![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The brazenly named Gods of Rap tour has rounded up three of hip-hop’s most iconic legacy acts for a guilt-free nostalgia trip with an outright ban on trap hi-hats.īoth Public Enemy and De La Soul are Golden Age bullseyes, landing in the late 80s, while Wu-Tang Clan hit the scene like a petrol bomb in 1993 and helped splinter the scene into more hardcore factions. Still, the most scene with the biggest love pile-on for the past is hip-hop, with a ‘Golden Age’ of acts that’s been scratched into stone tablets.įrom the mid-late 80s to the early 90s, hip-hop went through a period of exponential innovation, which along with house and techno running parallel at the same time, laid the plans for hundreds of underground subgenres as well as the biggest pop artists of the current age. We should always be wary about nostalgia in any music genre, no matter how many times your mates post songs from their teenage years saying it used to be way better. ![]()
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