Archive for July, 2009

R&S Records

Posted in New beat, Rave, Techno with tags , , , , , , , , on July 29, 2009 by theacidhouse

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I was a huge fan of the Belgian Techno in 1990-1992, a sound that was heavily promoted through Dj’s Colin Dale and Colin Favors shows on Kiss FM, and also pushed by Joey Beltram & Lenny Dee. Some excellent labels like Beat Box, Music Mann, Dance Opera, DRA and of course the legendary R&S Records made up the sound of the Free Party festivals during 1991 and some of the other raves I went too. The most prolific label during the period of the “Belgian Techno Anthems” was R&S Records, set up by Renaat Vandepapeliere & Sabine Maes. Some of their huge anthems and signings included Joey Beltrams infamous “Energy Flash”, massive club anthem from Jaydee “Plasic Dreams”, CJ Bollands – Ravesignal III and the huge rave stomper from Outlander called “The Vamp”. The Vamp was such a memorable tune of that era, although released in 1990, it gained anthem status in 1991. I can recall it being played at least three times at a rave called “Zen” held in Slough that boasted a line up including the biggest names in techno of its time Kevin Saunderson, Juan Atkins, Colin Dale and Colin Favor. A true fact, my brother loved the “Vamp” so much, he actually requested this to be played at his funeral, thats how much these tunes had an effect on our lives. So today I share with you some undergound releases from the R&S camp and a couple of anthems, and for would be collecters Belgian techno has never really got into that high price bracket like the UK hardcore breakbeat scene, so if you are a fan of these tunes, you can pick up copies fairly cheap at record fairs and online sites like Discogs and even ebay.

Last year R&S Records opened shop again, and have been releasing new tunes and some remixes of the old anthems, including Prins Thomas disco tinged remix of The Vamp. Check out their website ..http://www.randsrecords.com/

Spock JR – Ion (Boccoccia Edit) (1988)

http://www.mediafire.com/?zohfvkygdin

Greyhouse – New beats The House (1989)

http://www.mediafire.com/?tbnj2wmz3q3

Space Opera – Electrowave (1989)

http://www.mediafire.com/?kz0m0ejxmir

Outlander – The Vamp (1990)

http://www.mediafire.com/?wtmlmellmwg

How & Little – The Forumla (1991)

http://www.mediafire.com/?ezmziyzyjm4

Golden Girls – Kinetic (Orbital Mix) (1992)

http://www.mediafire.com/?odytm2mnmzt

I thought I would re-surface this mix as well as it contains quite a few Belgian techno tunes and represents my harder  style of Old Skool from that era….this was a mix I done at the Legendary Hazy Dayz Old Skool Night in Liverpool for a Halloween Special back in 2005…..absolutley loved every minute of the set on the night…and was a real treat to play upstairs to an appreciative crowd who knew there “old skool”…..would love to see those nights back on again….1991 all over again.

Tim Acid – Hazy Days Liverpool 29th October 2005 Upstairs Halloween Live Set

Equipment used – 2 x 1210’s and a Mixer

mp3 encoded now @ 224kps

Tracklist:

1. Nu-Tek – Happyness
2. Mr Lee – Get Busy
3. Outlander – Vamp
4. Mundo Musique – Enemy Missile
5. Autonation – Sit on the bass
6. Mitrax – Influid
7. Major Problems – Murder 25
8. Dee Georgoues – Better than sex
9. Hypnotize 2 – Desperanza
10. Science Lab – Flesh & Blood
11. Spectrum – Brazil (Remix)
12. Friends of Mathew – Out there
13. Spectrum – In Crowd
14. Llyod Owes me a packet – The Pounder
15. Beltram – Energy Flash
16. The Sounds of Now
17. Ravesignal III – Horespower
18. Set up system – Music and Noise
19. 1001 People – Ao Ao
20. Problem House –The Party Zone
21. French Connection – Who Cares

Download Here – Tim Acid – Hazy Dayz

Strictly Rhythm

Posted in House with tags , , , , , on July 28, 2009 by theacidhouse

strictly_logo_2_(800x600)

Think soul, think Motown. Think blues, think Chess Records. Think jazz, think Blue Note.

Think house, think Strictly Rhythm.

House labels come and go, yet while Strictly Rhythm isn’t the be-all and end-all of house music imprints it’s fair to say that no other single label has had such an influence on the development of house music as Strictly. We’re talking about the stable that launched the careers of, among others, Erick Morillo, Roger Sanchez, Armand Van Helden, Kenny Dope, Josh Wink…damn it, pretty much most of the names we today consider to be at the top of the house music tree. So we can only count our lucky stars that Strictly didn’t turn out to be a
taxi company.

Yes, that’s right. When Spring records closed in 1989, Financial Controller Mark Finkelstein had $25,000 dollars to his name and an ex-wife and two children to support. The smart move, he figured, was to work for a private hire service, having just enough money to put down a deposit on a car and radio.

Enter Finkelstein’s colleague Gladys Pizzaro, one serious clubber from the mean streets of Spanish Harlem. Leaving behind a lucrative career in the construction industry, Gladys had joined Spring as a receptionist and worked her way up to radio promotions, backed up by an intimate knowledge of the New York club scene based on, well, living the New York club scene. Enthralled by the new ‘house’ and ‘garage’ sounds emanating out of Chicago
and New York/New Jersey – sounds which reminded Finkelstein of the ’70s disco he’d so
loved – Gladys convinced Mark that to set up their own label to focus on this new music was the way ahead. And thus was Strictly Rhythm born on May 1st 1989, with Finkelstein in charge of business matters and Pizarro at the A&R helm. Along with that legendary logo…

“I have a street background,” explains Pizzaro, “and graffiti at that time was very popular, and because we were doing house music, house identified with street, so that’s what I identified the label with. Street music, house music, graffiti… urban culture.”

The Finkelstein/Pizarro double act composed, and that iconic grafitti logo drawn by Finkelstein in the bag, Tylon’s ‘Feel The Rhythm Of House’ (SR1200) marked the label’s debut, but the first few releases were low-key (though the label’s third release, ‘Special’ by Sir James, overlooked at the time, has gone on to be one of the most sampled records in house). The first single to really make an impact was Logic’s ‘The Warning’ (SR1207),
which was a club smash in 1990 (“Tony Humphries played it four times at a party,” recalls Pizarro, “that helped a lot”). That was followed later the same year by Underground Solution’s ‘Luv Dancin’ (SR1220). The debut release by one Roger Sanchez, this deep
house groover put Strictly firmly on the map.

“From there on it just started to snowball,” recalls Gladys, “because the word on the street got out and producers like Todd Terry started coming to see me, and Louie Vega, Kenny Dope, DJ PIerre… it just goes on and on. It was easy really because there was just so much talent in New York.”

Over the next couple of years, the label continued to turn out the club anthems – Simone’s ‘My Family Depends On Me’ and CLS’s ‘Can You Feel It in 1991, Aly-Us’s ‘Follow Me’ and Djaimin’s ‘Give You’ in 1992 – while several other notable producers had their first ever
releases on Strictly during the same period: Kenny ‘Dope’ with The Untouchables’s ‘Take A Chance’ (SR1227), DJ Pierre with Photon Inc’s ‘Generate Power’ (SR1251), Masters At Work with Hardrive’s ‘Sindae’ (SR1272).

The label had by now firmly established a reputation as New York’s leading house label, based on a combination, as Finkelstein puts it, of “integrity in business – everyone got paid – and Gladys’ ears. Gladys had the best ears in dance music, period.” By now, tracks were coming through the door so thick and fast that the label stepped up the release schedule to
a single a week.

“All my competitors were saying he’s lost his mind, he’s going to fuck this up entirely,” recalls Finkelstein. “And it turned out just the opposite. Every Friday, there’d be lines outside record stores in Manhattan, and we’d be selling them out of the box, unheard. We were fortunate in
that we had the only fanbase that would buy music to make money – the DJs. In those days there were no downloads, no CDs, you had to have the vinyl.”

But things would move to the next level in 1994, with the arrival of Erick Morillo in his Reel 2 Real guise. ‘I Like To Move It’ (SR12192) was a chart-busting hit around the world and marked Strictly Rhythm out as a major player on the international stage. Reel 2 Real would go on to rack up five Top 30 UK hits, not to mention a gold-selling album.

1994 wasn’t just about chart hits, though. The same year saw the label release classics like Barbara Tucker’s ‘Beautiful People’ (SRB015), River Ocean feat India’s ‘Love And Happiness’ (SREP4) and Morel’s Grooves’ ‘Let’s Groove’ (SR12200). Clearly, Strictly Rhythm were on a roll.

Through ‘95 and ‘96, the classics just kept on coming. Josh Wink’s ‘Higher State Of Consciousness’ (SR12321), Hardrive’s ‘Deep Inside’ (SREP2), Black Magic’s ‘Freedom’ (SR12403), Reel 2 Real’s ‘Jazz It Up’ (SR12475), Da Mongoloids’ ‘Spark Da Meth’
(SR12476)… the list goes on, and on.

It was also during this period that Strictly Rhythm had their greatest commercial success in their native USA, with Planet Soul’s ‘Set U Free’ (SR12362), a fusion of house with Miami bass. “I don’t think that sold 15 copies in the UK!” laughs Finkelstein, “but it sold half a
million in the US. Whereas Barbara Tucker or Ultra Nate didn’t sell anything in the US.”

Ah yes, Ultra Nate. Her 1997 worldwide smashes ‘Free’ (SR12512), ‘Found A Cure’ (SR12534) and ‘New Kind Of Medicine’ (SR12555) saw the label at the height of its success, but also marked something of a watershed for the label, according to Pizzaro. “After 1998, after our big hit with ‘Free’, there was a change going on in New York.”

The label itself was changing direction. “We were no longer a house label, a street label,” says Gladys, “we were a dance label.” A joint venture had been entered into with Warner Bros, and the label – while simultaneously having its first UK No 1 with Wamdue
Project’s ‘King Of My Castle’ – began to license European pop-dance acts for the US market, the likes of Fragma and the Vengaboys (signed to Strictly’s domestic offshoot Groovilicious Records) bringing them considerable commercial success.

“No doubt about it, at that particular time that was the best move for us to make,” says Pizzaro, “And we were pretty proud of it, that a major was interested in an independent. That was definitely Mark’s dream, to go on a major.”

The deal didn’t pan out as planned but some five years on, Strictly rises phoenix-like from the ashes, thanks to a tie-in with Simon Dunmore of the UK’s mighty Defected stable. “I fought the lawsuit, got the company back, got all the rights back,” says Finkelstein of the new partnership. “And it was like, now what? The dance scene in the US isn’t great right now, so headquartering Strictly in the US didn’t make sense. Plus, I needed a creative director, because I knew I didn’t understand cutting edge music. And Simon and I have worked together and been friends for 15 years, three of the first Defected releases were signed from Strictly Rhythm so it just made sense.”

As househeads worldwide will attest, if Strictly Rhythm Mk2 is even half as good as Strictly Rhythm Mk1, we’re in for one hell of a ride…

(Source: http://www.strictly.com/)

Here are a small selection of some lesser known cuts from the SR camp.

Tylon – Feel The Rhythm if the House (Bonus Edit)

http://www.mediafire.com/?mmwttwjmjfy

The House Crew – Dance to the house

http://www.mediafire.com/?miy1ertmzir

Rare Arts – Boriqua Posse

http://www.mediafire.com/?jtwnwwmyfjt

The Al Mack Project – Night Life

http://www.mediafire.com/?iowokkm2gjy

Black Orchid – Baby Baby (Baby Dub)

http://www.mediafire.com/?xzdjkigimyi

Balearic Jukebox – Pride After Party, August 1st.. Om Bar, Brighton

Posted in Events with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 28, 2009 by theacidhouse

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Just to give you all the heads up about the Pride After Party that is being hosted by The Balearic Juke Box. This will take place at their monthly residency at the Om Bar, Brighton on the 1st August.

The Balearic Brothers & Guests will be digging deep into their record boxes & playing all the best quality club classics from the 70’s, 80’s. 90’s, all the way up to the present day, and it’s most dedinately going to be a night to remember!

DJ’s on the night – The Balearic Brothers, Justin Garret (Resident from “Scream” nights in Plymouth and some bloke called Tim Rivers from theacidhouse.com blogsite….

Check out their Blogspot http://balearicjukebox.wordpress.com/ for more info…

Old Skool Legend 2 – DJ Greg Wilson

Posted in Diggers Delight, Old Skool Legends, mixes with tags , , , , , , , , on July 10, 2009 by theacidhouse

greg wilson brighton

In February 2009 I was lucky enough to hear Greg Wilson play at the Loft in Brighton. I had bought my ticket well in advanced for this event as my gut feeling was it was going to be a special night. That evening there was an incredible buzz of excitement, tickets had sold out and everyone was desperately trying to gain some to get to hear the legend. This was the first time I had heard Greg play live and I was blown away by the music and the whole atmosphere. I was only talking with someone last night about when the Frankie Knuckles Hallucinogenic Dub of Rufus & Chaka Khans “Ain’t Nobody” got dropped, the build up was immense, and the place went off completely when the lyrics eventually hit. Another stand out tune for me personally (that I got id’d later) was Pete Herbert’s Mix of Tony Orlando’s – Don’t Let go. I remember being at the bar at the time when this came on and thinking how one element of the the tune had a similar kind of sound to Jimmy Bo Horne’s – Spank. If I had not actually just ordered the drink having queued up for about 15 mins, I would have rushed straight back to the dance floor for this. Both myself and my wife stood at the bar nodding heads with big grins while this tune played agreeing this was a special night.

The Acid House proudly presents the 2nd DJ in the series of Old Skool Legends, the Godfather of UK Electrofunk Greg Wilson.

To trace some of the origins of dance music as it is today, you have to go back in time to the days of when disco and funk were the choice of the dance floor. So it’s not a surprise to find that hundreds of samples in house music were lifted from disco, funk and Electrofunk tunes in the 70’s and early 80’s, therefore directly shaping the sound and movement of modern dance music.

With a DJ pedigree stretching back to the original disco era, Greg Wilson first came to national prominence in the early 1980’s as the first to champion New York’s emerging Electro-Funk sound.

From day one, his support for this radical new electronic dance music caused deep divisions within the jazz-funk fraternity.

Electro-Funk’s legacy is huge. It announced the computer age and seduced a generation with its drum machines, synthesizers, sequencers, dub mixes, bonus beats and samples… Its influences lay not only with Kraftwerk, and British Futurist acts like the Human League and Gary Numan, but with pioneering black artists, including Miles Davis, Sly Stone, Herbie Hancock, Stevie Wonder, Norman Whitfield and George Clinton (Greg Wilson)

Electro-Funk is unquestionably the source from which much of today’s house, techno, and breakbeat-oriented club music originated.

1982-84

Braving outright hostility from jazz-funk and soul purists, Greg Wilson’s brave new world of electronic funk could be experienced at largely black dance nights, in clubs such as Legend in Manchester, the Wigan Pier, the Stars Bar in Huddersfield, and at numerous all-dayers in places like Preston, Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Nottingham, Derby, Blackpool, Wigan and Sheffield.

‘I had fantastic support, Legend was always packed to the rafters on a Wednesday and it was the norm for about 450 people to head up to Wigan on a Tuesday from all over the North and Midlands… and double that on a special occasion!’ (Greg Wilson)

Electro-Funk heralded the arrival of New York’s ‘Hip Hop’ culture in the UK, and Greg was among its earliest and most enthusiastic ambassadors…He cites Malcolm McLaren’s ‘Buffalo Gals’ video (1982) as a defining moment for the arrival of Hip Hop in the UK:

‘For here, before our very eyes, was scratch mixing, graffiti art, and the most amazing sight anyone could remember – a man spinning on his head! The age of the breakdancer had arrived.’ (Greg Wilson)

Then, in 1983, Greg became the first dance music DJ to become resident at Manchester’s Hacienda, then very much an indie and ‘alternative’ music venue.

It would be no exaggeration to say that the future of UK Club Culture began here…. Nothing would be quite the same again.

1982–84 was a time of intense musical creativity, an ‘anything goes’ era, before house and techno standardised both the tempo and rhythm of club music.

1984 – 94

Greg retired from DJ’ing in 1984, but his involvement with music continued.

That same year he co-produced the landmark Street Sounds ‘UK Electro’ album. Later in the decade, he returned with the cult Manchester Ruthless Rap Assassins, who he managed and produced.

In 1994, his role as ‘Electro-Funk Pioneer’ was acknowledged when he compiled the best-selling ‘Classic Electro Mastercuts’ album, which reached the Top 20 of the UK album chart.

2003-

As the importance of Electro-Funk’s musical legacy has become increasingly apparent, more attention than ever is being focused on the crucial 1982-84 period, which apparently shaped so much of what followed. Now, through his website (www.electrofunkroots.co.uk), Greg is once again acting as an ambassador for Electro-Funk.

Head over to Greg’s website www.electrofunkroots.co.uk to read more about the Legend, view historical charts he compiled, interviews and other interesting information.

Also join Greg’s Facebook Group to keep up to date on up and coming gigs around the UK and the rest of the world.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Greg-Wilson/17586590755?ref=s

And if you are in Brighton next weekend, Greg Wilson will be playing at Audio, Brighton, on Friday the 17th, there are only a few remaining tickets left so head down to the following outlets.

Tickets will be on sale £8 in advance from:

Rounder, Brighton sq 01273 325440

Dance 2, Western rd 01273 329459

412 Fashion, Middle st 01273 325336

Or online from http://www.residentadvisor.net/gregwilson

http://www.electrofunkroots.co.uk
http://www.myspace.com/djgregwilson
http://www.youtube.com/user/electrofunkr…

And if you cannot make it to Brighton, here is a little something for you to listen too.

GREG WILSON

NYC PRIME TIME

SANTOS PARTY HOUSE

25.10.08

1. Fantastic Four got to have your love

2. Commodores machine gun (situation edit)

3. Jazzy Dee get on up (situation edit)

4. Northend tee’s happy

5. Telemusic baby’s band (leo zero edit)

6. Chic I want your love (todd terje edit)

7. Escort starlight (gw version)

8. Rvng Of The Nrds 07 cosmic dj delight (gw edit)

9. T Connection do what you wanna do

10. Captain Rapp bad times (I can’t stand it) (gw ruff edit)

http://www.mediafire.com/?u3lzz0ctkux

Massive respect and thanks to Greg Wilson for the resources and for being a true Legend.

28th Street Crew – I Need a Rhythm

Posted in House, Music with tags , , , , , , , on July 2, 2009 by theacidhouse

28th street crew

I was listening to this album recently and thought I would share this with you, many of you will recognise the title track as a classic house anthem that was regulary played at The Hacienda Nude nights. The 28th Street Crew are David Bryon Cole & Robert Manuel Clivillés who also go under the name of C&C Music Factory, the album has edit credits to Danny Krivit that was carried out at the Razor Shop, 28th Street NYC, probably where the 28th Street Crew name comes from. While “I Need A Rhythm” remains the main anthem, there are some real gems on this album that are worth checking out particulary if you are into that late 80’s NYC deep house groove.

A.1 28th Street Crew – I need a rhythm

A2. 28th Street Crew – Inch by Inch

A3. 28th Street Crew -Steppin’ Out

A4. 28th Street Crew – Get it up

B.1 28th Street Crew – Where’s the party

B.2 28th Street Crew – It’s in the groove

B.3 28th Street Crew – Pump it up (let’s groove)

B.4 28th Street Crew – Sex on the dance floor