109. Beatmasters featuring The Cookie Crew - Rok Da House (Rhythm King) 0 ▲ everybody's number one to someone 8 hours ago · 9 min read1897 words · Life · hide · 0 comments One week at number one on 30th January 1988Casual dismissers of eighties music usually refer to the over-produced “sameyness” of the era. I’ve always been a little bit gobsmacked by that assertion – yes, the MOR and AOR aspects of the decade’s middle period occasionally suffered from a weird, suffocating and dispassionate smoothness, and there was a tendency to either overlook or airbrush guitar sounds in the mainstream, but that was never “it”. Innovation was everywhere. “Rok Da House”, for example, is something which was didn't completely take off on its first release for its crossing of two genre streams. In 1987, House Music and Hip-Hop were two different beasts, seldom seen in the same habitats – in some cities they may have attracted similar audiences, but people usually did not rap over a House beat, anymore than they would a Hi-NRG rhythm. House was party music, Hip-Hop was its own, usually more intense area.“Rok Da House” is widely considered to be the first example of a disc… No comments yet. Log in to reply on the Fediverse. Comments will appear here.