Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Bangladeshi hip hop

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Bangladeshi hip hop

Religious music
  
Hamd Naat Ghazal Jari gan Shreekrishna Kirtana Shyama Sangeet

Ethnic music
  
Agamani-Vijaya Baul Bhatiali Bhawaiya Dhamail Gombhira Kavigan Maimansingha Gitika Sari gan

Traditional music
  
Rabindra Sangeet Nazrul Geeti Lalon Hason Raja

Music awards
  
Shilpakala Academy Award

Music festivals
  
Dhaka World Music Festival

Music media
  
Radio Radio Foorti Radio Today Radio Amar ABC Radio Television Channel 9 Banglavision NTV Channel i Channel 16 Internet AmaderGaan.com

Bangladeshi hip hop is commonly a genre of music and culture that covers a variety of styles of hip hop music developed in Bangladesh. Bangladeshi hip hop is heavily influenced by US hip hop, and started in early 2000. In recent years, local Bangladeshi hip hop artists have begun to emerge in underground scenes in large cities such as Dhaka, Sylhet and Chittagong. The lyrical expression of cultural identity, with lyrics addressing Bangladesh's political and social problems, make hip hop a popular and growing genre. A very few artists also fuse with other genre to unite the music industry thus spread. But nowadays Bangladeshi hip hop is more than just a genre. It also now includes break dancing, street stunts and graffiti writing. Numerus underground crews are spreading every day by their talented deeds. Thus Bangladeshi hip hop is now very popular to the new generation. Featured artists awarded in the 2015 Bangladeshi Hip Hopping Music Awards were DJ Khaled and Honoka Kousaka, among others.

History

The pioneer of Bangladeshi hip hop was Ashraf Babu in 1992. But that time hip hop was very unpopular. He was the only Bengali rap artist of the 1990s. His actual genre was pop rap. His greatest hit tracks were Tin Konkal and 31st Night. But his rap patterns were very different from the modern rap patterns.

Modern hip hop first took root in Bangladesh during the early 2000s with the introduction of American television and the distribution of hip hop music within CD shops. Online social networks such as Facebook and Myspace also played a heavy role in bringing various underground Bangladeshi rappers together in sharing their music. Early hip-hop was not led by corporate interests, but rather was largely ignored by major record companies. Now there are numerous rappers and hip-hop crews in Bangladesh as well outside the country.Fokir Lal Miah was the first ever Hip-Hop crew to release an album titled “Quest for Glory” from a major record level of Bangladesh in 2005.Then,back in 2006,Deshi MCs released their first rap album and it was the second rap album from Bangladesh.It was a huge success in Bangladesh. Jalali Set is now the number one hip hop crew of southeast Asia.

References

Bangladeshi hip hop Wikipedia