meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Kitchen Sisters Present

100 - The Keepers: Archiving the Underground—The Hip Hop Archive

The Kitchen Sisters Present

The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

Society & Culture

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 5 September 2018

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is the first episode in our new series THE KEEPERS—stories of activist archivists, rogue librarians, curators, collectors and historians—Keepers of the culture and the cultures and collections they keep.

We begin at The Hip Hop Archive and Research Center at Harvard. In the late 1990’s the students of Dr. Marcyliena Morgan, Professor of Linguistics at UCLA, started falling by her office, imploring her to listen to hip hop. They wanted her to hear this new underground sound and culture being created, the word play, the rhyming, the rapping. They wanted her to help them begin to archive this new medium. “Hip Hop *is *an archive," they told her. Dr. Morgan wasn’t an archivist and she didn’t listen to hip hop. But she listened to her students and saw a new kind of soundtrack emerging from the cracks.

Bit by bit she opened her office and her resources and began to collect the history and material culture of hip hop. Some 15 years later the Archive has gone from her office at UCLA to Harvard, where she and Professor Henry Louis Gates founded The Hiphop Archive & Research Institute at the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute whose mission is to “facilitate and encourage the pursuit of knowledge, art, culture, scholarship and responsible leadership through Hiphop.” Along with gathering everything about hip hop for preservation and study, the Archive created the Nasir Jones Fellowship for scholarly research in the field, named for Nas, one of hip hop’s titans, and the “Classic Crates Project,” a collection that aims to archive 200 seminal hip hop albums in the same Harvard music library that houses the works of Mozart, Bertolt Brecht and Edith Piaf. The first four—Nas’ “Illmatic,” “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill,” Kendrick Lamar’s “To Pimp a Butterfly” and “The Low End Theory” by a Tribe Called Quest have been inducted into the University’s Loeb Music Library.

You’ll hear from Professor Marcyliena Morgan, Nas, Professor Henry Louis Gates, Nas Fellow Patrick Douthit aka 9th Wonder, The Hip Hop Fellows working at the Archive, an array of Harvard Archivists, and students studying at the Archive and the records, music and voices being preserved there.

And we take a look at the Cornell University Hip Hop Collection, founded in 2007, through a sampling of stories from Assistant Curator Jeff Ortiz, Johan Kugelberg author of “Born in the Bronx,” and hip hop pioneers Grandmaster Caz, Pebblee Poo, Roxanne Shante and more.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Radio Topia.

0:02.0

Welcome to the Kitchen Sisters Present.

0:04.0

PRX.

0:05.0

We're the Kitchen Sisters, Davia Nelson and Nicki Silva.

0:09.0

This is Nicki Silva of the Kitchen Sisters present.

0:13.0

Thanks so much to everyone who's already donated to Radiotopia's fall fundraiser.

0:18.0

If you haven't donated to the network before, you might wonder where exactly your dollars go.

0:24.2

The short answer is your donation goes to the Kitchen Sisters present and all the shows in

0:30.0

our network so that we can keep making the audio that you love and listen to.

0:35.0

Radio Topia from PRX is a non-profit public media company.

0:39.0

They connect us with new listeners and they've built an infrastructure around the work from sponsorship

0:44.2

publishing tech and other industry expertise. It's a great benefit to the

0:49.0

kitchen sisters to be part of a group of independent creators for

0:52.3

troubleshooting, camaraderie, and inspiration.

0:55.9

Head to radiotopia.F.M. slash donate.

0:58.9

To make a tax deductible contribution, you'll receive a special curated playlist from all of the Radiotopia producers,

1:07.0

go to Radiotopia. F.M. slash Donate. Today the kitchen sisters present our new series the Keepers, stories of activist

1:20.1

archivists rogue librarians, curators, collectors, and historians, keepers of the culture

1:27.0

and the cultures and collections they keep.

1:30.1

Anytime the Kitchen Sisters launch a series, we always reach out to listeners, to everyone we meet on the street, and we say, for example, with the Keepers, what keepers do we need to chronicle?

1:41.0

Who are the guardians of history large and small the protectors of

1:44.8

the free flow of information and ideas what collections move and astound you. We

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.