-Hop Generation
  • 28. Kim Osorio, the First Woman Editor in Chief at The Source Magazine
  • 29. Angie Martinez, the First Latina Hip-Hop "Voice" in the Radio of Hall of Fame
  • "Awards/Certifications"
  • 30. Interlude: A Very Random Thing I Learned About Foxy Brown
  • 31. Salt-N-Pepa Were the First All-Woman Rap Act to Have an Album Go Gold and Platinum
  • 32. Da Brat, the First Solo Woman Rapper to Have a Platinum Album
  • 33. Ms. Lauryn Hill, the First Woman to Win Five Grammys in a Single Night
  • 34. Cardi B is the First Woman Rapper to Earn Three Diamond-Certified Records
  • 35. Outro: Thank-yous
Review by Library Journal Review

Women have been part of hip-hop since its inception in 1973. Simmons (creator/blogger, The Gumbo) enthusiastically celebrates those who have actual and figurative first achievements. Some chapters are straightforward and give a small bio and a critique of a person's work. Besides musical artists, there are chapters about fashion designers, magazine editors, and radio deejays. She cites R&B soul singer Millie Jackson as the first mother of hip-hop because her music has been sampled more than 200 times by rappers. Other chapters use Venn diagrams, sidebars, and more to get Simmons's point across; a chapter on Lil' Kim includes transcribed text messages between Simmons and a friend to explain why she is the first blueprint for modern women in rap. Simmons engages readers by speaking directly to them. Many of the sidebars give her opinions, such as why Queen Latifah deserves multiple stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. While some readers may welcome Simmons's fresh writing style, others may find it distracting, especially the multiple footnotes that are more about her than the chapters' subjects. VERDICT Give to readers who want an original and different take on the history of hip-hop.--Anjelica Rufus-Barnes

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An engaging study of "just how important women are to hip-hop." Considering how Nicki Minaj, Cardi B, and Megan Thee Stallion reign over pop culture as much as Drake, Kendrick Lamar, and other male rappers, the idea behind this entertaining history of women in hip-hop may seem superfluous. However, as Simmons makes apparent, such seeming equality was not always the case. The author, founder and CEO of online hip-hop hub The Gumbo, provides a charitable explanation for the slight: there simply wasn't enough space to promote the origin stories of both men and women in hip-hop. Her reaction ("stinks if you ask me") captures her can-do approach to her worthy enterprise. Simmons is clearly not interested in wasting time with the negatives of life because there are so many amazing women and accomplishments to celebrate. The result is a fascinating document of how essential women were to the foundation of hip-hop and how they helped carry it to become the world's most popular genre today. Though most of the women Simmons writes about aren't new to hip-hop heads, the way she centers them rather than making them footnotes is noteworthy, as is the lack of sexist judgment directed at artists like Lil' Kim, "whose innovative fashions played an important part in her overall image." Furthermore, the author thankfully reminds us that the famous Bronx party signifying the birth of hip-hop 50 years ago was planned by then-teenager Cindy Campbell, not her brother, DJ Kool Herc ("Yup, you read that right"). Simmons' lighthearted approach doesn't always work--especially when she follows strong arguments about the importance of MC Lyte or Queen Latifah with joke-filled sidebars--but does keep the party going throughout the entire half-century ride. Simmons happily rips up decades of hip-hop mythology to show the indispensable work of women in the game. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.