Emerging
in the first half of the 1980s, Swedish hip hop
was first heard from the cities of Stockholm
and Malmö
.
In the
early days, most rappers in Sweden
rapped in English. Funkalics and
The Latin
Kings, two very different acts united by their innovative use
of the
Swedish language, debuted a
decade later and paved the way for a second, and bigger,
breakthrough for Swedish
hip hop.
Today, some of the most popular rappers use Swedish, often in the
form of "
Rinkeby Swedish", the youth
vernacular of many suburbs dominated by immigrants.
History
The beginning
Percussionist
Per Cussion along with
Grandmaster Funk is generally
credited with bringing hip hop to Sweden. In 1984 they released the
songs "Don't Stop", "Snow Blind" and "Payin´ The Price".
Breakdancing had arrived a year earlier and
spread quickly, its forerunners known as
Robot Lasse,
Mark,
Spirio and
Perkeles.
In the summer of 1984, following a major dance competition,
Double M Crew,
Abdula & The Rockers,
Rock Ski,
Almighty
T and
MC II Fresh joined together
to form the hip hop collective
Ice Cold
Rockers, a crew consisting of
rappers,
scratchers,
dancers and
graffiti
artists.
Broadcaster D and
One Eye Que (later recording under the name
Ayo) started their collaboration.
Sweden, outside of Stockholm, soon became familiar with hip hop
when the popular movie
Stockholmsnatt, which featured the
IC Rockers, came out.
Pop-C and
Snoopy
were on the soundtrack and had a hit in 1986 with their single
"Next Time".
New artists followed in their tracks.
Rob'n'Raz produced the album
Competition Is
None and introduced
Papa Dee's
dub and
dancehall
influenced rap to the Swedes.
See-Que,
from Stockholm, collaborated with the American label
Priority Records on their compilation album
Basement Flavor.
The first real rap song in Swedish "Jag Är Def" came from
MC Tim in 1989. The year after,
Just D was formed and their decision to rap in
Swedish would earn them a huge fan base, and introduce rap to the
general populace.
The first breakthrough
In the end of the 1980s, hip hop became increasingly more popular
in Sweden. The international success of rapper/singer
Neneh Cherry's crossover album,
Raw Like
Sushi, made the Swedish media take a closer look at the
genre in the context of Sweden's native
artists. The Swedish Championship in Rap was held for the first
time in 1989 and the winner was
ADL's
group
Sons Of Soul. The runner-up was
Ms Melodie, who went on to have a career as
Leila K. Briefly picking up the torch of Neneh
Cherry, Leila K had an international crossover hit with the rap
track "Got To Get". There was now a solid market for rap music and
record companies were taking notice.
Just D's
ironically
titled album
Rock N Roll became popular with many people
who had yet to embrace hip hop.
Snoopy (aka Quincy Jones III) had moved to the USA
to produce
acts like Young MC, LL
Cool J and Ice Cube. The
Sure Shot Groove (
MC Stranger and
Complicated C) debuted with the 12-inch
Rhymes R Flowin'. The collective
Infinite Mass won the Swedish qualification
finals for the
World Rap
Competition and released their EP
Da Blackmass. One of
their songs, "Shoot The Racist", was on the soundtrack for the 1993
movie
Sökarna and became
hugely popular. It was later renamed "Area Turns Red" due to some
media controversy over the lyrics.
The Latin Kings ushered in a new
wave of Swedish hip hop artists. They used ”
Rinkeby Swedish”, sometimes described as a
kind of a
pidgin language, to describe life
in the
'Million Programme' suburbs
of Stockholm. Their 1994 debut album
Välkommen till
Förorten (Welcome to the suburb), produced by Gordon Cyrus and
founder of first the swedish Hip Hop label Breakin Bread, was a
success in the charts and favorite with the critics. The coming
generation of Swedish hip hop artists would be distinguished from
the first by their inclusion of Swedish language rhymes, as opposed
to the exclusive use of English rhymes by Sweden's first generation
of rappers.
The second breakthrough
In 1998
Petter debuted with the
album
Mitt sjätte sinne, which became an enormous success
and started the Swedish hip hop boom of the late 1990s. With him
came an array of artists, such as
Thomas
Rusiak,
DJ Sleepy and
Eye-n'-I. Other artists that achieved mainstream
popularity following Petter's break include
Ken Ring and
Ayo.
Feven released her acclaimed album
Hela
Vägen Ut.
Looptroop developed a
middle class revolutionary style.
Timbuktu,
a native of Lund
, emerged and
went on to gain a reputation as one of Sweden's most popular
MCs.
In the 21st century
Recent acts that has achieved nationwide recognition include:
Promoe,
Snook,
Ayesha,
Fjärde Världen,
Fattaru,
Ison &
Fille,
Advance Patrol,
Lazee Adam Tensta and the
latest breakthrough
Kartellen
Many of these artists have been exposed to a domestic hip hop
culture since they were born, or very young. In a sense the Swedish
scene has become less volatile, and also less vulnerable to
becoming extinct. Influence from the
U.S. culture is no longer as
significant;
American hip hop is
still important but outside influences also come from
French,
British,
Danish, and
Japanese hip hop, and other regions around
the world with vibrant and innovative music scenes.Due to
file sharing via the Internet and changing
consumer markets, the number of records an artist has sold is not
necessarily indicative of how popular or important that artist is.
There are Swedish hip hop acts who release records for what they
know is going to be an economic loss, in hope of earning their
money through concerts and other ventures.
The hip hop genres represented in Swedish hip hop are plentiful.
Alternative hip hop is, most
likely, bigger than
Gangsta and
Hardcore combined. There are also many
fusion genres such as
Neo soul,
Grime, and
Reggaeton.
Swedish rap often deals with themes of
multiculturalism and positive suburban
identity. Many rappers affirm their ethnic and racial background,
but tend to identify more with their community and with Swedish
minorities in general rather than with specific ethnic cultures, or
with mainstream Swedish culture. Rapper
Adam
Tensta, for instance, takes his name from the suburb of
Tensta and rhymes in his "Banging on the
System": "Every burb the same man / and we got every color / we all
the same man / at least to them we are / we all immigrants".
2008 is a
European Year of
Intercultural Dialogue and part of this effort was a hip hop
summit in Stockholm called
Make it
blast!, which took place on the 27th of May. Chaired by
Timbuktu, the festival featured
rappers from Sweden and elsewhere in Europe and aimed to create
dialogue between artists and between audiences of the European
urban music scene.
Well known artists
The list of people who have made a name for themselves in Swedish
hip hop can be made very long. With a few exceptions (
Feven,
Melinda Wrede,
Remedeeh), most of the artists are men.
Acts that has had some international success include
QD3,
Looptroop,
Max Peezay, and
Million Stylez.
Non-commercial hiphop
There have always been elements within the Swedish hip hop scene
that has reacted against the commercial aspects of the
music industry and have tried to find
alternative distribution and marketing channels for the music.
Internet has had a significant impact in
how media is communicated, and through various
online communities people without record
deals have also been able to find audiences for their music.
Examples of such communities that are centered around Swedish hip
hop are
Frizon and
Whoa.nu.
Other popular websites that are used for sharing (and promoting
music) include
YouTube,
Facebook, and
MySpace.
The graffiti culture
Graffiti is, to a large extent, seen as an
art form belonging to hip hop. In the early 1980s, the American
films
Style Wars,
Wild Style and
Beat Street would have a great impact and
influence many would-be artists, as would the Swedish cult classic
Stockholmsnatt a few years
later. The first graffiti artists in the Stockholm area had names
such as Disey, Ziggy, Razor, Merley (aka
Liam Norberg), Puppet and Zappo.
In 2004, the rapper
Promoe had a hit with the
track "These Walls Don't Lie", recorded and mixed by
Soundism, which dealt with the Swedish graffiti
culture, and the dangers of creating illegal art at difficult
locations.
See also
Notes
Books
- (About Writers United Fotball Club, a graffiti crew from
Nacka)
- (About a group of graffiti artists from the suburbs of
Stockholm)
- (Interviews and photographs from the Swedish graffiti
scene)
- (Interviews with eight Scandinavian graffiti masters)
- (A biography)
- (A collection of photos of the greatest hip hop acts between
1996-2004)
- (About the hip hop culture in Gothenburg)
- (Facts and rumors about most of the Swedish hip hop
artists)
- (About the Swedish graffiti culture)
External links
- Links to (English language) Swedish hip hop
resources
- Links to (Swedish language) Swedish hip hop
resources
- Links to Swedish hip hop labels