Mics full form

THE NEW NEW YORK | 5ive Mics

INTERVIEW KB Tindal PHOTOGRAPH @DONJAIDIDIT

5ive Mics is a charismatic gentleman from Brooklyn, New York. He’s a fashion visionary when it comes to his personal style and an entrepreneurial hustler who really needs no introduction. We got to chop it up about music, gettin money, business endeavors, how important friends are in life and in this wicked industry of music and entertainment and his new signing with All Entertainment Media Group. Welcome to Brooklyn and the 5ive Mics interview. Enjoy.

Validated: Let's just jump right on into it man. Tell me a little bit about the history man. Like how did you get the name 5ive Mics? I know you grew up in Brooklyn. And it sounds like you grew up in Brooklyn in the 80s and the 90s or the 90s and the early 2000s you know when shit was kind of rough. New York's a little different now. How did New York influence you man and where did the name 5ive Mics come from?

5ive Mics: Well, I’m a Five Percenter that's one. So, there were a lot of different elements of the 5ive thing with me. But Five Mics from S

Born to Use Mics

Born to Use Mics: Reading Nas'sIllmatic,[2] edited by Michael Eric Dyson and Sohail Daulatzai[1] is a collection of scholarly essays and historical documents presenting Illmatic from an academic perspective. The book features contributions from scholars and intellectuals including Adilifu Nama, Guthrie P. Ramsey Jr., James Peterson, Marc Lamont Hill, Mark Anthony Neal, Imani Perry, Kyra Gaunt, and Eddie S. Glaude. It also includes a preface written by Common. In the introduction, Sohail Daulatzai explains the structure of the book, writing:

...Born to Use Mics encompasses the different styles and forms of hip-hop publishing, from the scholarly to the journalistic, the historical to the first-person account, using freestyles and wild styles to wax philosophic on the meaning of Illmatic. But the final mix you hold is more than the sum of its parts, as we've brought together an eclectic group of writers, scholars, poets, filmmakers, journalists, novelists, musicians, and combinations thereof who have all grown up with hip hop and

The History of Microphones

A microphone is a device for converting acoustic power into electric power with essentially similar wave characteristics. These devices convert sound waves into electrical voltages that are subsequently converted back into sound waves and amplified through speakers. Today, microphones are most often associated with the music and entertainment industries, but the devices date back as far as the 1600s when scientists began seeking out ways in which they could amplify sound.

The 1600s

1665: While the word “microphone” wasn’t used until the 19th century, English physicist and inventor Robert Hooke is credited with developing an acoustic cup and string style phone and is considered a pioneer in the field of transmitting sound across distances.

The 1800s

1827:Sir Charles Wheatstone was the first person to coin the phrase "microphone." A renowned English physicist and inventor, Wheatstone is best known for inventing the telegraph. His interests were varied, and he devoted some of his time the study of acoustics during the 1820s. Wheatstone was a

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