German hip hop

German hip hop is the German manifestation of hip hop music. After the United States and France, Germany is the third-biggest hip hop nation, sales-wise.

Music of Germany
History (Timeline and Samples)
Popular and modern Electronic - Rock - Hip hop - Alpine New Wave - Highlife - Cabaret - Volksmusic - Shlager - Klezmer - Heavy metal
Classical Chorale - Opera - Baroque - Classical - Romantic
Folk Lieder - Oom-pah - Volkslieder - Schuchplattler - Yodelling
Awards German Music Instrument Prize - German Music Awards
Charts Media Control
Festivals Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, Donaueschinger Musiktage
Media Keys
National anthem "Das Lied der Deutschen"
Regional music
Bavaria - Danish-German - Swabia - Sorbia - Northern Germany
Other Germanic areas
Austria - Denmark - Flanders - Liechtenstein - Luxembourg - Netherlands


Hip hop spread across Europe in the early 1980s. Graffiti art and breakdancing were already well-known by the time the first recordings were released later in the decade. Die Fantastischen Vier was the first hip hop crew to achieve commercial success, and they helped to popularize the field beginning in about 1992.

According to the European Music Office's report on Music in Europe, the first major rap crew, Die Fantastischen Vier, appealed originally to young, mainstream audiences. They responded by evolving a harder sound. There remain two kinds of German hip hop: underground and commercial. Underground performers include Walking Large and Fettes Brot; labels include Groove Attack, Yo Mama and Mzee [1].

See also: list of German hip hop musicians

References

World hip hop
Africa - Albania - Algeria - Angola - Australia - Austria - Azerbaijan - Bahrain - Belgium - Bosnia - Botswana - Brazil - Bulgaria - Canada - Cape Verde - China - DRC Congo - Cuba - Czech Republic - Denmark - Egypt - Finland - France - Gambia - Germany - Ghana - Greece - Guinea - Hungary - Iceland - India - Indonesia - Ireland - Israel - Italy - Ivory Coast - Japan - Korea - Madagascar - Malaysia - Mali - Mexico - Morocco - Native American - Nepal - Netherlands - New Zealand - Niger - Nigeria - Norway - Philippines - Poland - Portugal - Romania - Russia - Rwanda - Senegal - Serbia and Montenegro - Slovakia - Slovenia - Somalia - South Africa - Spain - Sweden - Switzerland - Tanzania - Taiwan - Togo - Turkey - Uganda - Ukraine - United Kingdom - United States - Zimbabwe

See also: German hip hop, 1992, African hip hop, Algerian hip hop, American hip hop, Angolan hip hop, Art, Australian hip hop