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This article is or was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Arista.w. Peer reviewers: Jem8953, Chh8414, Lilyb283.
Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 15:29, 16 January 2022 (UTC)
Surely Bobby McFerrin must be credited for his contributions and publicity of the artform very early on - in the late 1980's. The following text is from the Wikipedia article on Bobby McFerrin: He is known ... for his ability to use his voice to create sound effects and in vocal percussion, like his recreation of a bass and drums simultaneously, which he achieves by singing while tapping on his chest. Ackerjerr (talk) 21:01, 15 February 2008 (UTC)
which many consider the fifth element - what does this mean? RickK 21:24, Sep 5, 2004 (UTC)
The fith element of hiphop... beatboxing which comes after graffiti spraying, DJing, MCing, and breakdancing. ~ bbglas007 14:58, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
What exactly is a "dildo cannon"? Is it dayna? A sara clollice? A cannon that shoots dildos? you will never know, it could be all of the above for I know of. — mjb 18:49, 4 May 2005 (UTC)
beat box noun Also written beat-box or beatbox (Music) (Youth Culture) In colloquial use among musicians, a drum machine (an electronic device for producing a variety of drum-beats and percussion sounds as backing for music or rapping: see rap); hence a style of music with a throbbing electronic drum-beat which often also accompanies interludes of rapping. Also, another name for a ghetto blaster. Etymology: Formed by compounding: a box which produces the beat. History and Usage: The beat box, which is essentially a percussion synthesizer, became a popular alternative to the conventional drum kit during the early eighties, when synthesized sounds in general opened up new possibilities for many bands. It was really the increased popularity of rap and its spread outside the Black music scene that led to the development of a distinct style of music called beat box by the mid eighties. A beat box is an expensive piece of equipment, so it is perhaps not surprising that some youngsters tried to imitate the sound without actually using a beat box; this led to the development of a new action noun beatboxing, the activity of making percussion noises like those of a beat box using only one's mouth and body. How do you compare an album like that to...the sparse beat-box music and intensely engaging call-and-response served up by today's leading rap group, Run-D.M.C.? New York Times 9 Jan. 1985, section C, p. 14 Booming out of beat boxes on the street and bounced to in aerobics classes, the 'Big' beat sounds like the next equal-play anthem for American women. Washington Post 19 Mar. 1985, section C, p. 1 They usurp rap and beatbox, scratching their own frequently wild guitar marks on top. Q Mar. 1989, p. 72
Daniel Digby is one of the most famous beatboxers alive today. --Ethethlay 08:19, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
Is this traditional notation diagram at the top of the article really nescessary? It looks awkward and silly and isn't very meaningful; it would also give an unaquainted person the idea that beatboxing is just pronounciation of "boom boom chick" in english, rather than reproducing sounds. I have removed it and edited the definition.
I also don't think SBN is important enough to warrant such a major inclusion right at the top of the article; beat boxing notation is not widely accepted. I have moved this reference to the "Internet Presence" section of the article and removed the link to a specific forum page, which requires registration to view. It should be noted that this whole section stinks of advertisement for humanbeatbox.com and should probably be replaced. --Kineticturtle 07:19, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
Is it possible to represent the production of sounds using the phonetic sciences or by IPA? I'm just intrigued, since this is a phonetic curiosity. John Riemann Soong 07:00, 4 February 2007 (UTC)
What is the source for this information? On Humanbeatbox.com the origins of beatboxing are seen in more African culture, from Jazz music to barbershop quartets. See http://www.humanbeatbox.com/The_History_of_Beatboxing/p2_articleid/27 for more info. 165.123.174.163 09:22, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
It looked to me like "kennybeats" almost certainly contributed all this information himself, and a google search for his name returns four hits, which are all either unrelated or also contributed by kenny himself, so I removed the Vancouver section. Dr-ring-ding 17:36, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
== HAHA == (I use bot proxies btw) Quality Standards??? ROFL, this article is better quality than most crap articles on this pathetic excuse for an online ecyclopedia. LOL. It amazes me how you lot devote so much of your time for **nothing** to this tripe whilst simultaneously making a few people who own the damn thing very rich indeed. But hey, if wasting your time so that some ungrateful fat cats can buy theirselves a Bentley turns you on, then go right ahead. I've read some of your own articles, and frankly, your idea of "Quality" is not exactly what I'd call it. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 86.21.5.190 (talk) 20:04, 2 April 2007 (UTC).
Actually, Wikipedia doesn't really make much money at all. See any advertising?
When a beatboxer is a redlink and there are no links provided, it is difficult to verify whether or not they are an important, notable, or influential part of beatboxing. What are the thoughts on removing redlinks without sources? My feeling is that there are enough demonstrably notable beatboxers that it wouldn't hurt the article to remove all redlinks without sources. janejellyroll 06:21, 18 April 2007 (UTC)
I am wondering if Auntie Grizelda by the Monkees could be considered one of the first examples of beatboxing in pop culture. Check it out! It is silly but it also fits your definition. Further, if the wiki article is correct, Peter Tork did it spur of the moment: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Your_Auntie_Grizelda Whereas this is not representative of beatboxing in hiphop culture, the Monkees were on every television and were hugely popular in 1967 when Auntie Grizelda was released. Perhaps it is the first example on Television? Thanks for your consideration. [User:Tracykane] — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tracykane (talk • contribs) 09:48, 3 January 2020 (UTC)
Personally im a beatboxer and i find these articles full of biased and self-praise many of the "beatboxer mention" are not even well known]
I think you are right. Turns out that I was the very first person to create this entry on Wikipedia. This was before Wikipdeia had reached a critical mass and I wasn't versed in the encyclopedic style and protocol at the time. I just entered in beatboxing from my perspective, which is all a writer can do really. It has been through the global community's continuous edits and their clashing that will hopefully bring the biggest perspective to the table. Thanks.
and yes beatbox was a loop machine
thus the word human beatbox human replicating beatbox machine
and the earliest replication of beat was based on the roland 808 machine
^---You've deleted notable beatboxers that you may not have heard of, but many in the United States have.It is interesting how you particularly delete my contributions when yours are done amatuerishly. Mine were taken from credible online sources, yet yours come from your own opinion and poor excuse for writing. In fact you're making up beatbox terms. If you're going to contribute, do so credibly. Angelicmusic 23:55, 27 May 2007 (UTC)
Please explain the term"making up beatbox term" and please understand your fact before making biased view
Notable they may seen to you , in comparision to the beatbox scene as a whole they play little or no part in the revolution of beatboxing and the history of it
and if your so sure of your "trustworthy" source please reference them to moi
Thanks
Worthy of a mention for bring the artform to a mass audience. Benjiboi 07:05, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
Very recently, every single piece of information about UK beatboxers was edited out of this page. I attempted to put some of this back in and it got removed again.
Does somebody have something against the UK or was there something wrong with how it was written? Human beatboxing has a massive following in the uk and the biggest beatboxing website in the world is UK based so it deserves to be in this article. If it was removed due to the way it was layed out then please say so we can sort out the layout and wording of it :-)
--BOZE-- (humanbeatbox.com)19:38 11th Sept 07
So is nobody big enough to own up to it?
Shameful. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.26.172.162 (talk) 14:18, 31 October 2007 (UTC)
I don't know how to update the main page, but here is some information about female beatboxing:
In the summer of 2007, a 20 year old female from Davis, California was featured as a finalist on NBC's prime time show "America's Got Talent." This largely caucasian community is at last proving it is capable of producing multi-genre talent. Here is the link to her show, although she came in second, she is someone who will likely influence the music world in the future.
http://www.nbc.com/Americas_Got_Talent/episodes/season2/205/americas_got_talent_205_03.shtml
Pandora62 05:59, 11 October 2007 (UTC)
"removed image as per WP:PROVEIT without a verifiable source for this it looks like a possible WP:HOAX"
While the burden of evidence may lie on me you actually have to challenge the material. What's wrong with it? Hyacinth (talk) 03:13, 10 August 2008 (UTC)
Non notable source reads:
"Boom chick, boom boom chick” is the pervasive backdrop of beatbox, a completely unplugged genre involving no machines, keyboards or computers. The only instrument is the human body: mouth, throat and chest, imitating the sounds of drumbox and turntables to the extent that you’re hard put to distinguish it from the real thing.
This is not attributed to any author; the website is in actual fact a mini guide to the city of Barcelona.Despite this the editor presents the following information as fact:
The simplest and most stereotyped beatboxing pattern, imitating the bass and snare drums, in drum set notation.However, this pattern may be unrecognizable in more elaborate and skilled beatboxing.
This is beyond WP:SYN it's fiction in its current state. Please find a verifibale source for this claim. Semitransgenic (talk) 12:25, 10 August 2008 (UTC)
What is a typical beatbox pattern? Hyacinth (talk) 19:29, 10 August 2008 (UTC)
Ladies and gentleman, let us not get worked up over something so trivial!
As a beatboxer myself I can assure you that the stereotypical pattern is, in fact, b t p t b t p t (b = bass drum, t = hi hat, p = snare).
Regarding the image, even though I understand Wikipedia about as much as I understand women, it's clearly POV since it's saying it's the simplest pattern which is not necessarily true.
All in all, don't get upset - take a leaf from Bobby McFerrin, "don't worry be happy"! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.148.122.54 (talk) 10:38, 29 August 2008 (UTC)
I'm removing these two sentences from the intro:
Therefore it could be said to be a genre of a cappella music although it can be employed alongside other instruments. It may have some historical connections with other vocal traditions such as scat singing and puirt a beul.
Sure seems like OR, not to mention weasel-y. "could be said?" "may have?" If it has been said to be an a cappella genre, then we need a source. If it does have those historical connections, then they have been documented somewhere. These are interesting assertions, but at the moment they're OR. Please feel free to put them back in (minus the weasel words) if such sources can be found. SixFourThree (talk) 15:58, 12 November 2008 (UTC)SixFourThree
http://www.songfacts.com/detail.lasso?id=2074
Ok, so at the risk of being assailed, I'm going to venture a perspective that at present, this article is a mess. This isn't meant to disparage any of the contributors, who have altruistically committed their time to helping spread the word about this artform. But there's a reason beatbox is commonly referred to within hip-hop as the lost 5th element (the 4 elements of hip hop: graf writing, b-boying, mc-ing & dj-ing). It has to a certain extent, remained an underground artform, and while it is present within the mainstream culture, there is a dearth of documentation. That having been said, there are some serious historians of beatbox: Kid Lucky in New York, Tyte in the UK, Bee-Low in Germany, Each in San Francisco. These are people with an encyclopediac knowledge of styles, techniques, artistic chronology and genealogy etc. As it stands, I suspect most of them would agree that the page as written simply is not particulary *accurate*.
In the interests of transparancy and citation verifiability, I'm writing this from the perspective of being an organizer for Vowel Movement, San Francisco's oldest and original beatboxing crew. I don't know whether that makes me more suspect or less. But for what it's worth, my main agenda is promoting the artform, and the artists who produce it. If I can, I'll take a closer look soon, and see if i can make some suggestions/edits. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Widowsill (talk • contribs) 11:52, 17 January 2009 (UTC)
Pink Floyd did it in the 1960s http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uTfDUyUkVYE —Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.253.167.142 (talk) 15:49, 23 October 2009 (UTC)
The section "modern beatboxing" consists mainly of a list of beatboxing competitions and their winners. Although I can understand the relevance of these facts, think they would fit more appropriately into a new article of their own or at least a section of their own. zwhen confronted with the title "modern beatboxing", the noemal reader probably expects a section on the characteristics and perhaps the development of beatboxing as an art rather than a list of performers and where they were. Sadly, don't know enough about the topic to take such a project; anybody else? Erget2005 (talk) 16:39, 26 November 2010 (UTC)
The section "modern beatboxing" consists mainly of a list of beatboxing competitions and their winners. Although I can understand the relevance of these facts, think they would fit more appropriately into a new article of their own or at least a section of their own. zwhen confronted with the title "modern beatboxing", the noemal reader probably expects a section on the characteristics and perhaps the development of beatboxing as an art rather than a list of performers and where they were. Sadly, don't know enough about the topic to take such a project; anybody else? Erget2005 (talk) 16:41, 26 November 2010 (UTC)
Somebody added something about Brazil, which I think definitely lacks sources. What should be done? I would revert the edit as it seems not to fit with the remaining of the article, but the content seems real (though not backed up).
What should be done? #!/bin/DokReggar -talk
08:36, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
Why do people think Doug E. Fresh solely invented Beatboxing? I do accept that he was the one that popularized it however. I guess it's because he self proclaimed it and that's as far as the mainstreem media can see. Now-a-days since television and media came along we rely too much on media to tell us about our history but a lot of things especially the further back you go were not televised or captured in media form especially in early hip hop history because it was so despised by mainstream media, whites and older blacks at that time due to it's novelty and controversial lyrics. I myself grew up during the start of the hip hop era and I know for a fact that hip hop style Beatboxing was being done years before Fresh. I was a teenager at that time and I can assure you that Fresh who is extremely talented (and I love D. Fresh) and became popular for it did not invent it, it was being done in the streets years before that. Most likely it was some now obscure teenager that created the hip hop version of Beatboxing. Also Micheal Winslow also known as the "Human Sounds Effects Machine" probably contributed, influenced and possibly invented it unintentionally because of the fact that many of the hip hop generation including myself grew up watching him do sound effects which included electronic music beat machines. Whatever the truth I do know that the at least contributed do it's popularity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Winslow
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wga1nLKVlRs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0PuIsK2ySk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0PuIsK2ySk
I think people have forgotten how many different things became incorporated into hip hop and also they think Micheal Winslow is imitating hip hop beatboxers but it's more chronologically logical that hip hop beat boxers are imitating him. I don't think people associate him with Beatboxing because he's a comedian and an actor and not a rapper. But most of rap comes from people in entertainment that rappers grew up watching and listening to, looked up to and incorporated into their music. I and Pioneer rappers grew up in the "T.V." generation when television was fast becoming the primary babysitter of a whole generation of children, especially in the urban inner city. So what we and rappers of that time saw on television had a big influence on hip hop. This I know for a fact because I lived that piece of history and if you listen you can hear it in the music which often make references to things seen on T.V. This is common place now but it was not so common place then. Also not so well know is that Beatboxing was an inner city artform born of necessity because if you're a young African American inner city youth and you can't afford expensive musical equipment, what do you do? You create one, with your own body. I strongly disagree with the part of the article that says that Beatboxing comes from African Amercian "AND" European music traditions. When African American artforms are new and novel the were shunned and despised yet when it becomes lucrative, popular and accepted caucasions attempt to inject themselves into is origins. This is something that should not be forgotten because the fact that it was despised is part of the history it's birth and of it's success. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jparham3 (talk • contribs) 00:44, 15 September 2012 (UTC)
It would be incorrect to leave out the performers, Jimmy Riddle and Jackie Phelps, from the “Hee-Haw" television program. They performed a routine called Effen and Hambone". In it one of the guys made monosyllabic noises and mashed his hands together to squeeze out air as his partner slapped a thigh and his chest to provide a backbeat. This is clearly one originator of the sound. - KitchM (talk) 22:10, 19 June 2013 (UTC)
Removed "This album" passage as incoherent. The list of performers might be useful, though. Noahbirnel (talk) 16:15, 20 June 2014 (UTC)
"The rapping technique" seems unclear to me, but I am uncertain how to rephrase this. Noahbirnel (talk) 16:17, 20 June 2014 (UTC)
This short list seems a mess to me. A siren can be generated electronically, but is originally (and often still) a mechanical noise generator. Dubstep wobble bass is a technique of electronic synthesizers. Synthesizer is such a broad term that I find it hard to believe any beatboxer could claim to imitate 'synthesizers' in general.
Perhaps it could be retitled 'Miscellaneous', and Synthesizer removed?
- Noahbirnel (talk) 16:31, 20 June 2014 (UTC)
I just noticed the recent edits of User:Jaron_Felix_Patton on the beatboxing article. I feel they do not bring much to the article with this form. Anybody has an idea to improve this and source claims? I feel the content might be better stored in the talk page for the moment. #!/bin/DokReggar -talk
07:37, 20 January 2016 (UTC)
#!/bin/DokReggar -talk
08:15, 20 January 2016 (UTC)#!/bin/DokReggar -talk
07:25, 21 January 2016Hey Jaron here, Advertisement isn't my intentions with adding labeled terms It's simply providing information on actual beatbox styles and techniques. These terms that i've put are something that are actually acknowledged as styles and techniques in beatboxing, and i what i'm doing is just putting them on here so that readers who are curious about beatboxing can be informed about them. If you feel that they need to be removed i understand. Thank you for going over these edit's with me and i'll remember to what you've told me.
@ScrapIronIV:hello, I noticed you just removed a whole lot of content from the article, because it was not sourced. I understand your point of view, but did you consider putting request for references instead? You removed a lot of content that was edited since a few months, and that contain valid information, albeit unsourced. Opinion? #!/bin/DokReggar -talk
13:24, 11 July 2017 (UTC)
As to the history of beat boxing: It was popular in Ska and Early Reggae. Prince Buster did it as early as 1965: [1] .Probably Paul McCartney (who is mentioned in the article) got it from that tradition. Maybe somebody feels like adding that piece of information. 95.88.148.3 (talk) 09:40, 1 August 2020 (UTC)