in ,

Video Music Box was the first Hip-Hop music video TV show

Share

In June of 1983, Video Box launched on WNYC-TV in City and became the first music video TV show. The show aired the freshest hip-hop music videos to the people of New York City. Video Music Box was created by “Uncle” , an engineer at WNYC-TV and Lionel “” Martin. The show started five years before Yo! MTV Raps and ran on WNYC-TV (channel 31) until 1996, when the TV program moved to WNYE-TV (channel 25) after WNYC-TV was sold by the City of New York. The show’s theme song is “Five Minutes of Funk” by Whodini.

Ralph McDaniels and his partner Lionel “Vid Kid” Martin also directed music videos under their company Classic Concepts Video Productions, the first -owned music video production company. They directed Nas’ music video for “It Ain’t Hard To Tell,” ‘s music video for “C.R.E.A.M.,” Black Moon’s music video for “Who Got The Props,” Supa Cat’s music video for “Ghetto Red Hot” and many more.

Music video director Hype Williams got his start at Classic Concepts Video Productions. The show helped break the careers of Whodini, , Jay-ZWu-Tang Clan, Nas, , LL Cool J, The Notorious B.I.G., and many more.

Purchase our 100 Hip-Hop Facts (1973-2000) Book

Read: “Graffiti Rock” was the first hip-hop TV show

Read: Although Blondie’s “Rapture” was the first music video with a rap aired on MTV, Run-D.M.C.’s “Rock Box” was the first hip-hop music video by a rap group aired on MTV

JT Is Free

JT of City Girls Released From Prison, Announces New Music

The New York City Rap Tour was the first international hip-hop tour

The New York City Rap Tour was the first international Hip-Hop tour