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Lee "DJ Flash" Johnson is a West Coast Hip-Hop pioneer, producer, archivist, and the author of The Echo Will Never Die series. Before any of those titles meant anything, he was just a kid from central California who fell in love with music and ended up in the middle of something much bigger than he ever expected. In 1981, he answered an open audition at Magic Disc Records in Los Angeles and became a founding member of The Rappers Rapp Group, the West Coast's first rap group, signed to Rappers Rapp Disco Co., the first West Coast rap label. In doing so, Flash became what historians have since recognized as the first white rapper ever signed to a rap record label. It's not a title he went looking for, just what happened when he showed up and did not leave. DJ Flash stayed in that world for the next four decades. In 1992 he produced West Coast Rap: The First Dynasty, four volumes released on Rhino Records, which became one of the earliest serious attempts to document where West Coast rap actually came from. Then came Ice-T's The Classic Collection and Cold As Ever. In 1994, Flash launched Hitman Music as a joint venture with Sony Music. Hitman's first release was Dr. Dre's Concrete Roots. It sold over 250,000 copies in its first week, reached the Top 20 in both rap and pop categories, and remained on the Billboard Top 100 for eight consecutive weeks. Flash is currently the CEO of Rappers Rapp Records and owner of the legendary Macola Record Co., the independent label that gave early platforms to artists like Ice-T, Dr. Dre, Egyptian Lover, N.W.A., and Ronnie Hudson long before major labels recognized the movement. But none of that is why he started writing. Flash started writing because he kept watching the wrong story get told. Decade after decade, history books and documentaries focused on New York and either left the West Coast out entirely or reduced it to a footnote beginning with N.W.A. Every time he saw that, he thought about the people he knew. The DJs. The promoters. The dancers. The independent label owners pressing vinyl in garages. The radio pioneers. The people who built the foundation of West Coast Hip-Hop and never once received proper credit for it. The ones who built the stage but never... stood in the spotlight. Those people deserved better. So Flash built a series around giving it to them. The Echo Will Never Die is his life's work. It is a four-volume historical memoir series documenting the true, untold origins of West Coast Hip-Hop from the inside, told by the people who actually lived it. Not reconstructed. Not reinterpreted. Just the real story, finally on the page. Some readers have described the series as "The Holy Scriptures of West Coast Hip-Hop." Others simply call it overdue. Flash says he did not write this for fame. He wrote it for truth. And for every pioneer who helped build something great and never got to see their name in the history books.
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