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Man Parrish
Man Parrish
American musician
1
Beans
Beans
American rapper
2
Mantronix
Mantronix
American hip hop band
3
Grandmaster Flash
Grandmaster Flash
American rapper and DJ
4
Brenda K. Starr
Brenda K. Starr
American musician
5
Whodini
Whodini
American hip-hop group
6
A Tribe Called Quest
A Tribe Called Quest
American hip-hop group
7
Eric B. & Rakim
Eric B. & Rakim
American hip hop duo
8
Afrika Bambaataa
Afrika Bambaataa
American DJ, record producer and activist
9
7L & Esoteric
7L & Esoteric
10
Hudson Mohawke
Hudson Mohawke
Scottish music producer
11
Stateless
Stateless
English electronic rock band
12
Illmind
Illmind
American record producer
13
808 State
808 State
English electronic music group
14
J Boogie
J Boogie
American record producer
15
Q-Tip
Q-Tip
American recording artist; rapper, singer, actor, record producer and DJ
16
ESG
ESG
band that plays punk rock

Warp 9, was an American science-fiction-themed electro-funk and hip hop trio, best known for its influential singles "Nunk," "Light Years Away," and "Beat Wave," which ranked among the most iconic groups of the electro hip hop era. Described as the "perfect instance of hip hop's contemporary ramifications," Warp 9 was the brainchild of writer-producers Lotti Golden and Richard Scher. The duo wrote and recorded under the moniker Warp 9, a production project at the forefront of the electro movement. Warp 9 evolved from a studio concept into a band when Prism Records expressed interest in releasing Nunk as a single. Golden & Scher invited drummer Chuck Wansley and percussionist Boe Brown to perform the male vocals and rhymes. Later, a female vocalist was added to the group; Ada Dyer performed vocals and rhymes for Warp 9's second single, "Light Years Away." The group released two albums, It's a Beat Wave (1983), (Island Records), a street themed testament exploring the topics of science fiction, hip hop and mixing, and Fade In, Fade Out (Motown), (1986), a soul- and R&B-oriented montage. Warp 9's image is best described on the cover of its 12" single "Light Years Away," with Milton (Boe) Brown (Warp 9's lead singer), Chuck Wansley, and session singer Ada Dyer in their trademark sci-fi space suits.

The success of Warp 9's first single, "Nunk," created a large following for the band in the New York metropolitan area resulting in a worldwide deal with Island Records, on its 4th & B'way Records label in the UK, and on Prism Records/Island Records in the U.S. Brian Chin of Billboard called "Nunk" a "very skillful pastiche of a whole passel of recent street and fusion sounds, along with a simple rap." "Nunk" was a watershed for electro music, "next to 'Planet Rock', heralding the arrival of electro hip hop music." The song's title "Nunk," announced the group's musical direction—a fusion of funk and new wave, i.e., NUNK= N-ew wave + f-UNK. Fusing elements from electro-pop, rock, Latin, Afro-Cuban, and hip hop is integral to Warp 9 and to the identity of electro hip hop.

On May 14, 2014, Rob Fitzpatrick of The Guardian, described producers Lotti Golden and Richard Scher as electro-futurists, "working real emotion and intelligence into the world of experimental hip-hop and electro." In the piece, Fitzpatrick describes "Light Years Away"as a "cornerstone of early 80's beatbox afrofuturism," characterizing the track as "a brilliantly spare and sparse piece of electro hip-hop traversing inner and outer space, matching rolling congas with vocoder voices and the hiss and sizzle of cutting edge synth and drum-machine technology."

Warp 9's third single, "Beat Wave" (1983) is best described by David Toop: "Their [Golden and Scher] commitment to a medium generally considered junk food is disarming." Fitzpatrick continues the analogy: "The genius of Warp 9 is how [it] took what was considered a throwaway music and invested it with real emotion and intelligence."