Founded by Hip-Hop author and scholar Adisa Banjoko, is the worlds first scholar to teach how music, chess and martial arts can promote unity, strategy and non-violence. This award winning speaker teaches youth of all backgrounds risk assessment, emotional mastery and how to apply what they see on the chessboard to real life decision making. Follow us @realhiphopchess on IG! You can also listen to Bishop Chronicles podcast on www.bishopchronicles.com iTunes, Spotify and Mixcloud.
The other week Adisa the Bishop was invited to teach the philoosphies of the Hip-Hop Chess Federation in Staten Island (aka Shaolin). It was at a special private gathering for young creatives hosted by Camp Tazo and RZA of Wu Tang Clan. Shaolin Monk Shi Yan Ming, Sifu (teacher to RZA in kung-fu and zen philosophy) also taught at the session. Adisa brings you along on a fun, yet deep dive dealing with self exploration, education and the power of personal expression.
Adisa the Bishop talks about this one of a kind experience on his podcast, Bishop Chronicles. To download and listen to the show right now visit www.bishopchronicles.com or subscribe on Spotify, Mixcloud, Libsyn or iTunes.
You can also follow us on IG @bishopchronicles or @realhiphopchess ENJOY!
Also be sure to follow @tazo tea and go buy some today...
Camp Tazo (and event curated and actualized by the good people at TAZO Tea) recently hosted an artists retreat in Shaolin (aka Staten Island NY) to help them overcome blocks in their creativity. RZA of the mighty Wu Tang Clan put together a series of guided meditations for the campers and they are now here for your personal consumption! I hope you enjoy it! They are truly enlightening ideas and we at HHCF are sure they can help you grow in your personal and professional life.
On Friday Bishop Chronicles has an entire show talking about my visit to Camp Tazo. Subscribe to the show on Spotify, iTunes, Mixcloud or Libsyn to listen or visit www.bishopchronicles.com to listen in.
In Hip-Hop culture, the barbershop is known as a community hub for news and debate. Inside special exhibition RESPECT: Hip-Hop Style & Wisdom, gather around the Barbershop space inside the gallery to learn from guest speakers focusing on new topics each month. Explore unexpected aspects of Hip-Hop culture. This month’s theme is Hip-Hop & Martial Arts, featuring Gene Ching, Publisher of Kung Fu Tai Chi & kungfumagazine.com, and Adisa “The Bishop” Banjoko, Founder and Executive Director of Hip Hop Chess Federation.
Included with special exhibition Museum admission. There is an additional $4 charge for special exhibition RESPECT. Advance online tickets are available; choose your date and desired hour of entry. » Buy tickets
We also have some other special guests coming through....Don't miss this one!!
So my book #BobbyBruceandtheBronx was selected by the Hip-Hop Collection at Cornell University to be preserved for future generations. This is me with Ben Ortiz where He holds my book next to one of my favorite albums Yo Bum Rush The Show by PE. To see some of the records, photos and books my book will be preserved with was and is one of the most amazing moments of my life. Amazing because you don't know how lost I was as a teen and young adult.
Amazing because I was a Hip-Hop journalist when most people didn't think Hip-Hop was art or that it was worth documenting. Amazing because I cannot believe I took an idea like fusing Hip-Hop, chess and martial arts from getting laughed at to hosting tournaments with RZA winning em to breaking attendance records at the World Chess Hall of Fame to working with the Oakland Museum on this amazing event coming in 2018........ It is still a scary journey....I still dont know if I'm worthy......I have been sitting on a complete Iron Hook Scroll Vol. 2: The Cloud Scroll for about 3 years....I just need to take the photos and illustrate the positions.... I already have the outlines for 2 more books onHip-Hop, chess and martial arts..... and I've written a little on the next one already. But more than anything I just wanted to thank God, Marshon King, Eazy- E, and my wife for believing in me and giving me a shot at being something when I never thought I could be anything. To come from that emptiness to this fullness is at times very tearworthy. For more on Cornell Hip-Hop Collection visit http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/hiphop/
L to R Evidence, Brother Ali, Adisa Banjoko Rakaa Iriscience backstage at
Greek Theater UC Berkeley
I recently got interviewed by Mimi Chan for the Culture Chat Podcast. I met her through one of my friends from the martial arts world Gene Ching. This was a great interview. Not because of me, but because of her. I hope you like it. We talked a lot about education and working with the youth. LISTEN HERE: https://www.culturechatpodcast.com/hiphopchess/
From the first season of The Get Down, many were struck by the references to the martial arts. One second we are watching the dance battle skills of Shaolin Fantastic. The second season, we are listening to Grandmaster Flash tell his disciples to do “zazen” (meditation). Flash calls his key disciple Shaolin Fantastic Grasshopper.
For many people this seems confusing. In truth the martial arts explosion of the 1970’s comes at the beginning of Hip-Hop. The ripple effect can still be felt today.
Even before The Get Down, we saw kung-fu elements heavy in The Boondocks. Before that we heard homages to martial artists as far back as the 1980’s with T-La Rock (start it at 20 seconds in). If you remember the 1990’s, DJ’s like Mixmaster Mike with Terrorwrist (Beneath the Under) rappers like Jeru The Damaja Ya Playin; Yaself , Afu-Ra’s Mortal Kombat ,and RZA’s Tragedy cemented the martial arts path to the global community of Hip-Hop.
The short version is Hip-Hop was getting its baby legs in the early 1970’s. According to Grandmaster Flash it is even earlier than that. Rather than get bogged down in the “When did Hip-Hop start” debate we need to look at two other global events that changed New York and the world forever.These things unintentionally infected one another on the streets of New York. In the global explosion of this global subculture, the warrior spirit of Hip-Hop was born in Shaolin. But how?
The first is the release of Enter the Dragon in New York August of 1973. The other is the rise of DJ Kool Herc’s parties. As the spirit of competition began to grow within Hip-Hop, battle strategies began to be implemented. With Hip-Hop in its embryonic stage, the kung-fu films gave Hip-Hop the blueprint for war and peace.
The same parks that hosted the battles at night, had people doing tai chi during the day. The same street corners where people went head-to-head in chess also hosted rap ciphers and bboy battles. Some might argue the streets of New York have always been a war zone.
Additionally, it is important to note that because of the intensity of gang culture that permeated NYC streets, knowledge of martial arts (and military strategy) was consistently sought after. Also keep in mind that this surge of gang culture happened during the Vietnam War. Some people who were deep in street culture like the street legend 50 Cent (not the rapper) went into the military to avoid doing jail time. This not only gave them time to get away from the street life, it made them official as warriors.
Many are often blown away and confused about how Black America and the Hip-Hop community became so fascinated with Kung Fu films by Bruce Lee and The Shaw Brothers. The simple answer is that Black men had their warrior spirit and traditions taken from them during the transatlantic slave trade. Their spirits were broken further through the implementation of Jim Crow and the wave of White violence across the country during the Civil Rights Era. Bruce Lee films gave Black men a new path to engaging and actualizing the warrior traditions that had been centuries removed by their sojourn in America.
Bruce Lee vs. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in Game of Death
In this scene from Bruce Lee’s Fist of Fury, Bruce is not allowed in a park due to his race. They only allow dogs in. A Japanese guy tells him if he crawls on all fours, he can go in the park. Bruce not only beats up the guy, but breaks the sign (symbolically shattering the system). These movies inspired more than just the fighting spirit of the martial arts. It also taught Blacks and Whites about the power of nonviolence, meditation and was a key entry point for African-American’s to learn about the benefits of vegan diets.
In the 1980’s the VHS tape explosion created a second wave for Black America to not only soak in the films, but watch them over and over again. Now, with Hip-Hop having some legs, the warrior culture became even more embedded. However, it was happening with the DJ’s and the Bboys. Not with the rappers. In fact, the rappers are the last people in Hip-Hop to take on these ideas. In the book Foundation: B-Boys B-Girls and and Hip-Hop Culture in New York he speaks with dancers like Alien Ness who talk extensively about how Bruce Lee specifically and martial arts culture in general impacted the psychology of battle for dancers.
In The Get Down often when Shaolin Fantastic dances there are often punching, kicking and battle screams playing. This to me illustrates the conviction and intent to represent, defend and embody the essence of Hip-Hop itself in battle.
In the 1990’s (with 20 years under Hip-Hop’s belt) everything starts to unfold pretty fast. It is during this time we see DJ’s (especially on the west coast) taking in these ideas of having an unflinching work ethic, being original over all else and having confidence in battle. A series of independent records put out by Ace Beat and Dirt Style Records launched a series of Battle Breaks. These records were made by DJ Qbert, Mixmaster Mike, DJ Apollo, DJ Yogafrog and others. Rather than carry crates to battles these records had a few banging beats and a mountain of scratches to rock with for battles. This was like putting 20 records into one record. It changed the game. On almost every battle record there would be clips from kung-fu films. Not long after that we see the artists like Jeru, Afu-Ra and others bring these Eastern elements into their lyrics.
The 1990’s also gave rise to The Wu Tang Clan. The only group to ever perfect the fusion of martial arts, chess and Hip-Hop to date is Wu Tang. That can never be understated. Most of their strategies in business and their approach to artistic dominance came from RZA who was deeply affected not just by the films, but their true philosophical essence.
Today African Americans are moving rapidly toward a vegan lifestyle. Additionally we see growing numbers of African American Buddhist’s. It is hard to imagine these trends without kung fu films as an entry point.
DJ Mixmaster Mike’s original logo was a recreation of Bruce Lee’s Jeet Kune Do logo
Arguably one of the best recent examples of Kung Fu in rap is Zion I’s Shadow Boxing video. Zumbi of Zion I practices Qigong. It is important to note some of the rappers who train in various martial arts include RZA from Wu-Tang Clan, Rakaa from Dilated Peoples, Tajai of Souls of Mischief, DJ Rhettmatic, J-Live and many others. Not all of them practice kung fu mind you. Some practice Japanese or Brazilian jiu-jitsu, some box, or do other styles. One of my personal favorite videos ever done with kung fu is Aesop Rock’s ZZZ Top featuring an woman who is an elderly Tai Chi master going toe to toe with Zumbi from Zion I. It is important to note that Kung Fu films are the only films on earth where a woman fighting is not only seen as something “unladylike”. In fact they show that a woman’s beauty and power can often best be expressed in martial arts. It is hard to imagine that the women’s UFC champions of today were not influenced in part to these films.
Today rappers like Ka’s Honor Killed The Samurai are a great example of how the warrior tradition in Hip-Hop is still alive. Additionally, Oakand’s DB Tha General calls himself Sun Tzu (the author of the Art of War).
Right now as the world is soaking up Kendrick Lamar’s album, we see his new alias Kung Fu Kenny hit the scene.
Today, in the world where youtube beats have given open channels to people the rap music industry ignores, you can find many gems. One of the real things you can see out there is that there is a whole theme of music inspired by classic samurai and Chinese warrior culture.
Now with these elements solidified in The Get Down, we can only imagine what new forms, styles, and lyrical warfare will be unleashed in the future of Hip-Hop.
At Coachella, Lamar started his set by unveiling a short film titled The Damn Legend of Kung Fu Kenny that was modeled after the kung fu films of the 1970s. Similar imagery, including the phrase "Kung Fu Kenny" spelled out in Chinese characters, appeared in the "DNA" video. The moniker itself seems to be inspired by Don Cheadle's character in Rush Hour, who goes by Kenny:
HHCF Teamed up with philanthropic jiu-jitsu brand Deus Fight for a new line of gi's. The Oakland gi, is made in the warrior tradition of the Raiders as well as a reminder that Public Enemy's It Takes A Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back had a Silver and Black side to the Album....Proceeds from the sales of the gi will benefit the HHCF Chess and Jiu-Jitsu Initiative. Get one today at www.deusfight.com Special thanks to BJJ Legends Magazine for connecting our orgs for the greater good of our children. When we say our children, we mean all children. PEACE!
Shi-Yan Ming told me, “When people dance and listen to Hip-Hop, they are happy. This is also meditation. RZA, when he writes songs, uses philosophy to help people. He is giving people meditation.”READ THE FULL STORY HERE!