The HIP HOP School

The HIP HOP School

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from The HIP HOP School, College & University, Agboyi.

The HIP HOP School is a DE-LOCATIONALIZED FACILITY...and particularly..Africa,s 1rst educational facility for YOUTH EMPOWERMENT and the development of HIP HOP KULTURE in THAT CONTINENT...with special emphasis laid on its PIONEER CITY, LAGOS...NIGERIA.

Thank you @jacqconmusic 18/12/2025

The HIP HOP Schools INTERPRETATION OF THIS...WHICH WE HAVE ALWAYS POSTED AND SHARED EVEN ON OUR RADIO PROGRAM, CR5MICS on Rhythm 97.3 fm Lagos Nigeria is:

HIP HOP NEVER DIED. IT JUST WENT BACK TO THE UNDERGROUND WHERE IT CAME FROM AND ALWAYS BELONGED.
And in addition to that; How many of y,all noticed REAL GOLDEN AGE HIP HOP IS FULLY BACK. ITS JUST NOT ON Corporate/ MAINSTREAM MEDIA & PLATFORMS

Thank you @jacqconmusic

11/12/2025

If THERES NO PASSION BEHIND IT. IT AINT TALENT !!

11/12/2025

Vintage and ICONIC THANK YOU FOR LISTENING TO OUR RADIO PROGRAM; The HIP HOP Schools 5MICS ON 93.7 The Rhythm. PEACE ✌🏽✌🏽✌🏽

James Brown didn’t just move America — he moved the world.

Long before hashtags and viral moments, his voice traveled across the Atlantic on bootleg tapes, radio waves, and whispers. African DJs passed his records hand to hand, and young musicians studied his grooves like they were sacred text. To many across the continent, he wasn’t just the Godfather of Soul — he was the sound of a rising Black world.

In 1969, Fela Kuti saw James Brown perform in the United States and watched every step, every horn line, every command Brown gave his band. He carried that fire back home to Nigeria… and Afrobeat was born.
A whole new genre grew from a spark.

But Brown’s influence in Africa ran deeper than one night or one artist. Newly independent nations saw him as a symbol of global Black pride — a reminder that the beat survived every storm our people faced. His songs became the soundtrack of street parties, independence celebrations, and political movements. Musicians from Ghana to South Africa pulled from his rhythm sections to build their own protest music, their own joy, their own identity.

And when James Brown finally visited Africa, the reception felt more like a homecoming than a tour. Crowds greeted him as a returning son — a man whose sound carried the memory of a people who left, survived, and still found their way back through music.

In America he was a superstar.
In Africa, he was a symbol.

The Godfather of Soul.
And in spirit… the Grandfather of Afrobeat.

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Agboyi

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00