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MC Lyte, Chuck D, Collaborate With Smithsonian on Hip-Hop Compilation

MC Lyte, Chuck D are among celebrities teaming with Smithsonian for Hip-Hop and Rap anthology with over 120 tracks funded by Kickstarter.
Image: American hip-hop/rap trio from New York City, Salt-N-Pepa.
New York hip-hop/rap trio Salt-N-Pepa.Courtesy Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture

Music legends MC Lyte, Chuck D and Questlove of The Roots are among celebrities who’ve teamed with the Smithsonian on a forthcoming rap and hip-hop anthology that’s being touted as a “powerful cultural statement” about the community’s influence on American and global culture.

A $250,000 crowdfunding campaign is underway on Kickstarter to raise money for the "Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap," which will celebrate hip-hop, a distinctly African-American music and art form that began in the 1970s in the Bronx.

The compilation will include nine CDs, more than 120 tracks and a 300-page book with extensive liner notes and essays by various artists, produced and released by Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. The project will also feature never-before-published photos culled from the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture's vast collection.

The Smithsonian anthology is being produced and released by Smithsonian Folkways Recordings, helmed by director/curator, Huib Schippers; he's coordinating the project with Dwandalyn Reece, the museum’s music curator. Besides Chuck D, MC Lyte, and Questlove, the museum's anthology committee also includes 9th Wonder, music industry veterans, scholars, and authors.

Image: Part of the Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap
Part of the Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap.Courtesy Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture

“[The campaign] is one of the most important projects on contemporary history that the Smithsonian will ever undertake,” said museum director Lonnie G. Bunch III, in a statement. “Hip-hop helps us to understand the power of black music and the impact of African American culture on the world.”

The anthology is being billed as the first collection to include music from every major label and dozens of independent label recordings. It will explore issues and themes in rap history, while providing a window into hip-hop’s impact on the music and cultural traditions of the African diaspora.

“The story of hip-hop is one of great triumph and evolution,” said Chuck D of the iconic rap group Public Enemy in a statement. “And it represents the very best of black music tradition.”

MC Lyte, legendary lyricist and DJ, spoke exclusively to NBC News by phone from Los Angeles and said she's "honored" to serve on the committee developing the anthology.

Image: MC Lyte
MC LyteD' Andre Michael

“I think a project like this is really important because it sort of encapsulates a time period for a genre of music as well as a culture that has taken off in such a huge way,” said MC Lyte. “The speed at which hip-hop has moved can somewhat lead up to a place where we can forget the roots. And so a project like this helps us stay in tune with the truth and with the history of hip hop.”

The Brooklyn native was 17-years-old when her rap album "Lyte As A Rock" debuted in the late '80s. She is the first female rapper to ever receive a gold single, and her 1993 classic anthem, “Ruffneck,” was nominated for a Grammy for Best Rap Single.

Now in her forties and a newlywed, she juggles her entertainment career with community advocacy and philanthropy. Her nonprofit, Hip Hop Sisters Foundation, has awarded annual college scholarships to African American youth, most attending HBCUs.

“My first song was about the crack epidemic in New York,” she said. “It’s important to have some sort of message or a takeaway, just a message that inspires someone to make a move or to stand up for themselves. [My] new music is of the same sentiment, it's me wanting to connect with the people.”

MC Lyte’s personal mementos are now part of the museum’s collection. “I gave them a journal that had rhymes and poetry in it,” she said. “Since [early on] I've given additional artifacts. Earrings and all types of things.”

The campaign will run through Nov. 15 and has raised close to $195,000 as of Friday. Donors will have a chance to get the anthology before it arrives in stores, and at a reduced cost.

Donors can receive rewards through the Kickstarter campaign, including a set of hip-hop trading cards to a tour of the National Museum of African American History and Culture led by a curator and Questlove. One can also receive a one-of-a-kind pair of Adidas hand-painted by Cey Adams, a renowned visual artist and founding creative director of Def Jam who designed the anthology.

The anthology is expected to be released December 2018.

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