The birthplace of hip-hop is preparing to bring the culture into the classroom in a major way. The Bronx School of Hip-Hop is set to open this fall as one of several new public schools launching in New York City for the 2026-2027 school year.
The new high school will open in Claremont and welcome its first ninth-grade class in September. Reports say the school will use hip-hop as a foundation for learning while also offering traditional academics, audio production, digital media, financial literacy and other career-connected subjects.
The move matters because hip-hop has often been studied after the fact, through museums, documentaries and anniversary tributes. This school places the culture inside the education system in the borough where it was born, giving students a chance to connect history, creativity and real-world skills.
Incoming principal Jason Reyes has described hip-hop as a powerful way to help students see themselves in what they are learning. For a generation raised on music, media, production and entrepreneurship, that connection could make the school one of the most watched education stories in hip-hop culture this year.
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Hulda Hicks was born in Brooklyn, NY in the late ’70s, at the time when Hip-Hop music was just emerging as an art form. Her entire life was influenced by the culture, having grown up in the epicenter of the creative movement.
As a trained musician and vocalist, Hulda got exposed to the industry in her twenties and has worked on projects with iconic figures such as the Chiffons, the Last Poets, and Montell Jordan, to name a few. Her passion for music extended past the stage on to the page when she began to write ad copy and articles as a freelancer for several underground publications.
A written review from “Jubilee Huldafire” is as authentic as it gets, hailing from one creative mind that has a unique voice, on paper and in person.






















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