Nepalese hip hop

NepHop, is the Nepalese form of hip hop. Its major elements include alternative hip hop, avant-grade hip hop, breakbeat, free styling and DJing. Rap culture was introduced in Nepal through the electronic DJs mixing the classical Nepalese songs with the Western urban style in the early eighties. Later, it took the form of artists releasing songs with the commercial beats since the 1990s.

Music of Nepal
General topics
Genres
Specific forms
Media and performance
Music festivalsGoon lā
Music media
Nationalistic and patriotic songs
National anthem"Sayaun Thunga Phulka"

History

Popularity growth (early 2000s)

The first Nepali rap song is considered to be "Batti Balera" by the comedian Ratan Subedi, released in 1995.

In 2000, Girish Khatiwada and Pranil Timilsina started the rap culture. In 2000 Rappaz Union (Sammy Samrat and Nirnaya Shrestha created the first Nepalese rap album in English. In 2002, GP (Girish Khatiwada and Pranil L Timalsena) released the album Back Again. The song "Ma Yesto Chhu Ma testo Chhu" featuring DA69[1] was the first rap song to attract broad Nepalese audiences to rap music. Another song on the album is "Timi Jaha Pani Jaanchhau".[2]

In 2003, Nurbu Sherpa released his debut album Nurbu Sherpa Representin' K.T.M.C. ("K.T.M.C." meaning Kathmandu Metropolitan City). This was the first Nepalese hip hop album recorded in the United States, for which he was nominated for the Best Music Video Award. In 2004, The Unity {Aidray and DA69(Sudin Pokhrel)} brought out their first album Girish & The Unity presents X with Girish Khatiwada (Gorkhali G.) It included "She's the Bomb", the music video for which became a major success in the local charts.[3] Other songs on this album were "Malai Vote Deu", a satire to politics, "Da Drug Song", and "Anything" feat. Abhaya Subba and the Steam Injuns.

NEPHOP: Rise of the underground (2003 - 2008)

In 2003, underground rapper Aroz, based in New York City, and DJ AJ, based in Toronto, spearheaded the first Nepalese underground hip hop movement through their now-defunct website nephop.org and thus gave birth to a new Nepalese music genre called Nephop. The movement soon gained worldwide popularity and "Nephop" accepted as a portmanteau of "Nepalese hip hop". The online portal gave a platform to showcase the talents for all the budding rappers spread all across the world among the Nepalese diaspora.

In 2004, Aroz released his first underground single, "Chudaina", produced by DJ AJ. In 2005, Nepsydaz, a rap group, had commercial success with their version of the same song. Aroz gained massive notoriety for his next single "Katti Khep". WAVE magazine declared him "the most controversial"[4] rapper to experiment with dirty rap, a paradigm shift from the traditional conservative cultural norms.[5] This single had great success in the underground circuit because of its extremely explicit content. Aroz quickly capitalize on his success by releasing his next single "Killin' Terraces",[6] which the New Urban Music Blog[7] considered one of the best Nepalese political rap songs.

Aroz received some mainstream exposure after being featured on Nurbu Sherpa's single "Baby Gurl", from Nurbu's second album, Save Nepal. "Baby Gurl"[8] was voted one of the top ten songs of 2008 in Nepal by Fursad.com. Nurbu also featured Aroz and other underground rappers in his next single, "When I'm Around",[9] from his third album.

2012 - present

In 2012 'King of Nephop' "Yama Buddha " debut with his first official Rap song 'Sathi'.

See also

References

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