Break Free KC drops beat on cultural stereotypes, aims to rebrand hip hop

May 14, 2019  |  Austin Barnes

James “Sug Easy” Singleton, Break Free KC

Hip hop culture in Kansas City is misunderstood, James “Sug Easy” Singleton said, explaining his mission to help local artists break free of stereotypes and live their passion with authenticity.

“When I have a 88-year-old lady at my camp seeing her grandson — who came in with a negative notion of what hip hop was going to be — what she thought she was going to see and she saw a whole different perspective … it is rewarding,” said Singleton, owner of Break Free Kansas City — an offshoot of Break Free Hip Hop school founded in 2011 in Houston.

A graffiti-soaked space in Overland Park, the Kansas City iteration of Break Free specializes in camps, classes, after-school programs, and performances.

Built around the five pillars of hip hop: DJ’ing, emceeing, graffiti, beatboxing, and break dancing; Singleton is hopeful his gifts as an artist can lead the company in rebranding hip hop culture in Kansas City, he said.

Click here to learn more about Break Free Kansas City’s offerings.

“Now her grandson loves to beatbox, you know, so he’d be beatboxing all the time,” Singleton said with excitement, certain such enthusiasm and joy could be the key to unifying the city.

Violence and drug use are often among the top concerns of parents who oppose hip hop influences in their children’s lives, he said. Most often, such a reaction is the result of inaccurate portrayals of urban culture on the news and in TV shows or movies, Singleton said.

James “Sug Easy” Singleton, Break Free KC

James “Sug Easy” Singleton, Break Free KC

“We’re actually about community. We’re actually about change. We’re actually about building and helping people with hopes and dreams of dance or the next platform,” he said.

Beyond racial stereotypes, hip hop isn’t about skin color: it’s about breaking cultural barriers and learning to build relationships that transcended societal pressures, Singleton said.  

“There is a positive reinforcement through [hip hop and breakdance] that can save individuals and different types of culture — by experiencing it and showing the love of dance to young kids,” he said. “ … Yes, [hip hop] was created by blacks and taught by Puerto Ricans when it was first started … but that door has been open and branched off to so many different nationalities.”

For Singleton, Break Free KC is a way of rewriting the story of hip hop for a new generation, he said, envisioning a Kansas City that embraces roots of culture.  

“As [the pillars of] hip hop grew, they all became on unit,” Singleton explained. “When the parents see all those come together, then their ideas and views change.”

Symbolic, as Kansas City community’s grow in a similar way as the artform, so could the ties that bind their diverse cultural makeups, he said.

James “Sug Easy” Singleton, Break Free KC

James “Sug Easy” Singleton, Break Free KC

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Reese Davis as Ant-Man with "Ant-Man" star and Overland Park native Paul Rudd

    Walkin and Rollin, KC maker community treat kids with limited mobility to custom Halloween costumes

    By Tommy Felts | October 25, 2019

    The children in Reese Davis’ preschool class were often standoffish around him.  “He was the only kid they knew in a wheelchair,” recalled his father, Lon Davis, founder of Walkin and Rollin Costumes — a Kansas City-based non-profit that builds costumes for kids in walkers and wheelchairs, free of charge.   “They didn’t really know how…

    Digital Sandbox KC cohort; Mario Pabaroue, Len Frye and Brandon Dunlap, FilmDove Inc.; A.J. Mellott, Ronawk LLC; and Sunti Wathanacharoen, Pulmonaer Analytics LLC

    Digital Sandbox KC selects diverse health, AI and filmmaking startups for latest funding

    By Tommy Felts | October 24, 2019

    The latest trio of Digital Sandbox KC companies pushes the proof-of-concept program deeper into Johnson County with a new Overland Park partnership. “This group showcases the wide spectrum of businesses assisted by the Sandbox, from a data platform for creative filmmakers and studios, to improved patient care in asthma, to biologics in regenerative medicine,” said…

    Lyndsey Gruber, PEPPR

    Woman-led PEPPR sets table for simplified event planning with platform cooked in KC kitchens

    By Tommy Felts | October 23, 2019

    A veteran of the restaurant industry thanks to her family’s long-simmering connections to Kansas City kitchens, Lyndsey Gruber stood as a woman on her own Wednesday at 1 Million Cups. “It’s just me,” Gruber, CEO and founder of PEPPR, told Startland News before the event, which served as a mid-point of Women’s Empowerment Week and…

    Stephen Hardy, MySidewalk

    InnovateKC: City pivots to startup-in-residence program to leverage local tech ingenuity

    By Tommy Felts | October 23, 2019

    A new administration equals a new spin on established ideas, Nia Richardson explained, previewing the launch of Kansas City’s InnovateKC program.  “I literally had a 45-minute conversation with [former city innovation officer] Bob Bennett before he walked out the door. He sent me an email with some notes and I had to pick it up…