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MIDWEST ELECTRIC: THE STORY OF CHICAGO HOUSE AND DETROIT TECHNO
I've always like to wonder, to lay back and look at the stars and wonder about what's out there. I've been intrigued by all things having to do with outer space, space travel and time travel. And it just came out in the music. It was a natural progression for me to make futuristic music. Juan Atkins, Detroit Techno producer & pioneer
There was something forbidden about house music and at the same time, there was a sense that house music wasn’t racial -- this notion of international music, that somehow in America or outside of South Africa, there was a music that was crossing racial boundaries. That really appealed to black South Africans. It’s not really seen as ghetto music. It’s seen as cosmopolitan. Gavin Steingo on South African house More Readings from the Blog
Detroit Techno City
The Electrifying Mojo
Producers Marlon Bishop and Wills Glasspiegel visit Archer Record Pressing
Artists Featured
HOUSE:
(Vince Lawrence)
JUKE: DJ Traxman // DJ Clent // DJ Gantman // DJ Rashad // DJ Earl
(DJ Traxman)
TECHNO: Juan Atkins // Carl Craig // John Collins // Mark Flash // John Dixon // Brenden Gillen // Anthony "Shake" Shakir
(Carl Craig)
GHETTOTECH:
(DJ Starski)
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Midwest Electric: The Story of Chicago House and Detroit Techno
Aired June 16, 2011
It's been over thirty years since house and techno music exploded out of South Side Chicago and inner-city Detroit, and most Americans still don't know their dance music history. In 1977 a DJ named Frankie Knuckles moved to Chicago to spin and remix disco records at an underground club called The Warehouse. Out of a fringe subculture that formed there - gay and African-American - house music would emerge to become one the biggest club music genres in the world. Meanwhile, young black futurists of Detroit channeled their city's post-industrial decay into a utopian machine music known as techno. In this Hip Deep episode, Afropop travels to Chicago and Detroit to explore the past and future of electronic music. Through dozens of interviews with seminal house and techno producers - including Paul Johnson, Vince Lawrence, Juan Atkins, and Carl Craig - as well as scholars, radio DJs and party promoters, we'll find out how two chilly mid-western cities taught the world to dance