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Disco Gives Birth To House Music

February 6th, 2008 | by Duvy | 130 views

Disco Gives Birth To House Music
By Christopher Stout

Disco music gets a bad rap. People decry the genre as a plastic, soulless,
producer-driven music fad that deserves scorn for being empty and unfulfilling.
Many music fans were happy to see disco die in 1980, but the truth is that disco
never passed on. It spawned a new generation of dance music that branched out
and evolved into the global phenomenon known as house music. So how exactly did
disco give birth to house music? Here's the story.

So a gay guy and a black dude walk into a warehouse….just kidding! Well,
actually that's not too far off. Here's the short version.

Larry Levan started spinning disco records together at those crazy Paradise
Garage parties in New York.

Soon after Disco Demolition Night (when white kids killed disco at a White
Sox game), Chicago started developing a new, electronic, drum-machine happy
sound.

Frankie Kunckles brought his gay-friendly crate of thumping disco tracks to
Chicago and the kids got into it. Stuff like "Let No Man Put Asunder" from First
Choice rocked the Warehouse in 1983.

Soulful, bangin' disco tracks collided with what-the-hell-sounding beats
from Jesse Saunders, Farley Jackmaster Funk and a bunch of other DJs, remixers
and record producer types in Chicago.

All the kids wanted to buy the records that were playing at the Warehouse in
Chicago, and after some abbreviating — the house music label was born.

In Detroit, Juan Atkins (/Cybotron), Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson
originated a techno touch alongside the Chicago house music sound.

If you want to learn more, there's a video on it — Pump Up the Volume. This
documentary outlines the history of house music's muddied origins. From swinging
disco tracks to squelching, experimental knob-turning, to the base kick of
techno's first producers, this three-part video has it all.


Pump Up The Volume - History of House Music - Part 1

Part 1 starts with Larry Levan and the Paradise Garage and goes through the
early house music scene in Chicago.

In Part 2, you can learn about how Brits got hold of the stuff and used their
Northern Soul infrastructure and connections in Ibiza to club the music out to
the Euro masses. Detroit's take on house also gets attention.

Part 3 takes you through some of the more recent house music scenes, you know
– all that splinter faction definition label stuff. Anything Goldie says is
hilarious, and Armand Van Helden seems like a pretty chill dude.

Sure, these Google vids don't offer the best presentation. And yeah, some of
the music you'll hear is a bit wack, but this documentary from 2001 is a bridge
that connects the house music of today to the disco classics of yesteryear.
Understanding the details of this evolution will give you a greater appreciation
for the ever-evolving history of dance music.

Christopher Stout writes and manages Funk Deli, a funky lifestyle blog that
delivers slices of funk on a daily basis. Visit
Funk Deli
to learn more about funk, disco, electro, soul, and hip hop music,
and check out funky gear, events, clothes and kicks from all around the world.

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