From 1987 until 1992 I wrote a column in Monitor Magazine called "Pump Up D'Angelo". It started out as a gossip column and morphed into ... into ... I'm not quite sure. It lurched between satire, opinion, rant, and subversive fiction. These days you'd call it a Blog, so here I am back again. I'll publish new thoughts, old memories, and (when I find them) old columns from last century....
~ Nick D'Angelo
C4 is screening the movie Beat Street tonight, and I can't wait. For anyone into B-Boy culture (rap music, breakdancing, and graffiti) back in the early 80's then you'll know just how important it was. It reflected the lifestyle we were living (as best we could half way around the world), like no other. Sure, there was 1979's The Warriors but even back then we knew it was bit silly - no real gang would dress like they did in that movie. When Beat Street came out it was like our existence had been validated.
When it was released in 1984 I was managing NZ breakdance champions The Megazoids, and through Warner Records (I was also a DJ at the time) I managed to wangle us into a special screening for just us, the movie distributor, and Warners (who had the soundtrack). We were very excited going in to the movie and we weren't disappointed. Sure it had flaws (some of the acting is so cheesy and we didn't give a toss about the 'love' scenes) but there was plenty of dance action courtesy of various battles between NYC Breakers and the Rock Steady Crew ( there's even more on the DVD release, with lots of scenes deleted from the movie now included).
We left the screening buzzing, with both the record and film distributors suitably hyped that the movie was going to be BIG. So if it came to your local cinema you can thank us because they didn't really know sh!t about breakdancing/b-boys or how big the film would be in NZ - until we schooled 'em. Junior Satele (one of the Megazoids, 11 y.o. at the time) remembers it thusly on Facebook:
Hey Nick, I remember when you got us Megazoids into the special advance screening ... and it was a morning screening so I had to skip school for the morning!... I was at Kowhai Intermediate in Kingsland!!!... I remember loving the movie to bits and getting back to School and telling everyone about it and then at lunchtime going hard out trying to bust moves I’d just seen... on the cardboard outside the classroom!!! LOL... Those were the days!!! ;)
Beat Street was released in 1984 and tells the story of Kenny, a young hip-hop artist living in the Bronx with his younger brother Lee and their mother Cora ("eat your eggs, or I'll break your legs"). Kenny dreams of making it big as a DJ and playing at The Roxy, and Lee is part of a break-dancing crew. Various rap groups, break dancers, and singers make appearances including The Treacherous Three, The System, Rock Steady Crew, Soul Sonic Force & Shango, The Magnificent Force, New York City Breakers, Melle Mel & TheFurious Five, Tina B., Us Girls, and Afrika Bambaataa.
The plot was clearly written to win over a mainstream audience (someone dies due to gang violence, friends decide to put on a show to celebrate his life and defeat the stereotypes) but if you look you'll see various threads including one 'inspired' by the seminal graffiti documentary Style Wars. If you have the DVD you can pretty much fast forward through any scenes with Kenny, and just stick to the bits with Lee and Ramon. As I recall the Megazoids decided at some stage that Breakin’ was a better movie (it’s not), but that was only because Breakin’ didn’t waste too much time on the plot and just kept slamming in the dance sequences.
This is one of many Beat Street clips available on You Tube. I picked this one because you can hear Lee say "let's serve these dudes man". I love that kids today think their slang is all so new.
Actually, that clip is too choreographed. This one is more real;
No, not me actually. On the Facebook group Old School NZ Hip Hop I asked if anyone had any memories of Michael Jackson. Jon Davis (DJ/Promoter) sent me this email:
Jon Davis 08 July at 20:24
Meeting Michael Jackson
I was lucky enough to be working for Sony Music NZ in 1996 and unlike Australian Sony Staff (or Annie Crummer) he deigned to meet 10 of us working Sony grunts. We were herded into a curtained off room backstage of the concert on the first night, I could hear him talking and then we were ushered in.
Jacko was shorter than me, and on the darkness scale if I’m a 10 and Nick D'Angelo is a 1 then he was a 7. He’s quite dark but its all covered in makeup, he also probably hadn’t shaved since the morning... The stubble was showing through the pancake. He was also quite good-looking in the flesh, the surgery looked good, the nose didn’t look weird, I guess the press doprint pics of him looking awful or onstage where the singing and facial contortions make the implants stand out in odd ways but in real life it all looked quite normal.
He offered me his (ungloved) hand and said he was pleased to meet me and he was glad to be in New Zealand.
His voice was quite normal, not like the girly falsetto he puts on for interviews... I think I said "duh uhh uggg umph" or something like that, I was shaking... because I was shaking hands with mother fuckin’Michael Jackson, the most famous black* (LOL) man alive. The guy who was singing with James Brown and Stevie Wonder and hanging with Diana Ross and Marvin Gaye when I was rockin’ my Action Man and playing with jigsaws in Primary School (he’s 8 months older than me)
The one thing I took away from the 10 minutes we spent with him was he looks you in the eye when he talks to you, but all you see in those eyes is the question... "OK what do YOU want from me?"
We had our photo taken with him and it was all over. I looked back and saw him watch the last of us go out with that weird look in his eyes, then he disappeared off and the next time I saw him it was popping out of spaceship on stage. We never got the photos as apparently he vets them all and if he don’t like ‘em they never see the light of day...
In the end I got to meet him, not too many people worldwide who can say that...
Nick D'Angelo Today at 11:34 Wow! - that's a very cool story!! When you wrote "OK what do YOU want from me?" did you mean he wanted to do something for you , or he was sizing you up as to what you might 'take' from him? I'll post it to the wall on 'Old School NZ Hip Hop'....
Jon Davis Today at 20:12 Yeah the latter, it was like a searching look that said, 'everyone wants something from me... I’m on to you.... they want my money, my fame, my story, what is it you want....?’ Yeah freaky
Since we’ve all seen all the photo’s of Michael Jackson, here instead are some pictures of NZ Breakdance Champions The Megazoids performing at the Thriller album release party in Auckland, New Zealand. Waaay back in tha’ day...