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Sunsnail
Airwave Avenue?

bjork boulevarde :wtf:
lücid
quote:
Originally posted by Clovis86
Myragasm Mixmeister

Clovsha Appleton!

jdat
quote:
Originally posted by Sunsnail
Airwave Avenue?

bjork boulevarde :wtf:



for your information:
Airwave is from Belgium
Björk is from Iceland


None of them have any links to Chi-town :p
Clovis86
LAWL!
Aiwendil
Yeah, they named a street after some House DJ who nobody knows, pff.

Florida Breaks? What's that? The only Florida Breaks I know > Chicago House all the time.
lücid
DJ Sammy Drive
jonSun
Not too many people in chicago are familiar with EDM, so they ended up naming the street Oakenfold Blvd & thought they were naming it after a house DJ.
Slylee
This is so gay. I mean really, this whole site is just so everyone can feel cool and special. This is such an ego booster.
chojin
quote:
Originally posted by Slylee
This is so gay. I mean really, this whole site is just so everyone can feel cool and special. This is such an ego booster.


i prefer places like hi5 for that. because it lists your RL friends not just mostly online ones.
jdat
quote:
Originally posted by Aiwendil
Yeah, they named a street after some House DJ who nobody knows, pff.

Florida Breaks? What's that? The only Florida Breaks I know > Chicago House all the time.



Ok I found the name:
frankie knuckles way
It was declared the 25th of august 2004

And saying it's a house dj who nobody knows is such an ignorant statement :rolleyes:



lücid
quote:
Originally posted by jdat
Ok I found the name:
frankie knuckles way
It was declared the 25th of august 2004

And saying it's a house dj who nobody knows is such an ignorant statement :rolleyes:



thanks for clearing that up... i was really curious who they named the street after.
jonze234
Chicago years: early 1980s - late 1980s
In 1983 the Music Box club opened in Chicago. Owned by Robert Williams, the driving force was a DJ, Ron Hardy. The chief characteristics of the club's sound were sheer massive volume and an increased pace to the tunes. The pace was apparently the result of Hardy's heroin use. The club also played a wider range of music than just disco. Groups such as Kraftwerk and Blondie were well received, as was a brief flirtation with punk, dances like "Punking-Out" or "Jacking" being very popular.

Two tunes are arguably the first House music, each arriving in early 1983. The tune that was chronologically first was Jamie Principle and Frankie Knuckles' "Your Love", a huge hit in the clubs, but only available on tape copies. The second, "On And On" by Jesse Saunders was later but on vinyl. (Shapiro, 2000).

By 1985 house music dominated the clubs of Chicago, in part due to the radio play the music recieved on 102.7 FM WBMX, and their resident DJ Team the HOT MIX 5. Also, the music and movement was aided by the musical electronic revolution - the arrival of newer, cheaper and more compact music sequencers, drum machines (the Roland 909 and 808 and 707, and latin percusion machine the 727) and bass modules (such as the legendary Roland TB-303 in late 1985) gave House music creators even wider possibilities in creating their own sound, indeed the creation of Acid House is directly related to the efforts of DJ Pierre on the new drum machines.

Two record labels dominated the house music scene in Chicago, DJ International Records, owned by Rocky Jones and Trax Records owned by Larry Sherman (Trax self pressed records and the quality was not as good as the Disc Makers pressings of DJ International).

Many of the songs that defined the era came off of those record labels. Steve Hurley's "Music is the Key", Chip "E"'s "Like This" and Fingers, Inc. "Mystery of Love" (1985) were amongst some of the defining songs that came off of DJ International. While Trax released "Jack the Bass" & "Funkin With the Drums Again" by Farley Jackmaster Funk in 1985 followed the next year by House Classic "Move your Body" by Marshall Jefferson and "No Way Back" by Adonis.

This was something of a double-edged sword. In its favour Trax was very fast to sign new artists and press their tunes, establishing a large catalogue of House tunes, but the label used recycled vinyl to speed the pressing process resulting in physically poor quality records. Also disappointing was that many artists signed contracts that were rather less favourable towards them than they hoped.

Trax became the dominant House label, releasing many classics including "No Way Back" by Adonis, Larry Heard's "Can You Feel It" and the first so-called House anthem in 1986, "Move Your Body" by Marshall Jefferson. This latter tune gave a massive boost to House music, extending recognition of the genre out of Chicago. Steve 'Silk' Hurley became the first house artist to reach number one in the UK in 1987 with "Jack Your Body". This and other tracks such as "Music is the Key" and "Love Can't Turn Around" helped moved house from its spiritual home to its commercial birthplace - the United Kingdom.


taken from wikipedia
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