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Hip-Hop comes out to honor Snoop Dogg, Whoudini, Tribe and others

NEW YORK- Snoop Dogg is usually quick to brag and boast, but even he felt humbled as he was honored for his rap achievements at VH1’s fourth annual Hip Hop Honors.

The gangsta rapper was lauded along with Missy Elliott, the ’80s rap trio Whoudini, A Tribe Called Quest, music executive Andre Harrell and producer Teddy Riley for creating the “New Jack Swing” sound, and Fab Five Freddy and Charlie Ahern for the groundbreaking movie “Wildstyle.”

The event airs on the VH1 cable TV channel beginning Monday.

Among those on hand to congratulate Snoop backstage during the honors on Thursday were Q-Tip from Tribe and rap legend KRS-One, of whom Snoop asked, “Have I been a good student?” KRS-One gave him an approving nod.

“These are guys that I grew up wanting to be like and learning their words and dreaming and hoping and wishing, and now they know who I am and they respect me and they say that my work has put me in the position that I can be commended- it’s unbelievable, I can’t believe it,” he told The Associated Press backstage.

The celebration was more like an old-school party than an awards ceremony. During the tribute to Whoudini, Nelly and Jermaine Dupri did ’80s dance moves while Whoudini delivered their classic raps; Timbaland joined Eve, Ciara, Nelly Furtado and Keyshia Cole onstage to perform Elliott’s hits as the singer-rapper-producer looked on.

Other stars on hand included LL Cool J, Ne-Yo, Chris Rock and host Tracy Morgan.

“This is the best thing for us to happen for hip-hop, it’s positive,” said Snoop.

“These awards shows … it’s never negative, never anything in the media the wrong way, it’s always a great celebration of music and the artists and what they did.”

KRS-One is hoping to harness the positivity from the Hip-Hop Honors for a new project: At the event, he was enlisting artists like Snoop Dogg to record a new version of his ’80s message song “Self-Destruction,” an all-star recording that then included acts like Queen Latifah and Big Daddy Kane.

“Hip-hop as a culture is getting a lot of backlash right now for its lyrics, for its public image, and the people are crying out for more responsibility,” said KRS-One as he explained the need for the new recording.

“Nelly, Snoop, 50, Jay-Z, you are the Big Daddy Kanes, the Queen Latifahs, the Stestasonics of today,” he continued.

“Let’s get this movement together, that tells families in the United States, we never intended for your child to go to jail … the social ills of society, we never intended to highlight them.”