Music Definitions
House music : history
House music, techno, electro and hip hop musicians owe their
existence to the pioneers of analogue and sample based keyboards
like the Moog and Mellotron that enabled a wizardry of sounds
to exist, available at the touch of a button or key.
Although most people perceive house music to have originated
from Donna Summer's "I Feel Love", fully formed electronic
music tracks actually came before house. Early American Sci-Fi
films and the BBC Soundtrack to popular television series Doctor
Who stirred a whole generation of techno music lovers
like the space rock generation during the 1970s, influenced
by the psychedelic music sound of the late 1960s and bands
such as Pink Floyd, Soft Machine, Amon Duul, Crazy World of
Arthur Brown, and the so-called Krautrock early electronic
scene (Tangerine Dream and Klause Schulze). Shunned by many
as a "gimmick" or "children's music", it
was a genre similar and parallel to the Kosmische Rock scene
in Germany. Space rock is characterized by the use of spatial
and floating backgrounds, mantra loops, electronic sequences,
and futuristic effects over Rock structures. Some of the most
representative artists were Steve Hillage's Gong and Hawkwind.
Kraftwerk's 1970 classic "Ruckzuck" mixed live
instruments with electric that culminated in a monotonous epic
of bass, wild drums and strange sound effects. Pink Floyd's
1971 album, Dark Side of the Moon, was highly influential
on acid house with steady beats and Moog flurries. The mid-1970s
saw a spattering of techno-inspired music usually through ambitious
producers wishing to experiment with Moog and Mellotron type
keys on more conventional rock bands such as the Steve Miller
Band's 1975 track "Fly like an Eagle" which was later
heavily sampled by Nightmares on Wax in 1990.
The late 1970s saw disco utilise the (by then) much developed
electronic sound and a limited genre emerged, appealing mainly
to gay and black audiences, it crossed over into mainstream
American culture following the hit 1977 film Saturday Night
Fever. As disco clubs filled there was a move to larger
venues. "Paradise Garage" opened in New York in January
1978, featuring the DJ talents of Larry Levan (1954–1992).
Studio 54, another New York disco club, was extremely popular.
The clubs played the tunes of groups like The Supremes, Anita
Ward, Donna Summer and Larry Levan's own hit "I Got My
Mind Made Up". Drugs including LSD, poppers and quaaludes
boosted the stamina of the clubbers. The disco boom was short-lived.
There was a backlash from Middle America, epitomised in Chicago
radio DJ Steve Dahl's "Disco Demolition Night" in
1979. Disco returned to the smaller clubs like the Warehouse
in Chicago.
Opened in 1977 the Warehouse in Chicago was a key venue in
the development of House music. The main DJ was Frankie Knuckles.
The club staples were still the old disco tunes but the limited
number of records meant that the DJ had to be a creative force,
introducing more deck work to revitalise old tunes. The new
mixing skills also had local airplay with the Hot Mix 5 at
WBMX. The chief source of this kind of records in Chicago was
the record-store "Imports Etc." where the term House
was introduced as a shortening of Warehouse (as in these records
are played at the Warehouse).
Despite the new skills the music was still essentially disco
until the early 1980s when the first drum machines were introduced.
Disco tracks could now be given an edge with the use of a mixer
and drum machine. This was an added boost to the prestige of
the individual DJs.
Historic chronology:
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