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About
H.A.S.N
H.A.S.N
is a non-profit webiste which aims to showcase Garage
music and the DJ's who play it.
What
is Garage music? - a statement understood by many for
its true reason and just acknowledged by others for
its current meaning.
To
help explain where I'm coming from and the kind of scene
and sound I love, choose a mix, come back to this page,
and read through the selction of articles that I have
pulled together which set out the fascinating and almost
unbelieveable history of disco, how it went underground
(not for the first time) in Chicago and New York, crossed
over into Europe and evolved through the widespread
introduction of electronic instruments. Defining the
Spirit of House & Garage, is not an easy task, if
you feel it, you know it - it's a love thing....
Where
Disco Died, and House Music was born.
On
a summer night in 1979 between games of a White Sox
doubleheader at
Comiskey Park, Chicago rock deejay Steve Dahl created
a fireworks show out of a bunch of Donna Summer and
KC and The Sunshine Band albums. Disco
Demolition Night started a riot, left the field
unplayable and caused the Sox to forfeit a game, but
it couldnt kill dance music. Only a few blocks
from the ballpark on the citys South and West
Sides, a rougher, grittier sound called house was already
rising out of discos ashes.
I
view house as a discos revenge, says Frankie
Knuckles, who was already being called The Godfather
at Chicagos Warehouse when disco went boom at
Comiskey. I witnessed that Disco Demolition caper
and it didnt mean a thing to me or my crowd. It
scared the record companies, who stopped signing disco
artists and making disco records. So we created our
own thing in Chicago to fill the gap.
House
wasnt so much a new thing as a wild thing. Like
disco, house was an all night religious experience with
deejays as ministers who laid down the gospel from on
high in a darkened booth armed only with a stack of
12-inch singles, a pair of turntables and a drum machine.
But it was rawer, rougher, less glossily produced than
most late 70s disco. Its audience was primarily
black, gay and Hispanic, and deejays such as Knuckles
at the Warehouse, Ron Hardy at the Music Box and Farley
Jackmaster Funk at the Playground built
huge followings with their innovative mixing and sequencing.
By the mid-80s house records were coming out of
Chicago in ever greater numbers to feed the demand for
fresh grooves.
Many
of the early house records were homemade and sounded
like it; they
consisted of little more than a simple keyboard melody
and a ferocious groove that made words superfluous.
More often than not, the vocals worked like another
rhythmic device, urging dancers to Jack your body
or Work it to the bone. Many of the house
records that emerged in the mid-80s out of Chicago
might not have passed major-label muster during the
disco era, but their raw simplicity worked like an aphrodisiac
on the dancefloor. This was the golden age of Chicago
house, and the 11 tracks in this collection were among
the first to bring the international acclaim to the
citys underground scene.
Steve
Silk Hurley, who recorded his 1985 breakthrough,
Music is the Key, as J.M.Silk with vocalist
Keith Nunnally, says what made Chicago house different
from other dance musics was that its architects were
a bunch of deejays who didnt know what they
were doing musically but knew everything about moving
a crowd.
Music
is the Key defined that ethos rhythmically and
Iyrically: I am a
deejay/And music is my plan/To ease your mind and set
you free/From all
your days of misery. The follow-up, Jack
Your Body, was even more direct, its title invocation
a mantra for the dawn-to-dusk< generation in Chicagos
clubs.
Like Hurley, Marshall Jefferson was no musician. But
the postal worker concocted Move Your Body,
subtitled The House Music Anthem and arguably
the most sampled record in Chicago house history. The
vocal was provided by Curtis McClain, a friend of Jeffersons
from the Post Office, but the core of the track was
an insistent, idiosyncratic Keyboard riff. Jefferson
couldnt play Keyboards, which made the chord sequence
he composed on a sequencer all the more oddly compelling.
I only found out later a normal keyboard player
wouldnt play that way, Jefferson says. Youd
have to go against training to do what I did.
Jefferson
became an in-demand producer, and his arrangements quickly
became more sophisticated, as evidenced by his work
with Ten City on Devotion and CeCe Rogers
on Someday, records that courted the pop
audience while still engaging the hard-core dancefloor
crowd.
But
in balancing grit with grace, sumptuousness with sizzle,
Chicago house records inevitably erred on the lean-and-mean
side, as one listen to LNRs salacious Work
It To The Bone or the minimalist soundscape of
Finders Inc.s Mystery of Love will
attest. Also crucial to the Chicago house sound was
attitude, something possessed in abundance by such estrogen-driven
classics as Cant Get Enough by Liz
Torres; You Used to Hold Me, written and
coproduced by Ralphi Rosario but wrung of emotion by
Xaviera Gold; and especially Fun With Bad Boys,
by punk-scene refugee Screamin Rachael.
None
of these performances quite prepares the listener for
the other-wordly, near hysterical intensity of Daryl
Pandy on Love Cant Turn Around, however.
Pandy sounds like hed sell his home, his first-born
and his soul for one more chance with his lover, but
in reality what he was selling was the sound of Chicago.
His multi octave wails transformed the Farley Funk-Vince
Lawrence-Jessie Saunders anthem into an international
siren call, arguably the first shot heard round
the world from the Chicago house underground, and certainly
not the last.
House
music - the gritty, underground offshoot of 70s
disco - was born in Chicago, and by the mid 80s
some of the citys deejays werent taking
kindly to non-Chicago derivations. The attitude was
best summed up in the derisive title of one of Farley
Jackmaster Funks singles, U
Aint Really House.
But
even Farley couldnt deny that the foundation for
Chicago house was New York. underground disco. After
all, Frankie Knuckles, the acknowledged godfather
of Chicago house, got his start in Manhattan, where
he was spinning records in the early 70s with
another legendary deejay, the late Larry Levan.
And
it was Levans nights at the Paradise Garage disco
that gave the New York house scene its identity in the
80s. Just as Chicago deejays reinterpreted New
York disco to create house, East Coast deejays modified
and expanded Windy City house to create New York garage.
In contrast to Chicagos jack-your-body house flavor,
the 10 tracks on New York Garage Style generally
place greater emphasis on passionate soul-flavored vocals
and favor slightly slower tempos, mostly in the 115
to 120 beats per minute range, as opposed to the 122
to 125 bpms of Chicago house.
It
was a New York disco-era deejay, Walter Gibbons, who
pioneered many of the techniques of disco mixing that
would become the lifeblood of house deejays turned-
producers in the 80s. After years out of the spotlight,
Gibbons resurfaced in 1984 with a remix of a 12-inch
single called Set It Off that would define
the New York dance underground. It created a sensation
at the Garage, where it was championed by Levan, and
spawned countless remakes by the likes of C. Sharp and
Masquerade and at least one answer single, Number 1s
Set It Off (Party Rock). Perhaps the definitive
version of Set It Off was Strafes,
with its mesmerizing vocal hook woven into a spare but
hauntingly atmospheric rhythm bed.
Set
It Off was the apogee of the early garage sound,
followed closely by D Trains Youre
the One For Me, the Peech Boys Dont
Make Me Wait and Serious Intentions You
Dont Know, which blended underground grit
with uptown production sophistication that distinguished
them from the raw tracks then pumping in Chicago. Although
distinct from each other in sound and attitude, the
house scenes of the two cities carrier! on a conversation
of sorts throughout the 80s; note how Colonel
Abrams baritone-voiced pep talk on Music
is the Answer is a mirror image of JM Silks
Chicago classic Music is the Key.
By
the 80s New York house could no longer be confined
to the garage, but had spread into a mansion full of
rooms, each with a different style. In one was the plush,
inventive keyboards of Josh Milan on Blazes If
You Should Need a Friend, in another the dreamy
girl-group vocals of Jomandas Drifting.
The Basement Boys transformed the simmering vocal tour
de force Love Dont Live
Here
Anymore with ping-pong percussion and percolating,
pipe-like keyboard effects. Phase IIs Mystery
weaved layered vocals into a carpet of polyrhythmic
effects, a near-perfect marriage of man-made passion
and machine-driven groove. And Todd Terry dispensed
with a vocal narrative altogether on Royal Houses
Can You Party, as he created a dance classic
out of a delirious, near chaotic collage of electronicsamples.
At the core of this track is a repeated vocal hook that
refutes Farley Funks Chicago-only definition of
house. As the vocal loop in Can You Party
insists, all that
matters on the dance floor is, Can you feel it?
By
Greg Kot
Rock Music critic for The Chicago Times
Eddie
Amador - House Music
"Not
everyone understands House Music. It's a spiritual thing,
a body thing, a soul thing."
Eddie
Amador penned these words, "Not everyone understands
House Music. It's a spiritual thing, a body thing, a
soul thing". True.
Simple,
soulful and direct, the lines were a personal philosophy
as much as a summation of the essence of house music.
They also became the lyrics to Amador's first release
(and hit) as a producer. "House Music", a
deep, determined groove, became the underground dancefloor
mantra of that year. Picked up by Deep Dish's Yoshitoshi
label it was licensed across the globe on a huge wave
of clubland support.
"When
I play I definitely move the crowd. I'm concentrating
on getting inside of a person."
In fact, Amador, who is first and foremost a DJ and
maintains that will always be the case, has so far released
only two of his own productions. Both were huge hits,
The second, "Rise", a four-to-the-floor monster,
reached the Top 20 in the UK national chart in 1999
- a confirmation, if any were needed that house music
is something this man has a divine instinct for creating.
More adventures into production and remixing are on
their way.
As
he says: "My mission is to take the classic elements
of house and infuse it with technology to create a redefined,
streamlined form of house music - with twice as much
soul and twice as much energy in terms of electronics,
compression ratios etc. - but keep a groove and tempo."
A
mechanical engineering scientist by degree, tech-speak
and mathematical theory are part of Amadors musical
language. And his DJ sets, like his productions and
remixes are as scientifically precise as they are soulful.
Each mix is a work of art in itself and the sense of
responsibility that goes along with that hallowed position
behind the turntables is one Amador takes seriously.
"When I play I definitely move the crowd. I'm concentrating
on getting inside of a person". Using ultra-high
frequencies and low sub frequencies Amador engineers
his creations "to leave you with a message and
to allow you to leave the club feeling different than
you did when you arrived."
And
he's been doing it long enough to know just how to take
you there. DJing since the 80's , it was hip hop and
R n' B that Amador first honed his skills on. Moving
to the rhythm of the times, he continued to rock dancefloors
through to disco and then on to his first discovery
of house - the music that would change his life. Now
Amador's blend of straight-up, deep house is in demand
around the world - and he still manages to make it home
to Los Angeles for his residency and the city's house
Mecca, High Society.
Latin-American
born in the US, Amador was raised on the Latin sounds
of his family's neighborhood, soaked in the soul music
of sixties and seventies while developing a love for
classic jazz. Although a self-described purist when
it comes to the house music he creates and spins, Eddie
Amador is as much a part of the legacy of those earlier
sounds as he is following in the footsteps of Frankie
Knuckles, MAW and Tony Humphries.
Right
now though, it's all about the future for this man.
Right now though, it's all about the future for this
man. "To some people house can be a way of life.
It sounds generic, but that's what I have going on here".
We understand. It's a spiritual thing. A body thing.
A soul thing.
Eddie
Amador
The
Clubs
The
Paradise Garage
It
was located at 84 King street NY,from 1977-1987. The
Paradise Garage gave its name to Garage music. Garage=
New Yorks version of Deep House.
In
1972,Nicky Siano and his brother opened up the club-The
Gallery,in the soho section of Manhattan. It became
the key club in the rise of disco. Siano hired Larry
Levan and Frankie Knuckles for the Dj duties,while working
the two learned new mixing skills.
In
1973 Levan and Knuckles went to work for the Continental
Baths(which was known for launching music acts).
In
1976 Levan left to work the newly-Paradise Garage! After
a year Knuckles left for Chicago to help open up the-Warehouse.It
is ironic that the first choice for the Chicago club
was Larry Levan,he declined but,suggested his friend
Frankie Knuckles.From there on,music history was about
to be born both in, New York and Chicago.
To
all who worked at the Paradise Garage, each person had
their area of expertise (music,lights,sound, decoration)
they came together to create a legendary place.
The
Garage was open to Guests and Members only. (Madonnas
first public performance was at the Garage!)
The
Warehouse
In
1977, at the height of Disco, Frankie Knuckles was enticed
to leave his successful DJ work in New York to help
open a new club in Chicago. Chicago was not a dance
music city in the late 1970's and was known primarily
for its world-class blues. Many clubs still were relying
on jukeboxes for music and rarely used live DJs. Into
this void stepped Frankie Knuckles to help begin the
House movement which would revolutionize dance music
in the mid 1980's. The origin of the name House to describe
the music has often been disputed, but it seems the
most reliable explanation is a shortening of the name
of Knuckles' club the Warehouse. According to Frankie,
much of the music he played in the late 1970's at the
Warehouse was standard East Coast disco, Philly soul,
and Salsoul. By 1981 he had begun to reconstruct and
remix records live with additional percussion effects.
The House sound was beginning.
The
evolution of House music can not (and should not) be
attributed solely to Frankie Knuckles. There were a
number of DJs and other music industry figures who played
key roles and helped to cross-pollinate the sound that
was developing. In 1981, a group of DJs formed the Hot
Mix 5 to give their music a radio outlet on Chicago's
legendary WBMX-FM. Among the DJs ere Farley Keith, better
known as Farley "Jackmaster" Funk and Ralphie
Rosario, who remains a top dance music performer and
producer today. Farley would later become resident DJ
at the Playground club, a crosstown rival of Frankie
Knuckles' Warehouse.
Farley "Jackmaster" Funk House music would
introduce a powerful beat to mainstream dance music.
The beat became strong and hard. Often early house music
was as much about rhythm as it was about any vocals
or other aspects of the recording. House also became
a showcase for the talents of DJs and remixers. Elements
of wide ranging recordings from found voices to classic
soul would weave in and out to help work the dancefloor
crowd into a frenzy.
By
1983 Jesse Saunders was emerging as a key figure in
the development of House music in Chicago by releasing
some of the first commercial recordings. Jesse had begun
DJing in Chicago after returning from the University
of Southern California in 1981. He eventually became
resident DJ at the Playground, one of the key large
clubs for early House. After having one of his favorite
mixes stolen, he decided to recreate and rerecord it
himself with his own synthesizers and drum machine.
The result was the single Fantasy, released in 1983.
Later in the year he released On and On on his own Jes-Say
Records label. It is considered by many to be the first
commercially released House recording.
Jesse Saunders Among the sounds used by Jesse Saunders
in his groundbreaking recording were the bass line from
Space Invaders, the "toot toot hey beep beep"
loop from Donna Summer's Bad Girls, and the horn chart
from Funkytown. After Jesse Saunders' seminal recordings,
House music began to develop quickly. Larry Sherman
soon opened Chicago's legendary Trax Records label.
Ron Hardy at the Powerplant, Frankie Knuckles at the
Warehouse, and Farley Keith at the Playhouse reigned
supreme among DJs spinning new records for their devoted
crowds. Locally produced House ecordings began to be
released at a furious pace in Chicago as producers and
entrepreneurs battled for the city's House crown.
In
1986, Farley "Jackmaster" Funk released Love
Can't Turn Around, the first House record to have a
major chart impact. Later Steve "Silk" Hurley
had the first House #1 with Jack Your Body. By the end
of the 1980's House music had become one of the key
sounds in dance music around the world.
Source
unknown
A
narrative of house music
Many
quip that the days disco music have come and gone. However,
our contemporary historical moment in popular music
speaks otherwise. House music and its offshoots and
close cousins of hip-hop, techno, drum and bass, and
trance have been coined as the dance musics of the nineties
and are the soundtracks of club culture in America and
numerous countries around the world. All of these musics
place a prime emphasis on rhythmic structure, or the
beat, in the dissemination and mediation of these musics
to their respective audiences. Likewise, the musical
production of these vibrating compositions are almost
exclusively created by electronic drum machines, computer
programs, samplers, and other forms of music and media
technologies.
House
music is the obvious musical descendent of disco. Like
disco, the growth and popularity of house music began
in underground African American and Latino gay clubs
in major metropolitan areas of Chicago and New York
City. Disco and house music both showcase the vocal
abilities of African American women whose lyrics often
spoke of inclusive acceptance of all, freedom, love,
and struggles in contemporary relationships. Likewise,
the centrality of the beat is evident in disco and house
music.
The
determined rhythms of jazz, blues, and rock n
roll were disseminated though new media technologies.
Media scholar Marshall McLuhan contends that, "[r]adio
was inseparable from the rise of jazz culture as TV
has been inseparable from the rise of rock culture."
In addition to the utilization of communicative media
technologies, disco music used the digitized technologies
of drum machines, synthesizers, and samplers, as primary
instruments in the actual creation and production of
the music itself. Many note that disco music was essentially
up-tempo soul and R&B recordings popularized in
African American and Latino gay urban clubs during the
early 1970s.
The
hegemonic force of rock n roll reluctantly
gave way to the new, different and digitized rhythm
of disco as it gained popularity in the mid to late
seventies with its brief ascendance in the popular music
charts throughout the United States. Mainstream Americas
previous concerns over alleged sinister erotic beats
in blues, jazz, and rock n roll now applied
to disco music. Concurrently, discos elevation
of electronically programmed beats along with its irrelevance
to the guitar infuriated many rockers. Debates surrounding
the inauthenticity of disco music also fueled the rock
establishments fire. The public distaste over
watered down disco music culminated in the much-publicized
Disco Sucks campaign of 1979 in Chicagos
Cominsky Park where disco met its commercial ruin. But
the music did not die. It returned to the black and
Latino gay dance clubs where discos revenge was
sanctioned through house music, interestingly enough,
in Chicago, the very city that showcased discos
spectacular demise.
There
are many histories that acknowledge various tenants
of house music's cultural production, consumption, and
subsequent dissemination and they are crucial in expressing
diverse narratives and documentation. The Diva Delight
site focuses on a particular genealogy of house as traced
through underground African American and Latino gay
clubs in Chicago, New York, and New Jersey as places
of refuge from homophobia and racism. The disco music
of the 1970s is often cited as the progenitor
of house music. House music is characterized by the
continuous 4/4 beat, the use of new music technologies
(drum machines, turntables) and motifs of love and freedom.
The articulation of house lyrical texts is mediated
through, though not exclusively, African American women
as house divas.
One
particular DJ whom many note as the one of the godfathers
of house music is Frankie Knuckles. Beginning in 1977
as resident DJ of the Warehouse club in Chicago, Knuckles
proved to be both a sensation and inspiration to his
mainly black and Latino gay club clientele. Concurrently,
the legendary Larry Levan was resident DJ at the Paradise
Garage club in New York City. Crucially included as
godfathers of house are Ron Hardy, Farley 'Jackmaster'
Funk, Tee Scott, Steve 'Silk' Hurley, Jesse Saunders,
Chip E, and Fingers Inc, among numerous other house
music deities.
In
keeping with the house motifs of love, peace and togetherness,
the term family was the whole community
of house enthusiasts, gay, straight, bisexual, Asian,
white, and otherwise. The children or kids
of house is a term that some house enthusiasts use to
describe themselves. Given the subversive structure
for this family household, the children
went to work on the dancefloor. The Black
woman, personified as the house diva, is gendered to
be the mother of the house. Unlike notions
of the glamorized mammy, the historicity of house divas
is placed within African American musical traditions
of the gospel church that featured matriarchal lead
vocalists. Female singers such as Taka Boom, Dajae,
Kym Simms, Ann Nesby, Kim English, Jocelyn Brown, Su
Su Bobien, Ultra Nate, Lisa Shaw, and Grace Jones are
premier examples of fabulous Black dance divas.
Peter
Braunstein, a Ph.D. candidate in history at New York
University and a freelance writer in 1997 wrote;
But
the real animosity between rock and disco lay in the
position of the straight white male. In the rock world,
he was the undisputed top, while in disco, he was subject
to a radical decentering. Disco was an extended conversation
between black women female divas and gay men. Straight
men were welcome to join the party, but only if they
learned the lingo. Some did, but for many, this new
demand aroused a kind of "castration anxiety,"
as Alice Echols put it in a 1994 essay. Disco symbolized
a world where straight men were not only expected to
engender the female orgasm, but to incorporate it.
Only
by killing disco could rock affirm its threatened masculinity
and restore the holy dyad of cold brew and undemanding
sex partners. Disco bashing became a major preoccupation
in 1977. At the moment when Saturday Night Fever and
Studio 54 achieved zeitgeist status, rock rediscovered
a rage it had been lacking since the '60s, but this
time the enemy was a culture with "plastic"
and "mindless" (read effeminate) musical tastes.
Examined in light of the ensuing political backlash,
it's clear that the slogan of this movement--""Disco
Sucks!"--was the first cry of the angry white male.
The
rock/disco wars might seem silly in retrospect if it
weren't for the deadly seriousness with which they were
waged at the time. In a 1979 end-of-year summation,
Rolling Stone, the index of cultural regression, surveyed
the field of battle like military strategists: "You
can say that the first six months [of 1979] belonged
to disco... and that the last six months belonged to
the brave young rockers." The turning point was
the July "Disco Demolition" rally in Chicago's
Comiskey Park. The event's original gimmick involved
blowing up disco records between games of a doubleheader,
but the charged-up crowd lost control and began tearing
up the stadium. Comiskey turned into a giant coded gay
bashing, a frightening harbinger of an enraged, homophobic
America, given sanction in the mock-patriotic venue
of a baseball stadium.
By
1980, disco had become a dirty word. The term was banished
from the language as an added security measure, but
the music was exported to England, where it was de-gayed
and re-exported to the States under a new name: "new
wave dance music." The rock majority was satisfied
by the replacement of explicitly gay Sylvester with
flamboyantly closeted Boy George. As the playlist segued
from "I'm Coming Out" into "Do You Really
Want To Hurt Me," the pulverization of the liberal
imagination became a political fact. Ronald Reagan was
elected president, and the following June, a mysterious
new "gay cancer" appeared.
"Good
Times" has been cited by critics as one of the
most important singles of all time. Bernard Edwards'
bass line has been copied and sampled by bands like
Queen and rappers Grandmaster Flash.
Marco
Werman in an interview with Peter Braunstein;
Whether you consider this day in recording history one
to celebrate or mourn depends, as they say, on where
you're coming from. On August 25th, 1979, the quintessential
disco band Chic released an album that came to signify
the end of the disco era...while containing a song that
epitomized the best of the much-maligned style. As The
World's Marco Werman tells us, the "good times"
that were about to end started long before the "disco
decade."
MW:
Nile Rodgers and the late bassist Bernard Edwards were
a power song writing team with many hits to their name.
The biggest one owed its success to an unforgettable
bass line and chopping guitar refrain.
This
seemingly happy song marked the last days of disco.
"Good Times" was a nostalgic look back at
the disco decade in which Jimmy Carter ushered in better
days after Nixon and Vietnam, when the hedonism of the
seventies gave carte blanche to revel in - as the song
says - clams on the half shell and roller skates.
According
to writer and cultural historian Peter Braunstein "Good
Times" was also the cue for darker days ahead.
PB:
The music itself has a downbeat, almost poignant quality
to it that foreshadows what would happen a couple of
years later where that hedonistic ethic would soon be
completely annihilated by the sort of neo conservative
turn that the nation took starting in 80. And also the
AIDS epidemic which just destroyed club life and the
disco hedonistic ethic.
MW:
"Good Times" has been cited by critics as
one of the most important singles of all time. Bernard
Edwards' bass line has been copied and sampled by bands
like Queen and rappers Grandmaster Flash. Even in the
same year "Good Times" was released, the Sugarhill
Gang would lift the riff and trigger the birth of the
hip-hop nation.
"Good
Times" and just about all other disco has been
called fluffy, trivial, lacking musical integrity. But
it was popular art that served as the banner of the
counterculture. It brought together gays, blacks, Latinos,
showbiz celebrities and street people. But that revolution
and challenge to authority in the 1970's was rooted
three decades earlier.
PB:
The very origin of disco was during the French resistance
during World War Two. Basically an illicit form, it
was a music - jazz - that the Nazis in wartime Paris
had banned because it related to several things that
they didn't want to deal with like Americans, Jewishness,
blacks, so they banned it. So it became the official
resistance music in clubs. Discotheques started out
in this completely illicit environment, they weren't
tolerated by the state, and they never lost that underground
appeal.
MW:
After the war, Paris clubs like the Whiskey A Go Go
continued the festivity of the private record library,
literally the translation of the French word, "discotheque".
The spirit of the underground disco was marked by the
size of the clubs (they were tiny with even smaller
dance floors); the subversion (parties were announced
via word of mouth); and even the privacy of the clubs
was conveyed through the manner in which drinks were
consumed, says Peter Braunstein.
PB:
People didn't order drinks the way we do, like OK, I'll
have a whiskey, OK, I'll have another whiskey. They'd
buy an actual bottle of whiskey, it would have their
name emblazoned on it, and then they would keep the
whiskey in a locker at the bottom room with the midget
dance floor. So you would then go back week after week
and you'd still be working off this one whiskey bottle.
MW:
By the early sixties, New York City had created its
own versions of the Paris discotheques. They slowly
grew bigger in size and by the end of the decade, the
novelty had worn off, but the hedonism hadn't. As Peter
Braunstein explains, the inherent hedonism of sixties
disco culture was co-opted by a more creative group
of revelers.
PB:
This was the era of gay disco culture, underground discos.
The most notorious one was right behind the Port Authority
Bus Terminal, it was called the Sanctuary. Basically
it was scandalous because it was a former church, a
Lutheran church that was converted into a gay nightclub.
As if that wasn't crazy enough for most people, you
had the deejay who actually started to mix. And this
club was notorious. You would have people outside at
4 am, piling out into the street.
MW:
The glamour of late nights that the gay scene started
then got mainstreamed by New York clubs like Studio
54. But some Americans hated it, and a few even went
so far as to riot against disco.
PB:
"Good Times" came out within a year of the
infamous Kaminsky Park riots, the "disco sucks"
demolition in which Chicago White Sox fans during an
impromptu disco demolition rally between games went
nuts and began tearing up the stadium, and they had
to cancel the game and it caused a lot of damage. There
was sort of a backlash against a lot of the demographics
that disco represented, its core audience being gay
men, a lot of blacks listened to disco, in fact it represented
every other demographic except the traditional white
male rock fans, and they were so afraid every time that
disco would take up a couple more notches on the charts,
they would see it as a personal attack as if their identity
was being violated.
MW:
Compare the sounds on the dance floor of 1979 with those
at disco's roots during the French resistance, and there
appears to be little in common. What they did share
was a rhythm that moved the counterculture and would-be
revolutionaries to while the hours away until they could
emerge into the daylight, and act like everybody else.
-
Marco Werman
original
article offline, copyright Marco Werman
Salsoul
- One of THE DISCO labels...
Salsoul
Records was founded in 1974 by the three Cayre Brothers
- Joe, Ken & Stanley. The name Salsoul was a blending
of Salsa and Soul. Salsoul Records was the first label
to release 12" Disco Mix singles to the public,
the first commercial 12" Disco Mix single ever
was: Double Exposure's "Ten Percent".
Before
the release of "Ten percent" the 12"
Disco Mix singles was only released as DJ promo's, the
success of this first "public" 12" single
made all the Disco labels start releasing 12"s
as well. In 1984 Salsoul was sold to RCA Records. For
more of the Salsoul story visit "Disco
Disco.com"
The
History Of House Music
It's been ten years since the first identifiably house
tracks were put on to vinyl, ten years which have changed
the technology behind the electronic music revolution
beyond recognition but left the basic structure of house
intact. It's seven years since it was being said house
couldn't last, that it was just hi-NRG, a fast blast
that would wither as quickly as it had started. But
then the music reinvented itself, and then again and
again until it gradually dawned on people that house
wasn't just another phase of club culture, it was club
culture, the continuing future of dance music. The reason?
It's simple. People like to dance to house.
The roots to 1985
Like it or not, house was first and foremost a direct
descendant of disco. Disco had already been going for
ten years when the first electronic drum tracks began
to appear out of Chicago, and in that time it had already
suffered the slings and arrows of merciless commercial
exploitation, dilution and racial and sexual prejudice
which culminated in the 'disco sucks' campaign. In one
bizarrely extreme incident, people attending a baseball
game in Chicago's Komishi Park were invited to bring
all their unwanted disco records and after the game
they were tossed onto a massive bonfire. Disco eventually
collapsed under a heaving weight of crass disco versions
of pop records and an ever-increasing volume of records
that were simply no good. But the underground scene
had already stepped off and was beginning to develop
a new style that was deeper, rawer and more designed
to make people dance. Disco had already produced the
first records to be aimed specifically at DJs with extended
12" versions that included long percussion breaks
for mixing purposes and the early eighties proved a
vital turning point. Sinnamon's 'Thanks To You', D-Train's
'You're The One For Me' and The Peech Boys' 'Don't Make
Me Wait', a record that's been continually sampled over
the last decade, took things in a different direction
with their sparse, synthesized sounds that introduced
dub effects and drop-outs that had never been heard
before.
But it wasn't just American music laying the groundwork
for house. European music, spanning English electronic
pop like Depeche Mode and Soft Cell and the earlier,
more disco based sounds of Giorgio Moroder, Klein &
MBO and a thousand Italian productions were immensely
popular in urban areas like New York and Chicago. One
of the reasons for their popularity was two clubs that
had simultaneously broken the barriers of race and sexual
preference, two clubs that were to pass on into dance
music legend - Chicago's Warehouse and New York's Paradise
Garage. Up until then, and after, the norm was for Black,
Hispanic, White, straight and gay to segregate themselves,
but with the Warehouse, opened in 1977 and presided
over by Frankie Knuckles and the Garage where Larry
Levan spun, the emphasis was on the music. (Ironically,
Levan was first choice for the Warehouse, but he didn't
want to leave New York). And the music was as varied
as the clienteles - r'n'b based Black dance music and
disco peppered with things as diverse as The Clash's
'Magnificent Seven'. For most people, these were the
places that acted as breeding grounds for the music
that eventually came to be known after the clubs - house
and garage.
Right
from the start there was a difference in approach between
New York and Chicago. "All of the records coming
out of New York had been either mid or down tempo, and
the kids in Chicago wouldn't do that all night long,
they needed more energy" commented Frankie Knuckles
after his move to Chicago. The Windy City was seduced
to a far greater extent by the European sound and when
the records started to come, it showed. Whereas garage
in New York evolved more smoothly from First Choice
and the labels Salsoul, West End and Prelude, there
was no such evolution in Chicago. Opinions still differ
as to what the first house record was, but it was certainly
made by Jessie Saunders and it was on the Mitchball
label - probably Z Factor's 'Fantasy', but there was
also another Z Factor tune which went by the name of
'I Like To Do It In Fast Cars'. 'Fantasy' sounds extremely
dated now but ten years ago it was like a sound from
another planet, with echoes of Kraftwerk's heavily synthesized
string sounds, a Eurobeat bassline and a simple, insistent
drum machine pattern. Suffice to say, the record remained
obscure outside the close-knit urban Chicago scene.
"Those
records didn't really motivate people" says Adonis,
one of the early producers on the Chicago scene. "The
first was Jamie Principle's 'Waiting On Your Angel'.
See, before there were records there were cassettes,
and that was the hottest thing in Chicago. It was so
hot Jessie Saunders went in and recorded that track
word for word, note for note, and put it out on Larry
Sherman's label Precision. It was so influential that
four or five records came out that took its sounds."
Within a year though, others were fast joining. Saunders,
who by then had come out with his Jes-Say label, with
Farley Keith (or Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk) getting in
on the act. Frankie Knuckles, who had already done some
remixes for Salsoul was also beginning to work on his
own productions. By 1985 it was clear that something
big was beginning to stir. Ron Hardy, who was to become
the backbone of the Chicago club scene by consistently
breaking the new records, began playing at The Music
Box around the same time as Frankie Knuckles left The
Warehouse, and other DJs like Farley and the Hot Mix
5 who threw down the mix shows on the radio station
WBMX were making names for themselves. But making a
record wasn't the priority for most of the DJs at the
time - they were making music specifically to play at
the clubs and the parties that were beginning to spring
up in the city. Larry Heard and Robert Owens, later
to be known as Fingers Inc, and Steve Hurley were all
experimenting with basic rhythm tracks long before they
made the jump to vinyl.
"I
started dabbling in making my own music." says
Hurley. "Just making tracks to play as a DJ, not
really thinking as far as producing - more to do with
just having something to play that nobody else had.
And one of these tracks, 'Music Is The Key', got such
a good response that I decided to borrow some money
and go in with another guy, who happened to be Rocky
Jones, and put the record out."
That
momentous occasion was the beginning of DJ International
Records, one of the two labels that was to give all
the aspiring producers in the city a chance to get their
music on to vinyl. The other, Larry Sherman's Trax Records
was already up and running, though to begin with Sherman
was attempting to break into a more commercial market
with Precision. 'Music Is The Key' (the first house
record to include a rap, incidentally) took house on
a step by incorporating more musical elements and a
vocal, and by the time Chip E's 'Like This', also on
DJ International, appeared house had discovered real
vocals and the sampled stutter technique that's such
an integral part of dub remixes today. "It took
a little while for the sound to develop" remembers
London DJ Jazzy M, who worked in a record shop at the
time and was one of the very first to get house on the
radio in Britain with his immensely popular Jackin'
Zone show on London pirate station LWR. "When 'Like
This' and Adonis' 'No Way Back' came out, that's when
it picked up. At first it was just drum machine programs
and they were called trax, like there was Chip E Trax
and Kenny Jason Trax and that's what house was, with
maybe a few dodgy samples. I can remember talking to
Colin Faver, who was one of the first DJs here to get
into it, about 'Like This' and we were both really excited
by it."
Meanwhile,
things were gathering pace over in New York though the
development was a lot slower. Mixers like Larry Levan,
Tony Humphries, Timmy Regisford and Boyd Jarvis, who
came straight after Shep Pettibone and Jellybean Benitez
were making ground as remixers, and fired by the raw
club sound of Colonel Abrams, the deep, soulful club
sound that became known as garage was taking shape with
early releases on the Supertonics, Easy Street and Ace
Beat labels. Paul Scott was one of the first with 'Off
The Wall' in 1985 but before that there was Serious
Intention's deep dub classic 'You Don't Know' and even
before that was World Premiere's 'Share The Night'.
1986
While Frankie Knuckles had laid the groundwork for house
at the Warehouse, it was to be another DJ from the gay
scene that was really to create the environment for
the house explosion - Ron Hardy. Where Knuckles' sound
was still very much based in disco, Hardy was the DJ
that went for the rawest, wildest rhythm tracks he could
find and he made The Music Box the inspirational temple
for pretty much every DJ and producer that was to come
out of the Chicago scene. He was also the DJ to whom
the producers took their very latest tracks so they
could test the reaction on the dance floor. Larry Heard
was one of those people.
"People would bring their tracks on tape and the
DJ would play spin them in. It was part of the ritual,
you'd take the tape and see the crowd reaction. I never
got the chance to take my own stuff because Robert (Owens)
would always get there first."
"The
Music Box was underground " remembers Adonis. "You
could go there in the middle of the winter and it'd
be as hot as hell, people would be walking around with
their shirts off. Ron Hardy had so much power people
would be praising his name while he was playing, and
I've got the tapes to prove it!
"The
difference between Frankie and Ronnie was that people
weren't making records when Frankie was playing, though
all the guys who would become the next DJs were there
checking him out. It was The Music Box that really inspired
people. I went there one night and the next day I was
in the studio making 'No Way Back' " In 1985 the
records were few and far between. By 1986 the trickle
had turned to a flood and it seemed like everybody in
Chicago was making house music. The early players were
joined by a rush of new talent which included the first
real vocal talents of house - Liz Torres, Keith Nunally
who worked with Steve Hurley, and Robert Owens who joined
up with Larry Heard to form Fingers Inc, though the
duo had already worked with Harri Dennis on The It's
'Donnie' -and key producers like Adonis, Mr Lee, K Alexi
and a guy who was developing a deep, melodic sound that
relied on big strings and pounding piano - Marshall
Jefferson.
Marshall
worked with a number of people like Harri Dennis and
Vince Lawrence for projects like Jungle Wonz and Virgo,
who made the stunning 'RU Hot Enough'. But it was 'Move
Your Body' that became THE house record of 1986, so
big that both Trax and DJ International found a way
to release it, and it was no idle boast when the track
was subtitled 'The House Music Anthem', because that's
exactly what it was. Jefferson was to become the undisputed
king of house, going on to make a string of brilliant
records with Hercules and On The House and developing
the quintessential deep house sound first with vocalist
Curtis McClean and then with Ce Ce Rogers and Ten City.
"I can remember clearing a floor with that record"
laughs Jazzy M. "Though they'd started playing
it in Manchester, most of London was still caught up
in that rare groove and hip hop thing. A lot of people
were saying to me 'why are you playing this hi- NRG'
and it was hard work but people were starting to get
into it." 'Move Your Body' was undoubtedly the
record that really kicked off house in the UK, first
played repeatedly by the established pirate radio stations
in London, which at the time played right across the
Black music spectrum, and then by club DJs like Mike
Pickering, Colin Faver, Eddie Richards, Mark Moore and
Noel and Maurice Watson, the latter two playing at the
first club in London to really support house - Delirium.
Radio
was the key to the explosion in Chicago. Farley Jackmaster
Funk had secured a spot on the adventurous WBMX station,
playing after midnight every day, and it wasn't long
before he brought in the Hot Mix 5 which included Mickey
Oliver, Ralphie Rosario, Mario Diaz and Julian Perez,
and Steve Hurley, giving people who couldn't go to the
parties the chance to hear the music. Then there was
Lil Louis, who was throwing his own parties. By this
time, house was moving out of the gay scene and on to
wider acceptance, though in Chicago at least it was
to remain very much a Black thing. Though a number of
Hispanics were on the house scene, the number of White
DJs and producers could be counted on one hand.
The
labels were still mostly limited to the terrible twins
that were to dominate Chicago house for the next two
years Trax and DJ International. Between them they had
nearly all the local talent sewn up and by popular consent
they were just as dodgy as each other, with rumors and
stories of rip-offs and generally dubious activity endlessly
circulating. Everybody it seemed, was stealing from
everybody else. One that remains largely untold involved
Frankie Knuckles. "This was the story at the time"
recalls Adonis. "Supposedly Frankie sold Jamie
Principle's unreleased tapes to DJ International AND
Trax at the same time. Then Jamie came out with a record
called 'Knucklehead' dissing Frankie. After that Frankie
went back to New York."
When
Rocky Jones at DJ International became convinced by
a larger- than-life character named Lewis Pitzele who
was helping put a lot of the deals together at the time
that Europe was the place to focus on, house poured
into Britain with London Records putting the first compilation
of early DJ International material out. As the press
bandwagon rolled into action the 86 Chicago House Party
featuring Adonis, Marshall Jefferson, Fingers Inc and
Kevin Irving toured the UK's clubs. Trax took a little
longer
Adonis:
"Trax was meant to be a bullshit label for all
the dirty, raggedy records Larry Sherman didn't give
a shit about. You know, labels were always trying to
do radio stuff, but Trax became popular after 'No Way
Back' and 'Move Your Body' and all those tracks."
It was DJ International and London who notched up the
first house hits, first with Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk's
'Love Can't Turn Around', a cover of the old Isaac Hayes
song with camp wailer Daryl Pandy on vocals which reached
Number 10 in September 1986, and then a record that
spent months gestating in the clubs before it was finally
catapulted to Number One in January 1987 - Jim Silk's
'Jack Your Body'. The Americans were gob smacked. Their
underground club music was going mainstream four thousand
miles from its home. But it was no surprise that Steve
Hurley was behind the track, which hit the top despite
only having three words - the title. Even then he was
the one with the commercial touch. It wasn't a terribly
original record - the bassline was from First Choice's
'Let No Man Put Asunder', but it summed up the mood
of jack fever. All of a sudden the word 'Jack', which
originally described the form of dancing people did
to house, was everywhere 'Jack The Box', 'Jack The House',
'Jack To The Sound' 'J-J-J-J-JJack-Jack-Jack-Jack'.
It was the stutter sample on the 'J' that took the word
into legend. Vaughan Mason's Raze, who'd quietly been
doing stuff out of Washington DC burst into the clubs
and then followed Jim Silk into the charts with 'Jack
The Groove'. And garage? New York simply couldn't match
the energy flowing out of Chicago but there was little
doubt that the music was developing simultaneously.
The Jersey garage sound, boosted by Tony Humphries (who'd
also been on the radio since 1981) at Newark's Zanzibar
Club, was beginning to take shape with Blaze but the
New York club sound was defined at the time by Dhar
Braxton's 'Jump Back' and Hanson & Davis' 'Hungry
For Your Love' which borrowed heavily from the Latin
freestyle sound but echoed the energy of house. And
over in Brooklyn, producers like Tommy Musto working
for the Underworld/Apexton label were developing a different
style again, one that like Chicago seemed to take its
roots as much from Eurobeat as from Black music, though
the mood and tempo was strictly New York.
1987
While Chicago stole the thunder in 1986, other cities
not only in the United States but across the world had
either been absorbing house or working on their own
thing, biding their time. One record from New York served
a warning shot that the city was gearing up for some
serious action - 'Do It Properly' by 2 Puerto Ricans,
A Blackman and A Dominican. 'Do It Properly' was essentially
a bootleg of Adonis' 'No Way Back' with loads of samples
and a great electronic keyboard riff squeezed in to
it and the first in a long, long line of New York sample
house tracks. Its producers were one Robert Clivilles
and David Cole, helped by another guy called David Morales.
After that some kid in Brooklyn called Todd Terry made
a couple of sample tracks with a freestyle groove for
Fourth Floor Records by an act he called Masters At
Work.
But the sound that was really taking shape in New York
and New Jersey was a deep style of club music based
on a heritage that had its roots firmly in r'n'b. Though
there were some superb deep, emotive instrumentats like
Jump St. Man's 'B-Cause', the emphasis was on songs,
which came with Arnold Jarvis' 'Take Some Time', Touch's
'Without You', Exit's 'Let's Work It Out' and a record
on Movln, a new label run from a record store in New
Jersey's East Orange - Park Ave's 'Don't Turn Your Love'.
Ironically, as the first garage hits began to appear,
The Paradise Garage - Larry Levan had already left -
closed, but the vibe carried on with Blaze, who recorded
'If You Should Need A Friend' and Jomanda, both of whom
teamed up with new New York label Quark.
Echoing
the need for vocals in house music, deep house began
to take hold in Chicago. Following Marshall Jefferson's
lush productions, the record that defined deep house
was the Nightwriters' 'Let The Music Use You', mixed
by Frankie Knuckles and sung by Ricky Dillard, a record
that a year later was to become one of the anthems of
the UK's Summer Of Love. And it didn't end there. Kym
Mazelle launched her career with 'Taste My Love' and
'I'm A Lover', while Ralphie Rosario unleashed the monstrous
'You Used To Hold Me' featuring the wailing tonsils
of Xavier Gold. Then there was Ragtyme's 'I Can't Stay
Away', sung by a guy who sounded a a little like a new
Smokey Robinson - Byron Stingily. Soon after, Ragtyme,
who also made an extremely silly innuendo track called
'Mr Fixit Man', mutated into Ten Clty. But Chicago's
excursion into songs wasn't only characterised by uplifting
wailers. There was another side, led by the weird, melanchoty
songs of Fingers Inc and beginning to show itself in
other minimalist productions like MK II's 'Don't Stop
The Muslc' and 2 House People's 'Move My Body'. By 1987,
though house was no longer a tale of two cities. The
virus was taklng hold elsewhere as clubbers, DJs and
producers worldwide became exited by the new music.
It
was obvious that Britain, which had already seen a massive
boom in club culture in the mid-eighties as the increasingly
racially integrated urban areas turned to Black music
in favour of the indigeonous indie rock music, would
eventually get in on the act. Though acts like Huddersfield's
Hotline, The Beatmasters from London and a handful of
others who included DJs Ian B and Eddie Richards had
been trying to figure things out, the first British
house track to really make any noise came from a partnership
that included a DJ from Manchester's Hacienda, one of
the very first clubs in Britain to devote whole nights
to house music - Mike Pickering. With its funk bassline
and Latin piano riffs, T-Coy's 'Carino' busted out all
over, particularly in London at previously rap and funk
clubs like Raw. But with the open nature of the UK pop
charts compared to Billboard which was an impossibly
tough nut to crack for small labels marketing new music,
it was inevitable that the sound would be commercialised.
'Pump Up The Volume' by M/A/R/R/S was a rather lightweight
record based on a house beat with a number of clever
(at the time) samples but it worked like crazy on the
dancefloor and it wasn't long before club support propelled
it into the charts, where it held Number 1 for an incredible
three weeks. Also in the top ten at the same time was
another record that had broken out of Chicago - the
House Master Boyz' 'House Nation'. The marketability
of house - or pophouse - in the UK became gruesomely
apparent with the advent of the 'Jack Mix' series, a
number of hideous stars-on-45 style megamixes of all
the house hits.
Things
were progressing in a much more underground fashion
back in the States. A few guys in particular who'd been
noticed hanging out in Chicago and checking the scene
came from a city just a couple of hundred miles away
Detroit. One of them, Juan Atkins, had been making records
since the early eighties under the moniker Cybotron
which specialised in spacey electro-funk fired by the
Euro rhythms of Kraftwerk. But progress had been slow
and electro had already fused with rap. By 1985 Atkins'
sound was beginning to change with records like Model
500's 'No UFO's', which bore more than a passing resemblance
to the new sounds emanating from their neighbouring
city. Two other guys who had been to school with Atkins,
and who shared his passion for European music were also
beginning to experiment with making tracks and heartened
by what they heard coming out of Chicago, set to work
Their first tracks, X-Ray's 'Let's Go', produced by
Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson's 'Triangle Of Love'
by Kreem weren't classics by any stretch of the imagination
but it didn't tahe them long to hit full power. Kevin
came out with 'Force Field' and 'Just Want Another Chance',
and Juan pressed on with Model 500's 'Sound Of Stereo'
but it was Derrick who really hit the button with Rhythim
Is Rhythm's 'Nude Photo', 'Kaos' and 'The Dance', all
of which were immediate hits on the Chicago scene, and
the latter a record that was to be thieved and sampled
again and again for years to come. The Belleville Three,
as they became known after the college they attended,
made an amusing trio with Kevin as the regular guy,
Derrick as the fast-talking nutter and Juan as the laid-back
smokehead, but there was more to techno than that. Two
other producers who helped forge the different sound
were Eddie Fowlkes and Blake Baxter. It was faster,
more frantic, even more influenced by European electrobeat
and severed the continium with disco and Philadelphia,
taking only the space funk basslines of George Ctinton
from Black music. They called it techno. But Chicago
was also beginning to head off into another direction,
the most frenetic form of house yet. It was started
by two crazy tracks that Ron Hardy had been pumping
at the Music Box and it was going to be perhaps the
most important stage of house so far. It was acid.
1988
In truth, acid house had already started long before
1988. Amongst the scores of Chicagoans who were buying
equipment and trying to learn how to make tracks was
one DJ Pierre, who'd started out playing Italian imports
at roller discos in the Chicago suburbs, and who had
joined Lil Louis for his notorious parties.
"Phuture was me and two other guys, Spanky and
Herbert J." remembers Pierre. "We had this
Roland 303, which was a bassline machine, and we were
trying to figure out how to use it. When we switched
it on, that acid sound was already in it and we liked
the sound of it so we decided to add some drums and
make a track with it. We gave it to Ron Hardy who started
playing it straight away. In fact, the first time he
played it, he played it four times in one night! The
first time people were like, 'what the fuck is this?'
but by the the fourth they loved it. Then I started
to hear that Ron was playing some new thing they were
calling 'Ron Hardy's Acid Trax', and everybody thought
it was something he'd made himself. Eventually we found
out that it was our track so we called it 'Acid Trax'.
I think we may have made it as early as 1985, but Ron
was playing it for a long time before it came out."
Explanations
for the name of 'acid' have been long and varied, but
the most popular, and the one endorsed by a number of
people who were there at the time was that they used
to put acid in the water at the Music Box. Pierre though,
stresses that Phuture was always anti- drugs, and cites
a track about a cocaine nightmare, 'Your Only Friend'
that was on the same EP as 'Acid Trax'. 'Acid Trax'
came out in 1986 but made little impact outside Chicago,
as was the case with another acid track, Sleazy D's
'I've Lost Control', which slapped a deranged laugh
and some geezer repeating the title over the 303 squelching.
'I've Lost Control' was made by Adonis and Marshall
Jefferson and was certainly the first acid track to
make it to vinyl, though which was created first will
possibly never be known for sure. It wasn't until well
into 1987 that the acid sound began to infiltrate Britain,
fuelled by another track that was getting a lot club
play, and which fitted into the sound Bam Bam's 'Give
It To Me', and a diversion of the regular acid track
which put vocals into the equation, developed by Pierre's
Phantasy Club with 'Fantasy Girl'. The house scene in
Britain had faltered following the commercialisation
of the poppier end of the spectrum, but towards the
end of 1987 the underground was taking off with new
LP compilation series like 'Jack Trax' and the opening
in London of seminal clubs like Shoom and Spectrum and
the move of Delirium to Heaven where the main dancefloor
became exclusively house. Delirium's Deep House Convention
atLeicester Square's Empire in February 1988 which featured
a number of seminal Chicago artists like Kym Mazelle,
Fingers Inc, Xavier Gold. Marshall Jefferson and Frankie
Knuckles was a depressing event because of the poor
turnout. But the people who did go were to be become
the prime movers of London's house explosion. The next
week a warehouse party called Hedonism was rammed and
the soundtrack was acid. Acid house UK style had begun.
As
acid tracks like Armando's '151' and 'Land Of Confusion',
Bam Bam's 'Where's Your Child' and Adonis' 'The Poke'
began to flow out out of Chicago, the scene grew at
a rate of knots with Rip, Love, Future, Contusion and
Trip opening in London, and the legendary Nude in Manchester.
DJs suddenly discovered they had a year's worth of classic
house which hitherto they'd been unable to play. When
WBMX in Chicago closed down, signalling the end of radio
play for the music in the city, it was clear that the
emphasis had switched to the UK. Acid house became the
biggest youth cult in Britain since punk rock a decade
before as British house records like Bang The Party's
'Release Your Body', Jullan Jonah's 'Jealousy &
Lies' (later used as the backbone of Electrlbe 101's
'Talking With Myself'), Baby Ford's 'Oochy Koochy',
A Guy Called Gerald's Voodoo Ray, and Richie Rich's
'Salsa House' became huge club hits, before the chart
UK house records emerged with S'Express' 'Theme From
S'Express', D-Mob's 'We Call It Acid', which popularised
the ridiculous but funny club chant of 'Aciiieeeeed!'
and Jolly Roger's 'Acid Man'. Opinions differ as to
the effect on the scene of the relatively new drug ecstasy,
but there was little doubt that the sudden rise in availabilny
of the drug was directly related to the growth of the
club scene. Before the tabloids discovered what was
going on with their inevitably lurid headlines about
'Acid House Parties' and drug barons, it was easy to
see people openly imbibing the drug in any club.
Like
Chicago radio was to prove crucial to spreading house
in Britain. But this wasn't any kind of legitimate radio.
Save for a few token shows, you couldn't hear Black
music or dance music on legal radio, and eventually
the demand turned into supply in the form of numerous
pirate stations, mostly in and around London but also
in a few other big cities. Most of them were on and
off the air in months or even weeks, but the more organised
stations managed to keep going, supplying hungry listeners
with the music they wanted to hear - reggae, soul, jazz,
hip hop - and house. Steve Jackson's House That Jack
Built on Kiss and Jazzy M's 'Jacking Zone' on LWR pumped
out the new music week in, week out.
"When
LWR was what you call the boom, it was on half a million
listeners." says Jazzy M. And we knew that because
the surveys were actually being published in newspapers
The Jacking Zone was getting 40-50 letters a week and
I was broke because all my wages went on new tunes.
Once that plane had landed with the imports, I was getting
the new records on the show the same night. It was unbelievable."
1988
wasn't just acid it was the year that house first really
began to diversify. For a start, there was the 'Balearic'
business, an eclectic style of DJing which at the time
encompassed dance mixes of pop artists like Mandy Smith
and quasi-industrial music like Nitzer Ebb's 'Join In
The Chant' Championed by Danny Rampling, Nicky Holloway,
Paul Oakenfold and Johnny Walker who'd all been to Ibiza,
Balearic was an integral part of the club scene at the
time, but after the gushing media overkill it all became
a little farcical as people attempted to make Balearic
records There was, of course no such thing
Then
there were the anthems. A year's worth of inspirational
Chicago deep house, which went back to the Nightwriters
and took in Joe Smooth's 'Promised Land' and Sterling
Void's 'It's Alright' along the way became some of the
biggest club records of the year, while Marshall Jefferson
took the music to new highs with Ten City's 'Devotion'
and Ce Ce Rogers 'Someday'. Marshall was on a roll in
88, picking up remixes and linking up with Kym Mazelle
for 'Useless' It was the deep house that spawned the
first two house LP's, which naturally came out in Britain
first - Fingers Inc's benchmark 'Another Side' and Liz
Torres With Master C & J's excellent 'Can't Get
Enough'.
Ten
City were an important stage in the development of house.
With self-conviction unusually high for the time, they
snubbed the Chicago labels which by that time were losing
their artists more quickly than they could sign them,
and headed for Atlantic records in New York where Merlin
Bobb promptly snapped them up. Where nearly all the
house that had gone before them was strictly producer
created, Ten City were an act, and they could be marketed
as such. Plus, they returned some of the soul vision
to house, a tradition that went all the way back to
the Philly sound it was no coincidence that 'Devotion'
was one of the first records from Chicago to really
do well on the East Coast, which always had much stronger
r'n'b roots in its club music. After another huge club
hit with 'Right Back To You', they broached the UK top
Ten in January 1989 with 'That's The Way Love Is' Even
Detroit was discovering songs. Though the new techno
sound was by now at full tilt with Rhythm Is Rhythm's
anthem 'Strings 0f Life' Model 500's 'Off To Battle'
and Reese & Santonio's 'Rock To The Beat', it was
Inner City's 'Big Fun' a techno song with vocals by
Chicagoan Paris Grey that was to propel Kevin Saunderson
into the big time. Originally a track recorded for Virgin's
groundbreaking 'Techno! The New Dance Sound Of Detroit'
LP, 'Big Fun' was just too commercial to hold back,
and Saunderson suddenly found himself in a virtually
full-time pop duo making videos, follow-up singles and
EPs like any other pop act.
Chicago
however was still finding new things to do with house,
though the next trend wasn't to be anything like as
significant. There had already been raps put down to
house tracks as early as 1985 with 'Music Is The Key'
and more recently with M-Doc's 'It's Percussion', The
Beatmasters' 'Rok Da House' and New York's KC Flight
with 'Let's Get Jazzy'. But it was Tyree Cooper (who'd
already had a big club record with 'Acid Over') and
rapper Kool Rock Steady who defined the hip-house style
with 'Turn Up The Bass', a galloping track which somehow
combined Kool's rap with the classic Chicago piano sound
and Tyree's trademark 909 roll. It wasn't long before
Fast Eddie, also at DJ International, expanded it with
'Yo Yo Get Funky'.
But
the biggest new producer of 1988 was someone who didn't
come from Chicago at all. Or Detroit. New York was beginning
to flex its muscles, the city that had always regarded
itself the world's capital for dance music wanted some
of the limelight back. But it wasn't an established
figure in the New York or New Jersey dance scene that
broke through, it was a kid from Brooklyn who was showing
an incredible alacrity for the new form of sampling
that had been co- developing with house - Todd Terry.
First it was those Masters At Work tracks, but after
that Todd hit house in a big way with 'Bango' (at which
Kevin Saunderson was highly miffed, because it heavily
sampled one of his records), 'Just Wanna Dance', Swan
Lake's 'In The Name Of Love', Black Riot's 'A Day In
The Life' and 'Warlock' and the one that was almost
certainly the biggest club record of the year - Royal
House's 'Can You Party!'. Though in New York Todd's
sample tracks were firmly categorized with the Latin
freestyle house sound that the Hispanics were developing,
in the UK Todd became the toast of the house scene.
In a by now familiar scenario, 'Can You Party' hit the
Top 20 in October on a wave of club support, closely
followed by another track on the new Big Beat label
out of New York, Kraze's 'The Party'.
As
it became more and more apparent that Chicago was grinding
to a halt, New York was getting it together, with more
labels like Cutting (who'd already released Nitro Deluxe's
classic 'Let's Get Brutal' in 1987) and Warlock turning
to house and new labels starting up. One of these was
to prove more important than all the rest - Nu Groove.
1989
By now the UK and its trend-hungry music press had become
the local point of the dance music world. After acid
had slumped into fatuousness with the adopted logo of
acid, the smiley, appearing on t- shirts racked up in
every high street and the mainstream press (including
the 'qualities') scuttling after every whiff of a half-arsed
drug story, they discovered new beat from Belgium. The
trouble was that save for one or two genuinely good
records like A Split Second's 'Flesh', nearly everyone
outside Belgium hated new beat, a sort of sluggish cross
between acid, techno and heavy industrial Euro music
and the media hype dissolved into a number of red faces.
Then they discovered garage. 'Garage' as a term had
already long been in use on the house scene to differentiate
the smooth, soulful songs flowing from New York and
New Jersey from the more energetic, uplifting deep house
out of Chicago. But the hype on this supposedly new
music did allow a lot of very good acts a chance of
exposure that otherwise they wouldn't have had. The
Americans were confused. To most New Yorkers and Jerseyites,
garage was what was played at the Paradise' Garage,
which had closed two years earlier. What they were making
was club music or dance music, and house was all that
track stuff from Chicago. But they were happy that someone
somewhere was getting off on their sound. Tony Humphries,
who'd been on New York's Kiss FM since 1981 and at the
Zanzibar in New Jersey since 1982, was to become instrumental
in exposing the Jersey sound. Though he was one of more
open-minded DJ's In the New York area, his was the style
that married real r'n'b based dance to house.
"I really saw house start with the Virgo 1 record,
which had that 'Love Is The Message' skip beat, and
I was using that and a lot of other Chicago stuff as
filler between the vocals, so if I was to play Jean
Carne I would use the Virgo drum track before it. Vocals
was always very much my thing, and I would say the people
from Chicago we really respected in Jersey were Marshall
Jefferson, Frankie Knuckles and JM Silk. A lot of it
was really Philly elements, it was like Philly living
on forever, and that was our flavor. "I became
known for breaking new stuff, and to stay ahead of everyone
I had to come up with more and more demos. I wanted
to help all the people around me in Jersey, so around
88-89 I did a huge showcase with all the acts at Zanzibar
first on my birthday and then at the New Music Seminar.
Suddenly everyone was talking about the Jersey sound."
Blaze
were the forerunners of the new soul vision, followed
by their protégés Phase II, who struck
big with the optimism anthem 'Reachin', and Hippie Torrales'
Turntable Orchestra with 'You're Gonna Miss Me'. Then
there were the girls - Vicky Martin with 'Not Gonna
Do It' and of course, Adeva, behind whom was the talented
Smack Productions team. ' In And Out 0f My Life' had
already been released by Easy Street a year before,
but when Cooltempo signed the Jersey wailer up on the
basis of her cover of Aretha Franklin's 'Respect', mainstream
success was more than on the cards - it was a dead cert.
'Respect' entered the Top 40 in January and hung around
for two months, by which time Chanelle's 'One Man' and
then her own collaboration with Paul Simpson, 'Musical
Freedom' had followed the example. It didn't end there.
Jomanda, who shared the billing with Tony Humphries
at a massive event stage in Brixton's Academy were next
with 'Make My Body Rock', and though they were to become
successful in the States, their sound never crossed
over in the UK.
New
York was stepping up the pace in grand fashion and there
was a lot more going on than just the Jersey sound.
Following Todd Terry's success, the New York sample
track was breaking out like wildfire, particularly with
Frankie Bones, Tommy Musto and Lenny Dee at Fourth Floor,
Breakln' Bones and Nu Groove records. Nu Groove, built
on the foundation of the Burrell twins who'd escaped
from an abortive r'n'b career with Virgin Records, was
fast becoming the hippest house label. Nu Groove had
started the year before with records like Bas Noir's
'My Love Is Magic' and Aphrodisiac's 'Your Love' and
by 1989 they were on a roll. Nu Groove never had a sound
- with producers as disparate as the Burrells, Bobby
Konders and Frankie Bones that wasn't conceivable -
and they never really had one big record, but the concept
of the label went from strength to strength. Among their
producers was Kenny 'Dope' Gonzalez, yet to hook up
with Little Louie Vega, who was moving into house with
his Freestyle Orchestra project. Nu Groove's first competitor
was to come in the form of Strictly Rhythm, who opened
up in 1989, though their first breakthrough wasn't to
come until the following year. Two other New York producers
who were also beginning to make a lot of noise were
Clivilles and Cole with Seduction's 'Seduction' and
their excellent deep, dubby mix of Sandee's 'Notice
Me'. Their break into the mainstream came with a mix
of Natalie Cole's 'Pink Cadillac'. Another guy who was
also beginning to make a name for himself as a house
remixer was David Morales.
But
one of the biggest records on the burgeoning UK rave
scene was a record that made very little impact in its
native New York - the 2 In A Room LP on Cutting Records,
a follow-up to 2 In A Room's 'Somebody In The House
Say Yeah' that included a clutch of firing sample tracks
from Todd Terry, Louie Vega, George Morel and a few
other producers known only on the Latin freestyle scene
in New York.
By
Summer 89 the acid house scene had grown into the rave
scene which was becoming so big that promoters came
up with the idea of putting on huge events in the countryside
outside London - events that could not only hold thousands
of people but which could go on all night. Although
the scene was later to degenerate with an increasingly
narrow musical policy, ludicrously numerous DJ line-ups
and suffer from gangster style promoters who saw how
much money could be made, at the time it was incredibly
broad. Alongside the regular house movers, records like
Corporation Of One's 'Real Life', Karlya's 'Let Me Love
You For Tonight' and 808 State's 'Pacific' became the
open air anthems.
Several
of those anthems came from a label that had started
up in Canada the year before. Toronto's Big Shot Records
was the brainchild of producers Andrew Komis and Nick
Fiorucci, and they were startled when Amy Jackson's
'Let It Loose', Index's 'Give Me A Sign', Jillian Mendez's
'Get Up' and Dionne's 'Come Get My Lovin' became huge
club records in the UK.
"I
was dumbfounded about England. To me it was soccer players
and the Queen, but if it wasn't for the dance stores
in London and Record Mirror I'd probably be working
in a hardware store." Andrew Komis. Again, the
scene was largely fueled by radio. Though the original
pirates had come off the air in an attempt to gain licenses
(Kiss eventually managed it in 1990) and the penalties
had been sharply increased, a new generation of pirates
were on the air - Sunrise, Center force, Fantasy, Dance
and countless others. Young, loud and incredibly unprofessional,
they pumped out an endless diet of underground house
music round the clock and shamelessly promoted all the
raves.
Another
set of incredibly successful records came from a country
only marginally more likely than Canada. House records
from the Continent were becoming more and more common,
though most of them were sub-standard covers of US and
UK records, and when Italy's Cappella crashed the charts
with 'Helyom Halib' it was really only because it was
based on a huge club record from Chicago which had never
managed to crossover - LNR's 'Work It To The Bone'.
Then came Starlight with 'Numero Uno' and Black Box
with 'Ride On Time', both the work of production team
Groove Groove Melody. 'Ride On Time' was a brilliant
concept, taking the vocals from Loleatta Holloway's
'Love Sensation' and putting them to a sizzling piano
anthem. There was no holding it back. As the record
flew up the charts on its way to becoming the first
house Number 1 since 'Jack Your Body', the floodgates
opened. Italo-house was a happy, uplifting lightweight
sound nurtured in the hedonistic clubs of the Adriatic
resorts Rimini and Riccioni, and it gatecrashed everything
from the large raves to the hippest clubs. Those that
argued that there was no substance behind it (a lot
of the records WERE extremely corny) were foiled when
a more mature sound emerged with Sueno Latino's 'Sueno
Latino' and Soft House Company's 'What You Need.' Despite
their initial insistence that 'Ride On Time' wasn't
all sampled, Black Box managed to record a very good
album, though they promptly pulled a similar stunt on
Martha Wash, who wasn't at all amused. The Italians
would go on to become an integral part of house music,
with one of the most consistent labels, Irma, proving
acceptance in New York by opening up shop there.
Even
in 1989, when house music had become the property of
the world, Chicago still had a few tricks up its sleeve.
Led by people like Steve Poindexter and Armando, the
new underground of the city was returning to its roots
with a new, minimalist style even rougher and rawer
than the original drum tracks, a sound that was to join
acid and techno in forming the roots of the hardcore
scene. Another producer who'd led the way with crazy
tracks like 'War Games' and 'Video Clash' was Lil Louis.
While his spinning partner DJ Pierre became entangled
in a fruitless contract with Jive Records (a fate that
also befell Liz Torres), who'd opened up in Chicago,
Louis' time came in 1989 with a track that slowed down
to a complete halt and had as a vocal only a senes a
female love moans - 'French Kiss'. 'French Kiss' was
a huge club record and eventually it climbed to Number
2 in the charts and landed Louis an album deal with
Epic in the States and ffrr in the UK. Though the style
had started three years earlier with Jackmaster Dick's
'Sensuous Woman Goes Disco' and Raze's 'Break 4 Love'
the previous year, 'French Kiss' began a sex track phenomenon
that was to last a long time.
Another
group that broke out of Chicago was Da Posse, formed
by Hula, K Fingers, Martell and Maurice. Their early
tracks like 'In The Life' were mostly based on old Rhythm
Is Rhythm records, but 'Searchin Hard', a deep house
song on Dance Mania records led them to a deal with
Dave Lee's Republic Records, for whom they eventually
recorded an excellent album. Later they formed their
own label, Clubhouse Records.
Two
other house originals also teamed up in 1989 - Frankie
Knuckles and Robert Owens, who recorded 'Tears' with
Japanese keyboardist Satoshi Tomiie. 'Tears' was a great
record but mystifyingly, even in the year of house hits,
it failed to make the charts. Though Kevin Saunderson,
Derrick May and Juan Atkins had become very popular
with the majors as remixers, Detroit had become very
quiet, and the only club that supported techno, the
Music Institute, had closed down. But a resurgence was
on the horizon with new producers like Carl Craig and
a young protégé of Saunderson who had
just made his first record for KMS - Marc Kinchen.
Despite
the studied apathy of the American music business and
repeated attempts to replace house in Britain with just
about anything - Soul II Soul and their numerous imitators
proved more of a hiccup than anything else the 4/4 bass
kick entered the new decade stronger than ever, underground
dance scenes developing in new cities and new countries
with every month that passed. Even Spain underwent its
own acid house craze in 89, and threw up the talented
Barcelona producer Raul Orellana, who created a style
all of his own by merging flamenco with house. A comment
made in 1988 by Robert Owens on the UK TV documentary
'Club Culture' was proving truer and truer.
"It's
not just boom boom boom. They're telling me something
here. Something I can dance to and learn from. I can
see house music becoming universal one day. It'll just
take time for people to receive it."
written
by Phil Cheeseman for DJ magazine.
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