Fab 5 Freddy photographs

id
11530
origination
Fab 5 Freddy, 1959-
date statement
1971-2009
key date
1971
identifier (local_mss)
186081
org unit
Photographs and Prints Division. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
call number
SCP 186081
b-number
b22855040
total components
187
total series
0
max depth
3
boost queries
(none)
component layout
Default Layout
Extended MARC Fields
false
Extended Navigation
false
created
2022-09-14 19:23:19 UTC
updated
2022-09-14 19:24:57 UTC
status note
(missing)
Display Aeon link
true

Description data TOP

unitid
{"value"=>"186081", "type"=>"local_mss"}
{"value"=>"SCP 186081", "type"=>"local_call"}
{"value"=>"b22855040", "type"=>"local_b"}
unitdate
{"value"=>"1971-2009", "type"=>"inclusive", "normal"=>"1971/2009"}
unittitle
{"value"=>"Fab 5 Freddy photographs"}
physdesc
{"format"=>"structured", "physdesc_components"=>[{"name"=>"extent", "value"=>"21 boxes", "unit"=>"containers"}, {"name"=>"extent", "value"=>"8.42 linear feet", "unit"=>"linear_feet"}]}
{"format"=>"structured", "physdesc_components"=>[{"name"=>"extent", "value"=>"1 computer file", "unit"=>"computer_files"}, {"name"=>"extent", "value"=>"361.78 kilobytes", "unit"=>"kilobytes"}]}
repository
{"value"=>"<span class=\"corpname\">Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Photographs and Prints Division</span>"}
abstract
{"value"=>"Fab 5 Freddy is an African American director, TV host, graffiti artist, and a key personality in the history of hip-hop culture. The Fab 5 Freddy photographs highlight both his professional and personal lives, including images taken behind-the-scenes at musical video shoots and on the set of <span class=\"title\">Yo! MTV Raps</span>, album artwork and photoshoots, as well as candid images of figures within the hip hop world."}
langmaterial
{"value"=>"English"}
origination
{"value"=>"Fab 5 Freddy, 1959-", "type"=>"persname", "role"=>"cre"}
bioghist
{"value"=>"<p>Biographical note taken from the Fab 5 Freddy papers, written by Amelia Carlin in 2020.</p> <p> Fab 5 Freddy is an African American director, TV host, graffiti artist, and a key personality in the history of hip-hop culture. He was born Frederick Leroy Brathwaite to Theresa Florence Brathwaite and Frederick Leroy Brathwaite in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, in 1956. His god-father was the jazz trumpeter and composer, Max Roach. Fab 5 Freddy was instrumental in connecting the New York uptown worlds of graffiti, rap, MC, and breakdance artists, with the downtown modern art scene of the late 1970s and early 1980s. In 1983, he worked on the seminal hip-hop film <span class=\"title\">Wild Style</span> and later gained widespread fame as a host on the MTV series <span class=\"title\">Yo! MTV Raps</span> (1988-1995). He has directed a number of music videos, including his debut work for Boogie Down Productions' release \"My Philosophy\" (1988), as well as clips for a number of other artists. He has worked in music and event production, on major motion pictures, and in television roles. He studied communications for a period around 1978 at Medgar Evers College, Brooklyn.</p> <p>Fab 5 Freddy was one of the members of the graffiti crew \"The Fabulous 5\" alongside the noted graffiti artist Lee Quiñones. The group were key participants in the movement of the late 1970s and early 1980s that saw graffiti move into more established art spaces. Both Fab 5 Freddy and Quiñones were invited to exhibit their work in at the Galleria La Medusa in Rome, in 1979. Fab 5 Freddy's most well-known graffiti work is a series of soup cans painted on a New York City subway train circa 1979-1980, referencing pop artist Andy Warhol's \"Campbell's Soup Cans.\"</p> <p>Fab 5 Freddy exhibited works at various galleries including the Fun Gallery; in the <span class=\"title\">Times Square Show</span> (1980), which also featured Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat; in the <span class=\"title\">Beyond Words</span> show at the Mudd Club (1981) that Fab 5 Freddy co-curated with graffiti artist Futura; and in <span class=\"title\">New York/New Wave</span> at P.S. 1 (1981).</p> <p>During this period, Fab 5 Freddy frequented the tapings of <span class=\"title\">TV Party</span>, Glenn O'Brien's cable access show, where he met Debbie Harry, and other members of the new wave band Blondie. He is famously referenced in Blondie's track \"Rapture,\" in the phrase \"Fab 5 Freddy told me everybody's fly,\" and appeared in the song's 1981 music video together with Quiñones and Basquiat.</p> <p>At the <span class=\"title\">Times Square Show</span>, Fab 5 Freddy met director Charlie Ahearn. Together they developed the concept for the film <span class=\"title\">Wild Style</span> which depicted the burgeoning New York rap, break dancing, and graffiti scene of the late 1970s and early 1980s. Fab 5 Freddy created the original music for the film and played the role of \"Phade,\" a nightclub owner.</p> <p>In 1982, Fab 5 Freddy released the single \"Change the Beat\" on Celluloid Records. The B-side of the EP contained a French version of the song by the rapper Beside. At the end of this version of the song is the line \"This stuff is really fresh,\" which has become one of the most sampled pieces of music of all time. This single, and five others were recorded to promote the \"New York Rap City\" tour. The tour brought Fab 5 Freddy, and a group of MCs, DJs, break dancers, graffiti writers, and the Fantastic Four Double Dutch team to France and the United Kingdom in November of 1982.</p> <p>Fab 5 Freddy is best known as the host of the MTV series <span class=\"title\">Yo! MTV Raps</span>. This was the first television series to present hip-hop and rap music videos, and is often credited with disseminating the genre throughout the United States and other parts of the world. The concept was developed by Ted Demme and first aired in 1988 with Fab 5 Freddy as the host, broadcasting every Saturday night. Owing to its popularity, MTV developed a daily format of the show that was filmed in-studio, with Ed Lover and Doctor Dre as the weekday hosts. The program featured interviews and performances with many of the most popular, widely regarded rap, hip-hop, and R&B acts of the time. The show was broadcast until 1995.</p> <p>In the same year the first episode of <span class=\"title\">Yo! MTV Raps</span> aired, Fab 5 Freddy made his music video directorial debut with the Boogie Down Productions' track \"My Philosophy\" (1988). He directed Queen Latifah's \"Ladies First\"; Snoop Dogg's \"Who Am I (What's My Name)?\"; \"One Love\" by Nas; several Shabba Ranks songs; and videos for artists such as Sharissa, and Ziggy Marley and The Wailers. During his career, he has directed more than 70 music videos.</p> <p>Through the 1990s and early 2000s, Fab 5 Freddy and business associate Roy Cormier headed several ventures in the music industry, including F&R Records, and In the Middle Entertainment. Cormier, an American recording executive, was an early promoter of hip-hop and rap events in the 1980s, moving on to become a talent manager, and record producer. Together, they were co-presidents of Pallas Records, a label distributed by Universal Records, the biggest record label in the industry at the time. At Pallas they were responsible for launching the Chicago hip-hop/rap group Crucial Conflict's first full-length album, <span class=\"title\">The Final Tic</span> (1996). After leaving Pallas, Fab 5 Freddy and Cormier ran F&R Records for a short period around 1997-1998, where they worked with the artists 45 King and Boogie Shoes. Following this venture, they co-founded the independent urban record label In the Middle Entertainment. By 1999, they had signed four acts; one group and three soloists: Ill Street, Tikki, Gee Pierce and Mike Ransom.</p> <p>Fab 5 Freddy's media projects have included acting parts in the feature films <span class=\"title\">New Jack City</span> (1991), and <span class=\"title\">American Gangster</span> (2007), on which he also worked as a production consultant. In 2001, Fab 5 Freddy hosted a web based hip-hop lifestyle series <span class=\"title\">The Fab 5 Freddy Show</span> on GetMusic.com. He has been involved with the VH1 Hip Hop Honors awards since its inception in 2004, working as co-producer and host on a number of the shows. He regularly participates as a speaker and panelist in programs at galleries, schools, and conferences.</p> <p>His writings include a dictionary of contemporary hip-hop terminology entitled <span class=\"title\">Fresh Fly Flavor: Words and Phrases of the Hip Hop Generation</span>, published by Longmeadow in 1992, and several articles in commercial magazines. From the 1990s, he has collaborated with other writers on several film projects with themes of rap and hip-hop culture. He continues to create art works, and direct, produce, and appear in television and film productions.</p>"}
scopecontent
{"value"=>"<p>The majority of the collection consists of approximately 200 rolls of commercially developed film prints. These prints were originally housed in their commercial lab envelopes and this order has been maintained. Many of these rolls have accompanying negatives, which are housed alongside their prints.</p> <p>The subject matter in the photographs are not always clearly delineated or described; Fab 5 Freddy's professional and personal work, as presented in this collection, overlap quite a bit. The rolls of film also have a tendency to overlap in terms of the subject of the photographs. Additionally, the vast majority of the images were not titled or dated; Fab 5 Freddy's original titles have been used wherever possible. Those subjects that can be identified have, but there is a large component of this collection that remains untitled and can best be described in terms of approximate dates. </p> <p>Subjects include backstage photographs from <span class=\"title\">Yo! MTV Raps</span> and Fab 5 Freddy-directed music video shoots, such as Nas' \"One Love,\" Queen Latifah's \"Ladies First,\" Brand Nubian's \"Wake Up (Reprise in the Sunshine),\" and Snoop Dogg's \"Who Am I (What's My Name)?.\" Also included is artwork for Crucial Conflict's album <span class=\"title\">Good Side Bad Side</span> (1998), slides of artwork that were included in <span class=\"title\">Wild Style</span>, and headshots.</p> <p>There are also a number of personal photographs of friends and family, as well as candid shots of famous figures or work-related shots from projects Fab 5 Freddy was not directly associated with, such as yachting with Ice-T and his family, images of Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg during the production of the former's <span class=\"title\">Doggystyle</span>, Ted Demme's 1994 wedding, attending the 1994 US Open Men's final with Shep Gordon, and P. Diddy's 2002 birthday party in Morocco. In the Middle Entertainment-signed artists appear to make up a significant part of the collection, mostly notably a photoshoot for Mike Ransom. Additionally, there are images related to broad subjects that interested Fab 5 Freddy, such as the development of rap culture in Brazil and the dancehall scene.</p> <p>Occasionally non-photographic elements are interleaved. These include postcards without writing, a call sheet from <span class=\"title\">American Gangster</span>, and notes.  </p> <p>It should be noted that this collection includes images shot by famed hip hop photographers Lisa Leone and Doug Rowell.</p>"}
arrangement
{"value"=>"<p>Alphabetical arrangement is used.</p>"}
acqinfo
{"value"=>"<p>Purchased from Boo-Hooray in 2019.</p>"}
separatedmaterial
{"value"=>"<p>Photographs transferred from Fab 5 Freddy papers in Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books, Schomburg Center.</p>"}
processinfo
{"value"=>"<p>Processed by <span class=\"name\">Stacey Ference</span> in <span class=\"date\">2022</span>.</p>"}
date_start
1971
keydate
1971
date_end
2009
date_inclusive_start
1971
date_inclusive_end
2009
extent_statement
8.42 linear feet (21 boxes); 361.78 kilobytes (1 computer file)
prefercite
{"value"=>"Fab 5 Freddy photographs, Photographs and Prints Division. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library"}

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Child components TOP

  1. Afrika Bambaataa
  2. African Street Carnival and "Roses" Video Shoot
  3. Alpo 80's -- Harlem Drug Dealers
  4. Artwork Polaroids
  5. Bab's -- Central Park, Met Museum -- Spring
  6. Boogie Down Productions -- "My Philosophy"
  7. Brand Nubian -- "Wake Up (Reprise in the Sunshine)"
  8. Brazil
  9. Bronx Zoo
  10. Bushwick Bill, Nicole, Ted Demme
  11. Campbell's Soup Graffiti
  12. Central Park -- Summer
  13. Chi-Town for Common Yo! Shoot
  14. Chi Town with Daure, Maregeux, Cliff Love Clowning, and Roy
  15. Chicago and San Fran
  16. Chill Hill with Babs -- J. Khan
  17. Christmas
  18. Computer Printed Photographs/Notes
  19. Copies of Older Photographs
  20. Crucial Conflict [6/1]
  21. Cuba
  22. Cuban Postcards and Tiki
  23. Dancehall
  24. DC -- Bre With Roy and U. Ditt in Car
  25. Def Jam Christmas Party
  26. Jonathan Demme, Jac, Statue of Liberty
  27. Ted Demme's Wedding
  28. Disney World
  29. Dr. Dre and Others
  30. Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg -- Dr. Dre in Studio
  31. Dru Hill
  32. "Erase Racism" Video Shoot
  33. Easter Parade -- Monie Love
  34. Fab 5 Freddy [16/1]
  35. Fab's Godson Timmy
  36. Fam Picnic with Mom and Dad
  37. Daniela Federici
  38. Friends
  39. The Groomsmen / The Sopranos Comp Card
  40. Hanging on Hancock Street
  41. Harlem Week and Harlem
  42. Debbie Harry and Others
  43. Debbie Harry / Hip Hop Honors Program Schedule
  44. Headshots
  45. Hip Hop Honors -- Bone, Kahn's House
  46. Hip Hop Photographs Sent to Fab 5 Freddy
  47. Hip Hop -- Some Portraits and Sent Photographs
  48. House Renovations
  49. Hunter Halloween Ball
  50. Ice-T and Others
  51. Impact in Nashville with Wendel and George
  52. In the Middle Entertainment Photoshoot
  53. iNi Kamoze
  54. JA. Island Village
  55. J.A. with C. Blackwell
  56. "Jac's B-Day with Usual Suspects"
  57. Jackie Robinson Show
  58. Jamel, Mansion, Sparkle, Kurt, and Camila
  59. Jamaica with M. Sayeed
  60. Japan
  61. Quincy Jones and Others
  62. Kasper, Lefty, JBoogie
  63. Kimyatta and Auto Show / Mom and Pop
  64. KRS-One
  65. Spike Lee Shoots a Jaguar Industrial at 411 Convent Ave
  66. Lisa Leone Photoshoot -- Untitled
  67. London [3/1]
  68. Los Angeles [6/1]
  69. The Mack Lobby Cards, Photograph
  70. Malik's Birthday
  71. Maui, Hawaii
  72. Debi Mazar and Jimmy Alt and Lisa / Tupac and Madonna at Versace Party -- Spring
  73. Debi Mazar at Party
  74. Miami at Bobbi's
  75. Miami with Kimyatta
  76. Model Slides
  77. Mr. Freeze
  78. MTV -- Tom Freston
  79. Music Video Shoot
  80. Nas
  81. Nas -- "One Love" Video
  82. New Jack Entertainment Event
  83. Nigeria
  84. North Carolina
  85. Notes
  86. Office and Friend
  87. Connie Orlando with Peaches in Miami
  88. Paris -- Guru and MC Solaar Video
  89. Paris Barclay, Luki, Peter Tomas in my Old Apartment
  90. Party at James DuBose's House
  91. Party at Franki's House with N'Dea, Lisa Meets Sparkle and Connie Orlando -- Spring
  92. P. Diddy
  93. P. Diddy -- Birthday Party in Morocco
  94. Max Perlich / Stush and Co
  95. Petey Pablo
  96. Photograph by Lisa Leone
  97. Pine Ridge with Aunt Lu, Essa, and Ernest
  98. Amos Poe, D. Cortez, Malik Sayeed, James Nares, Hilton Als
  99. Polaroids
  100. Postcards
  101. Puerto Rico
  102. Queen Latifah -- "Ladies First" Video
  103. Mike Ransom
  104. Mike Ransom and Others
  105. Restaurant Event
  106. Max Roach Tribute
  107. San Francisco
  108. San Francisco with The Chronic
  109. "Satellite" Painting
  110. Scotland -- King Tut's Wah Wah Hut
  111. Shabba Ranks -- "Trailer Load A Girls"
  112. Rev. Al Sharpton
  113. Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre
  114. Snoop Dogg and Others
  115. "Sophia Cries"
  116. Stonewall Anniversary with Babs
  117. Studio with Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg
  118. T-Boz Book Release
  119. Tokyo -- 12/93
  120. Uptown Unplugged -- LA with Taharka
  121. US Men's Open with Shep Gordon, Peter May
  122. Melvin van Peebles
  123. Various Music Videos -- Gang Starr; "Erase Racism"
  124. Joan Vass Fashion Show
  125. Walrod, A. Logadia, A. Smalls
  126. Wes Johnson
  127. Wild Style Artworks, Graffiti, Chalfant
  128. Wild Style Interview
  129. Wild Style Promotional Photographs
  130. Wine Country
  131. Writing Cinderella's with Suzanne Brokerick
  132. Woodstock '99
  133. Yachting with Ice-T and Family -- LA
  134. Yo! MTV Raps [7/1]
  135. West Indian Parade
  136. Untitled [3/1]