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Turntablism
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===Decline in role of DJ in hip hop=== The appearance of turntablists and the birth of turntablism was prompted by one major factor β the disappearance or downplaying of the role of the DJ in hip-hop groups, on records and in live shows at the turn of the 1990s. This disappearance has been widely documented in books and documentaries (among them ''[[Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America|Black Noise]]'' and ''[[Scratch (2001 film)|Scratch]]''), and was linked to the increased use of [[Digital Audio Tape|DAT tapes]] and other studio techniques that would ultimately push the DJ further away from the original hip-hop equation of the MC as the vocalist and the DJ as the music provider alongside the producer. This push and disappearance of the DJ meant that the practices of the DJ, such as scratching, went back underground and were cultivated and built upon by a generation of people who grew up with hip hop, DJs and scratching. By the mid-90s the disappearance of the DJ in hip hop had created a sub-culture which would come to be known as turntablism and which focused entirely on the DJ using his turntables and a mixer to manipulate sounds and create music. By pushing the practice of DJing away, hip hop created the grounds for this sub-culture to evolve (Greasley & Prior, 2013).
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