
Lyrically, most MCs latched onto the idea of jazz as “cool” ( Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat) being a prime example) and pushed Hip Hop closer to street poetry, heavily engaging in slang and laid back attitudes that would best express this coolness. This live ‘feel’ would become an important trait of the music, sometimes showcasing improvised vocals or instrumental solos. Early jazz-rap groups such as A Tribe Called Quest and Gang Starr initially balanced jazz with traditional Hip Hop evenly, but in just a few years artists such as Digable Planets and Guru (through his Jazzmatazz series) would introduce live jazz instrumentation as a focus.

Containing rhythms very familiar to other forms of Hip Hop, samples, and extra production details are almost exclusively culled from various forms of Jazz, such as Jazz-Funk, Hard Bop, and Soul Jazz, using trumpets, saxophones, looped piano, and double bass, etc.


[ Jazz Rap/Jazz Hip Hop: A style of Hip Hop born out of the booming Hardcore Hip Hop scene in the late 1980s and early 1990s, jazz-rap has a noticeably different feel, instead usually opting for a laid-back, mellow sound.
