Afrika Islam

Charles Andre Glenn (born 1967 in New York City), professionally known by his stage name Afrika Islam, is an American hip hop DJ and producer.[1] He was one of the pioneers of hip hop culture and the hip hop radio station.

Afrika Islam
Birth nameCharles Andre Glenn
Also known asMr. X
Born1967
The Bronx, New York City, US
Genres
Occupation(s)
Labels
Associated acts

He began his musical career in 1977 as a ten-year-old, joining the group Rock Steady Crew. He started as an apprentice to Afrika Bambaataa,[2] from whom he learned the art of remixing tracks. He was responsible for the events that the Zulu Nation held during the 1970s. A few years later, he moved to Los Angeles where he began working with Ice-T, for whom he produced four gold albums, all of which were released on Sire Records.[2] He went on to remix artists including Michael Jackson and New Order.[2]

Afrika Islam is also known for compositions that he wrote for the Soul Sonic Force and his own group called Funk Machine. For two years he hosted the radio program Zulu Beats. In his career as a DJ, he was famous for the art of mixing on four turntables simultaneously.[2] He worked as a DJ and MC for the Rock Steady Crew.

In 1997 he released the EP Afrika Jam, which AllMusic rated 3/5.[3]

In Europe, he is known for his performances in duet with Westbam during big techno festivals such as Mayday and Soundtropolis. He also recorded a song from the Polish duo of DJ State Kalwi & Remi.

Notable production discography

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gollark: It's not, because your code needs to have an ugly mess of inits and requires at the top.
gollark: r/w/h/whatever other stupidly named stuff should just be required, as needed, by k.lua.
gollark: I still think that you should just be able to require k.lua and have it require the rest itself like a sensible dependency-using thing.
gollark: Within minutes of the first full-spectrum monitoring and rebroadcasting coming online, it was ruined by spam.

References

  1. Poschardt, Ulf (2002). DJ culture. Paris: Editions Kargo. p. 152.
  2. Kurutz, Steve. "Africa Islam". Allmusic. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  3. "Afrika Jam". AllMusic. Retrieved 3 December 2013.

"Afrika Islam". Discogs.

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