No one man invented hip-hop dance as at is nowadays. It's a child of breaking, locking and popping. This article is going to look into its activity from a battling device in the South Bronx to a mainstream Craft anatomy.
Birth of the B-Boy
The "b-boy"--a duration coined by DJ Kool Herc--is short for "rent boy," one who embodies all four elements of hip-hop culture: DJing, freestyling, graffiti and dancing. This is the commencement of what we understand as "hip-hop dance."
Breaking
Breaking arose in the late 1970s from the provocation of a rival crew--a group of b-boys--calling out another. As the DJ spun the track, introducing a breakdown in a song, one crew would interpret those "breakbeats," challenging another. The winner was whichever crew could outperform the other. Bragging rights, along with dominion over the dance floor, were paramount.
Popping was introduced by the Electric Boogaloos in the 1970s on the syndicated R&B music and dance show "Soul Train." It's a way the dancer interacts with the beats--the dancer's body seems to "pop."