Sylvia Robinson
Sylvia Robinson
Sylvia Robinson
Sylvia Vanderpool Robinson was born on March 6 of 1936 on New York City. Her
parents where immigrants from the Virgin Islands (Saint Thomas) and her father specially, as he
played the saxophone, made sure his daughters and sons had contact with music(Charnas 41). At
a very young age Sylvia was involved in the music industry having recorded at age thirteen for
Savoy Records under the name of "Little Sylvia". Dan Charnas in his book The Big PaybackThe History of the Business of Hip Hop expresses the importance of Sylvia's father, Herbert
Vanderpool, on her career as he contracted Mc Houston "Mickey" Baker to instruct Sylvia on
rhythm-and-blues guitar. That same instructor is who became Sylvia's music partner in the duo
"Mickey & Sylvia". Another great influence in Sylvia's life was her husband Joe Robinson. "It
was Joe, says Sylvia, who suggested that she form a musical partnership with her guitar teacher,
McHouston Mickey Baker, 11 years her senior"(Daly). The partnership with her music
instructor resulted a success with the hit "Love is Strange". In 1968 Sylvia and Joe Robinson cofounded All Platinum Records. "In the early 1970s, Joe and Sylvia Robinsons humble New
Jersey enterprise was scoring modest hits on the American R&B charts and in Europe as well.
All Platinums biggest success came with Pillow Talk, a song Sylvia had written in 1972 and
unsuccessfully pitched to Al Green"(Daly). As Al Green refused to sing "Pillow Talk" Sylvia
herself made a solo debut and sang the song that became a hit. Since the beginnings Sylvia was
causing sensation in the music industry being one of the firsts women to own a recording label
and exposing such a sexually charged song as "Pillow Talk". This song is considered to be a
precursor of the genre of Disco and "ushered in a wave of music by black woman about sexual
self confidence"(Ulaby). But a decade after the establishment of All Platinum Records the
company had financial problems and was filling for bankruptcy.
Just when Sylvia's record label, All Platinum, was going out of business something
happened that changed her life and Hip Hop's history for better or for worst. Sylvia's niece,
Deborah Jones, made a party for Sylvia in the club she managed called Harlem World(Charnas
40). That night hosting the party was Lovebug Starski a DJ protg of DJ Hollywood and an
alumnus of the Disco Fever. What she saw that night inspired her to work on a new project as a
producer.
One evening in late June 1979, she found herself attending a party
in Manhattan, 30 minutes from her home in Englewood, New
Jersey, at an uptown club named Harlem World. Sylvia Robinson is
now retired from the music game, but she will never forget the
sights and sounds that assailed her senses when she took her seat in
the clubs balcony. A D.J. called Lovebug Starski was spinning
R&B hits for an appreciative crowd, whom he whipped into a
frenzy by embellishing the music with his own rhymes,
catchphrases, exhortations. Some called it rapping.(Daly)
The excitement caused by the performance of DJ Lovebug Starski made her not to think
twice and offer him and other pioneers of the underground Hip Hop movement to record on the
music label she was forming with her husband, Sugar Hill Records ( a substitution of the before
failed All Platinum Records), but all of them refused. Mathew Birkhold in his article "If you
don't move your feet then I don't eat" explains why established Hip Hop D.J.'s and rappers
wouldn't agree to make contract with record labels and preferred working directly with the clubs
hosting the parties.
set an example and broke many race and gender barriers of her time. Sylvia made her way in the
music industry as an artist and became one of the first women to produce and own a record label.
There is no denying she was the mastermind behind the massive world acceptance of Hip Hop.
Thanks to the "Rappin Queen".
Bibliography:
Mckinley, James C. "Sylvia Robinson, Pioneering Producer of Hip-Hop, Is Dead at 75." New
York Times 30 Sept. 2011: B15. The New York Times. The New York Times, 29 Sept.
2011. Web. 13 June 2015. <http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/30/arts/music/sylviarobinson-pioneering-producer-of-hip-hop-dies-at-75.html?_r=0>.
Daly, Steven. "Hip- Hop Happens." Vanity Fair. N.p., Nov. 2005. Web. 13 June 2015.
<http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2005/11/hiphop200511>.
Charnas, Dan. The Big Payback: The History of the Business of Hip-hop. New York, NY: New
American Library, 2010. Print.
Birkhold, Matthew. "If You Don't Move Your Feet Then I Don't Eat: Hip Hop and the
Demand for Black Labor." Race/Ethnicity: Multidisciplinary Global Contexts 4.2,
Reworking Race and Labor (2011): 303-21. JSTOR. Web. 18 June 2015.
Ulaby, Neda. "Sylvia Robinson, Who Helped Make 'Rapper's Delight,' Has Died." NPR. NPR,
29 Sept. 2011. Web. 13 June 2015.
<http://www.npr.org/sections/therecord/2011/09/29/140927061/sylvia-robinson-whohelped-make-rappers-delight-has-died>.
Blow, Kurtis. 2002. Oyazo-Hinojosa y Alvarez Reyes, Sady [traduccin]. N.D. [approx. 20032005]. "La historia del rap, partes 1-3." Revista Movimiento. La Habana: ICM. Nu.1-3. p.
M2-M4, M6-M8 y M2-M5.