Artist: Pebbles Title: Mercedes Boy (Extended Remix) Year: 1988 Label: MCA Records Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
Pieces Of A Dream – “Rising To The Top” (UK Remix)…
Artist: Pieces Of A Dream Title: Rising To The Top (UK Remix) Year: 1988 Label: EMI – Manhattan Records Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
Pieces Of A Dream – “Ain’t My Love Enough” (UK 12-inch)…
Artist: Pieces Of A Dream Title: Ain’t My Love Enough (UK 12-inch) Year: 1988 Label: EMI – Manhattan Records Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
Although Hey DJ was released in 1984, but the first time I’ve heard and bought it was in Christmas time 1986 in England. Lots of good tracks with similar sound and feel, like this one, were released at that time. Stellar production on this 12-inch single. As mentioned in the blog/post previous to this one, Doug Wimbish on the bass and bass-synthesizers; Keith LeBlank on the drums; and synth & drum machine programming by Jack Waldman, Clifton Chase and Craig Peyton. Although Stephen Hague produced this track, Malcolm McLaren was somehow involved heavily in Hey DJ (check out the music video below).
World’s Famous Supreme Team – “Hey DJ” (Extended)…
Artist: World’s Famous Supreme Team Title: Hey DJ (Extended) Year: 1984 Label: Charisma Records Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
World’s Famous Supreme Team – “Hey DJ” (Extended Instrumental)…
Artist: World’s Famous Supreme Team Title: Hey DJ (Extended Instrumental) Year: 1984 Label: Charisma Records Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
The production on this LP is stellar. Doug Wimbish on the bass and bass-synthesizers; Keith LeBlank on the drums; synth & drum machine programming by Jack Waldman, Clifton Chase and Craig Peyton; background vocals by Divine; there’s even a five-member horn section; and the list goes on. One of the tracks is even produced by Malcolm McLaren (“Hey DJ“).
I decided to post Misery because of how it sounds. Nice keyboard layers. It’s an emotional track produced by Bradshaw Leigh. Even though the title of this track may seem like a downer, but in fact the track is very powerful, uplifting and inspirational in the positive direction.
I used to walk around Toronto and London a lot back in the day while listening to Misery on my walkman. The track’s powerful note and chord progressions served as the driving soundtrack to the vivid visuals which I’ve imagined/created in my head, going through my own kind of transcendental and meditational real-life montage. If I remember correctly, there were few images of beautiful faces from pretty women going through my mind, like a music video in slow motion. Heh, I was only 15 years old!
World’s Famous Supreme Team – “Misery”…
Artist: World’s Famous Supreme Team Title: Misery Year: 1986 Label: Charisma Records Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
Previously blogged about Doug Wimbish on September 18, 2009 (click here to read)
Title: Don’t Forget That Beat Year: 1985 Genre: Electronic Funk Drumbeat Industrial Comment: Doug Wimbish is one bad-ass bassist. He collaborated with Fats Comet on this track. Both are from the UK. Their sound is like Art Of Noise meets Africa Bambaattaa meets Ministry (of 1985 sound).
There’s no measuring of how much I adore this song. I fell in love with it since its first release dating back in July/August 0f 1982, and I will take it to the grave with me when I pass on.
August of 1982…
My mother and father were taking me around London, shopping for a list of stuff required for me to bring to my boarding-school (Millfield Prep School) which was about to start the first week of the following September. At the age of 11 years-old, I had been deluged with fear. It was my first time being enrolled in a British boarding-school in Glastonbury countryside. I was counting the 40 or less days left until I would suffer separation anxiety from my mother. As a young Iraqi, I did not understand nor was able to adapt as well as the other British kids to the standards of being sent away from my family, for months at a time, to some place far away where kids sleep in dormitories with 12-plus persons in each room. No candy. No toys. No games (unless school provides them). No walkmans, no music! WHAT WHAT WHAT-!! FOR THE LOVE OF GOD-!!!
So I broke that rule! I made myself few compilation tapes of music recorded from 12-inch records. I had a Sony Walkman, one stereo headphones and one mono earphone with me at school. I was secretly listening to my tapes … nobody else ever knew about it. Even when I was in bed after lights-out, I used the concealed earphone to listen to music. Never once was I caught. I beat the system!
Just An Illusion was my savior all along. Played that track over and over again at school, until the cassette tape got worn out over time, thus sounding more hissy and saturated.
Christmas 1982, England…
Best white Christmas ever in my life. I was on a four-week holiday break and back at home with mom, dad and elder brother, Jeff. We had just moved into our new house in the countryside of Denham Village, Buckinghamshire. England was the best during Christmas seasons in my life. And this one in 1982 was the most special. As a family of non-believers of Islam, we celebrated Christmas for the first time with a bang. Biggest turkey ever. Snow outside. Christmas lights and decorations. People in Denham Village’s main Village-Road were cheery. Bright lights. Lots of sweets at the small shop owned and operated by a very sweet old lady. And on Christmas day, my brother gave me the best present ever: BMX bicycle. I never knew how to ride bikes before. But after six dedicated days of trying … and with the help of Imagination‘s Just An Illusion track playing on the walkman … I learned to ride a bike for the first time in my life on new year’s eve. The biggest achievement I’ve ever accomplished by leaps and bounds! It was magic! The emotion was sensational. The feeling was liberating … to be able to ride a machine that had two wheels and travel around the countryside alone … with the walkman on … listening to music. Countless of joyrides on that BMX while listening to Just An Illusion.
Imagination – “Just An Illusion” (Original Version)…
Artist: Imagination Title: Just An Illusion (Original Version) Year: 1982 Label: R & B Records
The following is quoted from from the sleeve-note of The Very Best Of Imagination, Just An Illusion double-CD (picture below):
Looking at Leee John’s nether regions and his luxuriant falsetto, the phrase ‘all mouth and no trousers’ might well have been invented to describe Imagination. Neither demure nor modest (they were once ordered to cover up when meeting the Prince and Princess of Wales), their outrageous stage presence masked a surprisingly deep well of songwriting talent and a vastly underrated catalogue of recordings.
Named for the recently deceased John Lennon’s unctuous ‘Imagine’, Imagination came into being in early 1981 with the hypno-disco groove ‘Body Talk’. Predicated on a monstrous Linn-programmed kick drum and a hypnotic synth-bassline, ‘Body Talk’ somehow managed to be a killer dance record that was ponderously slow. The best compliment one could give a British dance record in the early 80s was that it sounded American and ‘Body Talk’ did, indeed, sound like it might have come from yet another Manhattan or Detroit hit factory. This was probably no coincidence. ‘Body Talk’ also marked the debut of the production duo Steve Jolley and Tony Swain, a pair who’d met while working on the Muppet Show, and who went on to produce Bananarama’s finest singles, including ‘Cruel Summer’, as well as Spandau Ballet (‘True’), Diana Ross and Alison Moyet.
Imagination originally came together through Leee John and Ashley Ingram, both of whom met while working in pick-up bands for touring American acts like the Deflonics and Chairman of the Board. They formed the short-lived Fizzz before meeting West Indian drummer Errol Kennedy and completing the trio. ‘Body Talk’ was a slow burner, totally ignored on radio, but thanks to the support of DJs like Steve Walsh its popularity was sealed in the clubs and by the time it reached TV there was no stopping them. This might have been something to do with the costumes. Aided variously by bin-liners, giant pianos, Centurions’ helmets, generous helpings of dry ice and what might well have been crocheted nappies, Imagination’s image glided effortlessly from gay Romans to transsexual boxers let loose in a sari factory (no wonder Leee John appeared on Doctor Who).
They swiftly became permanent fixtures on mainstream TV, while Leee John’s pleasingly daft persona masked a fierce talent for songwriting (along with Swain and Jolley, John and Ashley Ingram co-wrote all of Imagination’s hits). Their debut album Body Talk yielded a further two Top 20 smashes with ‘In And Out Of Love’ and ‘Flashback’ (as well as club classic ‘Burnin’ Up’) and eventually went gold. A 22-date UK tour swiftly sold out (crocheted nappies had never been so popular). In The Heat Of The Night, their sophomore album, was yet more successful with four of its eight tracks eventually ending up as hit singles. Drawing on the then fashionable influences of Romanology, the trio were portrayed as Centurions atop a winding keyboard that jutted out into the stratosphere, thrusting past Neptune and possibly even beyond the services at Newport Pagnell. This vivid imagery was offset by yet more winning tunes, none less so than ‘Just An Illusion’, the group’s biggest hit (no. 2, UK), again employing the synth-bass and heavy kick-drum beloved of its predecessors
Although crossover success eluded them in the United States, Imagination were huge in Europe and beyond, particularly in France where they even had a horse race, Le Prix De Caen, re-named in their honour (it’s now known as Le Prix Imagination). Despite the lack of pop action in America, their status as club heroes remained undiminished right through the ’80s – it waned somewhat in the UK possibly because of chart success, but also perhaps because of their outré Frankie-Howerd-in-a-turkish-brothel look. They had a huge following in America’s gay clubs with several of their songs being remixed by the leading DJs du jour, such as François Kevorkian and Larry Levan and they continued to enjoy high placings in the Billboard dance charts well past the ’80s. (Imagination eventually signed to RCA and made an uneven album with American producers like Arthur Baker and Nick Martinelli towards the turn of the decade.)
By the end of the 1980s, Imagination had spent a total of 105 weeks on the UK singles charts, released a series of gold albums and embarked on an endless series of sell-out tours throughout the world. And they had worn more gold and see-through satin than Elizabeth Taylor on the set of Cleopatra. In fact, they looked like they might have actually been in Cleopatra. For a while, Imagination quietly melted away, as the original members left and, finally, Leee John concentrated on other avenues. But the music never really went away. In the 1990s, it was down to the samplers to keep things boiling, with PM Dawn, who sampled ‘Just an Illusion’ on ‘Gotta Be Movin’ Up’, while last year, Mariah Carey’s stupendously good ‘Get Your Number’ was again built around the gigantic bassline of ‘Just An Illusion’. And if you count Leee John’s appearances in the club charts with ‘Mighty Power of Love’ and his collaborations with Club 69, Imagination never really went away.
Musically derided by so many, the ’80s was, in fact, one of the most creative decades ever for pop music, from the invention of hip hop to house and techno, Prince in his pomp and the flowering of the New Romantics with their unique brand of synth pop (and worryingly florid dress sense). Imagination were part of that early 80s revolution that took pop music out of the staid confines of ‘real’ instruments and dull rock formatting, and dragged it into the latter part of the century. The electronic production pioneered by Swain and Jolley on Imagination’s albums might have been viewed as prosaic ten years hence, but back then was undoubtedly revolutionary.
For this gleaming piece of aural artwork you’re presently holding, we’ve selected what we think are the best cuts from the R&B catalogue (their best and most consistent work) and in particular the golden period working with Jolley and Swain. While CD 1 focuses primarily on the hits but also manages to shoe-horn in a couple of choice ballads, I’ll Always Love You and I’m Coming To Get You. Over on CD 2 we’ve included some criminally overlooked album tracks like Shoo Be Doo Da Dabba Doobee (don’t be fooled by its mildly preposterous Flintstone-esque title, it’s altogether splendid) and So Good, So Fine, but we’ve also included the entire Nightdubbing album, imagination’s legendary club remixes LP, which, just so you know, also achieved double gold status. For good measure, we’ve also slung in a few of the original 12-inch mixes. If we got any more generous, we’d be giving it away. Imagination? No illusion.
Mid Summer 2009, a very close and longtime friend of mine RC Lair came to my side of town and hung out with me. Before going inside the Ocean Club for drinks, we stayed inside my car to listen to the entire Hale Bopp mix CD which he’d done in the mid 90′s. All the tracks on that CD were retro classics of electric disco/dance/italo ranging from the late 70′s through the mid 80′s. By the time we reachedtrack-05,I was going through the car’s roof from excitement. The track was just THAT awesome … pure electronic analog circuitry … melodic and true to its form and genre its era. And I JUST HAD TO HAVE IT … and own it! So I asked RC who/what that track was, but he couldn’t remember from the top of his head, and he wasn’t going to look through his entire record collection at any time soon, because they were all stored in boxes. Now I was on a serious mission to hunt for a full-length copy of track-05. After six weeks of unsuccessful digging and searching, I still had no name of the artist nor title of the track.
A few days later, my producer friend Peter Hecher exposed me to Casco who was an Italian legend DJ and Italo music producer. I checked out his MySpace page, his main site and all other webpages related to him; listened to all his amazing original/classic Italo tracks; and downloaded few of his old live mix-sets. When listening to one of his Italo mix-sets … low and behold … track-05! Thus immediately I sent Casco an email requesting him to identify track-05 for me. Few hours later he sent me a reply, “Mito – Droid“.
After searching the net for days, I was able to find only bad quality MP3 copies. But just recently, over the net, there was a nice fellow from Europe who had an actual 12-inch record of Mito/Droid and, at my request, was kind enough to record and send me a good quality .wav digital file of it.
However, during the entire period of searching for Mito/Droid, I had discovered that it is in fact a remix of an original 1978 “Droid” track by Automat. According to SongBooks blog:
Automat was a project of a disc, from the Italians Musumarra, Gizzi and Maggi. The first two were members of the pop band La Bottega dell’Arte that was successful in Italy between 1976 and 1984. The “Automat” LP was released in 1978 as a kind of demo Synthesizer MCS70 (Memory Controller Synthesizer 70) built by Maggi. The funny highlight of the LP is the band Droid, who say they were the opening theme of a TV news at TV Globo (Brazil) in the early 80′s. In fact parts of this theme were used twice in television news, in one of them no Globo Esporte noon. This all in it for 81/82. But it was common to the Globo television, since I remember that was used in the novel called “Brilhante”, type in 80/81. There are many more electronic themes that the Globo TV used in the field of the Fantástico.
I was able to find and download the entire Automat album on torrents. There were only four tracks in total, and all of them were in mono. At first I’d thought it was an accident by the person who recorded the album to digital, but in fact the original source of recording was done in mono. So I took the liberty to re-master Automat’s Droid, making it pseudo-stereo, adding true stereo ambient reverbs with independent left/right parameter settings, and enhancing the track’s overall low, mid and high range across its spectrum frequency (by using Waves Linear Phase Multiband plugin, among other RTAS plugins, in Protools). I’ve included both the original/mono and my enhanced re-mastered versions for comparison.
All in all, I find that Droid sounds very similar to Vangelis‘ Pulstar (1976). To my ears, it seems that Droid borrowed heavily from the melody of Pulstar with noticeable variations, although both manage to stand out away from each other at the same time.
As a bonus, I managed to find a great Italo remix of Pulstar by Hipnosis (thank you Beat Electric).
Spring 1988, Denham Village, Buckinghamshire, UK ….. on the way to Syco Systems(high-end pro audio shop — by appointment only — caters only to high-end clientele and famous artists such as Peter Gabriel) to pick up the gear for my first studio (see pictures below) ….. I heard this track by Mantornix on the radio.
Notice: If you need to know more about Mantronix and the man himself, Kurt Mantronik, refer to my previous blog Hanson & Davis. Please read that first and then come back here and continue reading this blog/article.
I used to dream about having a Linn-9000 one day, so I could load my own drum samples and program beats with its sequencer; I used to sit for hours and drool over the brochures of the Roland D-50 synth and think about how breathy and paddy(also see video below) my tracks would sound along with the Linn-9000 drums pulsing underneath. The D-50 was revolutionary at its time (1987), because it was the first synth to have built-in effects, such as the the reverb, attack-transient samples and linear synthesis, among many other things. When I went to Syco Systems with my dad to buy the new gear, Kendall Wrightson(see quick shout-out below) informed me that the Linn-9000 was no longer in production, because its parent company went bankrupt; however, its designer Roger Linn had come up with a much better machine through Akai. He pointed his finger towards the Akai MPC60 at the other end of the room. It was GORGEOUS. It looked like a mean machine with a tilting LCD screen! Oh, those 16 square rubber finger pads. I didn’t hesitate to add it on the transaction. Kendall said something along the lines that he had one in stock, boxed and with Tony Banks’ name on it (yes, Tony Banks — the keyboardist of Genesis), but Tony didn’t want it at the time. When I looked at the box, sure enough his name was in fact printed on the shipping label.
After picking up my new studio gear from Syco, I stopped by Our Price record store, bought the 12-inch of Simple Simon and then drove home from London to my parent’s country-home in Denham Village. I love this track through and through. It’s very melodic and street-emotional, especially the bassline. Love the guitars (which are not real but tone-sampled and played from a keyboard sampler). The sound and style is very different from Mantronix’ previous releases which were more freestyle-based. Simple Simon sounded more mature but still had that “Mantronix” feel … perhaps it was the snappy, hard drum samples and programming coming from an E-mu SP-1200. Whatever it was, it certainly had the Mantronix‘ stamp with MC Tee‘s rap vocals. These two guys really stood out with this one.
I used to play both A and B sides of the 12-inch. Check out the amazing editing and fast-gating on You Dubba Regard mix, which were very hard to produce. Around that same time of year, the Latin Rascals were doing clever edits like this, with stutters, splice-edits and gated chops. Check out their sound/edits on Information Society’s – What’s On Your Mind which I’ve blogged about previously.
Quick shout-out to Kendall Wrightson:
Kendall Wrightson who was my personal salesman at Syco Systems. He was very well-known in the pro-audio industry, for representing and selling high-end gear like the Fairlight (watch Kendall’s demonstration), Syclaviers, SSL mixer consoles, etc.. There were times when Kendall used to let me and my best friend Noel Derblich to go inside one of Syco‘s studio rooms and transfer samples from the E-mu Emulator-III(also watch video here) to my Akai MPC60 drum-sampler/sequencer (64 midi channel, 99 tracks). Kendall was also featured in several documentaries about music technology.
Mantronix – “Simple Simon” (You Gotta Rock Hard)…
Artist: Mantronix Title: Simple Simon (You Gotta Rock Hard) Year: 1988 Label: 10 Records (UK) Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
Artist: Mantornix Title: Simple Simon (You Dubba Regard) Year: 1988 Label: 10 Records (UK) Media Source: Recorded straight from 12-inch record to enhanced digital.
While the norm for most tracks go anywhere between 3:30 to 6:00 minutes in length, I prefer 15:00 minutes or longer, like the four seasons. Give me 4 long tracks to fill the hour, and I’ll be one very happy Iraqi. I love tracks that take me on long journeys through various movements. One of my all-time favorite synth-pop groups is PROPAGANDA from germany … who sound like twisted ABBA + Industrial + TechnoPop + Darkness. My favorite Proganda track is P:Machinery. I’ve taken two 12-inch vinyl versions of that track and conjoined them together as one … the way I want to listen to P:Machinery by:
Digitizing them into Protools; Spending two long months cleaning them up; Getting rid of every single scratch/pop/click; Restoring deteriorated sounds through various RE-SYNTHESIS processes and techniques; Splicing the tracks to separate clips; Re-arranging and layering clips to my taste; Throwing in my own synth-stabs, chops and other minor subtleties; Adding & automating series of chained top-notch effects throughout the mix, utilizing parameters some of you could not even pronounce ... thus resulting with more dynamic and reverberated DEPTH to the mix; Fattening the bottom-end; Widening overall stereo perception; and Mixing, engineering and mastering my version of P:Machinery the way I think it's supposed to be heard.
To my taste, P:Machinery sounds better than 'sick' ... more like master piece of shit which blasts sonically across the stereo-field ... not one element standing still but constantly moving all over the place.
Although he produced only a handful of tracks of renown and disappeared into obscurity almost as quickly as he had emerged from it, Manny ( Man ) Parrish is nonetheless one of the most important and influential figures in American electronic dance music. Helping to lay the foundation of electro, hip-hop, freestyle, and techno, as well as the dozens of subgenres to splinter off from those, Parrish introduced the aesthetic of European electronic pop to the American club scene by combining the plugged-in disco-funk of Giorgio Moroder and the man-machine music of Kraftwerk with the beefed-up rhythms and cut’n'mix approach of nascent hip-hop. As a result, tracks like “Hip-Hop Be Bop (Don’t Stop)” and “Boogie Down Bronx” were period-defining works that provided the basic genetic material for everyone from Run-DMC and the Beastie Boys to Autechre and Andrea Parker — and they remain undisputed classics of early hip-hop and electro to this day.
Man Parrish Boogie Down Bronx (dub version) PLAY TRACK
What made Trevor Horn’s productions stand out was his unique and genius production techniques and the heavy use of state-of-the-art pro-audio gear, which made him become the torch-bearer for the kind of technology-led pop music which was hip and incredibly disciplined. Trevor Horn’s 12-inch remixes were uniquely long (anywhere from 8 to 13 minutes in duration) and told stories which took the listeners through long instrumental journeys at the begenning of tracks until the climax is reached (around the 5/6 or 7 minute mark). After the climax, the original or alternate full vocal version of the track takes over from that point on to the end, lasting additional 3.5 to 5 minutes in length.
Frankie Goes To Hollywood Relax (12 inch Sex Mix) PLAY TRACK
Trevor Horn is the guy who produced and performed “Video Killed The Radio Star” world-wide smash-hit track. I did some major digging and discovered some fascinating, forgotten facts and hidden gem tracks from The Buggles. In 1980, the Buggles’ duo Geoffrey Downes (keyboards) and Trevor Horn (vocals) — who were coming off an international success with their new-wave album The Age of Plastic – to help out on a new YES album. Downes suddenly left Buggles when Trevor learned that YES’ keyboardist Rick Wakeman was leaving the band, and therefore snatched him as well as lead-vocalist Jon Anderson to work on the next Buggles album Adventures In Modern Recording. The Buggle’s second album was completed in 1981 but was never released or charted. The album was a gem masterpiece.
The Buggles I Am A Camera (12 inch version) PLAY TRACK
We’re joining our friends at Reddit, Tumblr, Wikipedia, Boing Boing, and Google today in raising awareness of SOPA/PIPA legislation in the US Congress. These bills aim to change the very structure of the internet by allowing corporations and the US government to block access to domain names, and they circumvent the DMCA provisions that have […]
Every Hype Machine Zeitgeist tabulates the best music of the year, as decided by music bloggers. This time, we thought it would be interesting to open the voting up to everybody and find out what albums everyone loved in 2011. We built an album picker stocked with all albums released in 2011 according to Discogs, […]
The Hype Machine Music Blog Zeitgeist 2011 is ALIVE! We will be revealing 10 of the year’s Top 50 artists and albums every day, with fresh mixes of the Top 50 tracks. Stick around till Monday to find out who made it to the Top 10. Here’s how this Zeitgeist was created: Top 50 Artists: […]
Anthony, founder of the Hype Machine here. Just wanted to say thanks for being with us this year. It’s our sixth year of running the site, the biggest yet. The list of things that have happened is long, but among them: • Reached 1 million registered users (that’s you!) • Made the site play on iPhone, Android & Windows phones […]
We are looking for awesome people to join our team in Greenpoint, Brooklyn NY to help us build the future of music culture on the web. Right now, we are looking for two: Versatile Front-end Developer You must have: Strong JS (+assorted frameworks)/CSS skills An eye for design and attention to the details of […]
We’re always making new stuff, but we frequently forget to tell you about it. Sorry :/ Here’s what we’ve been working on in addition to our site redesign: Zeitgeist: We’ve meticulously restored all four years of our Zeitgeists (2007-2010). Browse, remind yourself of some great music you may have forgotten, and sign up to be […]
We’ve been having a lot of fun with the site for the past few weeks, with a header paying tribute to Nine Inch Nails, and our earlier Halloween colors, but we’ve also been making some design changes, which you can now see! The update now live on the site streamlines the site player experience, makes […]
We make the site to keep everyone finding something new, and today we are testing a new revision to the Latest front page. Starting now, the front page (also accessible as “Latest“) will only show the most recently posted tracks that have never been blogged about before. This means that they are as fresh […]
We have something new for you today from the Hype Machine Labs. We call it Fast Forward. Fast Forward is a speedy, immersive way to explore new music being discussed by the world-class blogs we index at The Hype Machine. I mean it: it is really fast. We’ve been thinking about this idea since SXSW 2009, […]
SBTRKT is one of the most exciting artists to come out of London’s effervescent “bass music” scene over the past year. Following the release of his wicked debut album (which premiered right here on The Hype Machine), SBTRKT brings his LDN vibes to NYC this week. Along with our friends at TREEHOUSE, we’re stoked to co-host a special SBTRKT after-show par […]
Denroy Morgan is a Jamaican expat, moving to Brooklyn as a teenager. He is famous for his roots reggae sound but in the early eighties had a string of well known disco hits on Beckett records. He has apparently fathered over 30 children, 10 of which are either rotating in his backing band or gigging on the New York reggae scene. BeatElectric admires the viri […]
Here are a couple of cool cuts from 1984. 1984 was an interesting year for music. The boogie greatness of 1982 was fizzling out, electro was king, and house was just getting started. These tracks highlight where genres converged and coalesced into some strange hybrids.This first track by Zero Hour shows a lot of electro influence and can easily pass as a the […]
We've covered Maurizio Sangineto's productions before on this site. Firefly was a dance music group composed of fellow Italians and released four LPs during their career. This track was a big tune at the Garage. The uplifting vocals get me every time. I also really like the brave use of some dynamic range in this 12" mix. It is rare to hear ja […]
Carol Shinnette put records out on Oakland's 'Optune' label. Don't ever call the 415 number printed on the front of her 7" sleeves, as the gentleman on the other end of the line will threaten to kill you. This B.E have learned the hard way. Although the record is claiming our hometown, it turns out it was actually produced in Lake Ch […]
Aufect Recording’s = hot fiaa! Frank Grime’s steez w. Bassmynt flava. G. Poplopavich Follow Me you Twi†Z!! √ Follow Schitz you Twi†Z!! √ Hear† Us on HYPE!! √ Like Us Facebook √ Share this on Facebook Tweet This! Share this on Tumblr Digg this! Share this on Reddit Share this on Technorati Stumble upon something […]
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Tom Flynn Remix: Jakwob Remix: J. Crackinov Follow Me you Twi†Z!! √ Follow Schitz you Twi†Z!! √ Hear† Us on HYPE!! √ Like Us Facebook √ Share this on Facebook Tweet This! Share this on Tumblr Digg this! Share this on Reddit Share this on Technorati Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Email […]
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Mp3's on this site are for sampling and promotional purposes only and will only. Most of the mp3 tracks on this blog/site are remixes, extended and limited versions which are deleted, no longer available for purchase and would not be heard otherwise. However, please support these artists. If you are one of these artists and would like your music removed from this site, please notify me, and I will endeavor to remove them as soon as possible.
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