“There’s no story to hip-hop—just culture”: R.I.P. renaissance man Rammellzee
06.30.2010
05:47 pm
Topics:
Art
Belief
Fashion
Heroes
History
Media
Music
Science/Tech
Tags:
New York City
graffiti
Rammellzee
Afrofuturism
Gothic Futurism
Death Comet Crew
hip-hop
05:47 pm
Topics:
Art
Belief
Fashion
Heroes
History
Media
Music
Science/Tech
Tags:
New York City
graffiti
Rammellzee
Afrofuturism
Gothic Futurism
Death Comet Crew
hip-hop

Word from a Fab Five Freddy tweet and a post on his own MySpace blog is that New York hip-hop futurist Rammellzee has passed away at age 50 from as-yet-unrevealed causes. (@149st features a great, fact-filled interview with the man.) Emerging as a teen graffiti artist in the mid-‘70s, bombing the A-train from its last stop in his Far Rockaway, Queens hometown, Rammell ended up like many of his talented peers—a multidisciplinary creative icon submerged in the nascent metropolitan hip-hop scene. He first surfaced as a persona to the world in amazing fashion, dressed in trenchcoat and wielding a sawed-off shotgun as he MC’ed for the Rock Steady Crew in the Amphitheatre scene of hip-hop’s famous first film, 1982’s Wild Style.
Written by Ron Nachmann | Comments




