House music
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, with dances such as Punking-Out or Jacking being very popular.
Two tunes were 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. The second,
On and On by
Jesse Saunders was later put on vinyl (1985). (Shapiro,
2000). Immediately on the tails of these recordings was
Chip E. Jack Trax, which defined the genre with its complex rhythms, simple bassline, use of sampling technology, and minimalist vocals.
By
1985 house music dominated the clubs of Chicago, in part due to the radio play the music received 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 TR-909, TR-808 and TR-707, and Latin percussion machine the TR-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,
Larry Heard, and
Marshall Jefferson 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 its records and the quality was not as good as the DiscMakers pressings of DJ International.
Many of the songs that defined the era came from these record labels. Steve "Silk" Hurley's
'Music is the Key, Chip E's
Like This, and
Fingers Inc.'s
Mystery of Love (1985) were among some of the defining songs that came from DJ International. Trax released
Jack the Bass and
Funkin with the Drums Again by
Farley Jackmaster Funk in 1985, followed the next year by the house classic
Move Your Body (The house Music Anthem) by Marshall Jefferson, and
No Way Back by Adonis.
This was something of a double-edged sword. In its favor, Trax was very fast to sign new artists and press their tracks, establishing a large catalog of house tunes, but the label used recycled vinyl to speed up the pressing process, which resulted in physically poor-quality records. Also disappointing was that many artists signed contracts that were rather less favorable towards them than they had hoped.
Trax became the dominant house label, releasing many classics including
No Way Back by
Adonis,
Larry Heard's (as Fingers Inc.)
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 â€"the
United Kingdom.Acid house and hip-house scene was dominated by international producers like
Tyree Cooper,
Mr Lee,
Fast Eddie,
Kool Rock Steady and
Ralphi Rosario at the end of the 1980s.
The Detroit Connection: early 1980s - late 1980s
A form of music was forming at the same time in
Detroit, what became known as Detroit
techno. A major influence to the fusion of eclectic sounds into the signature detroit techno sound was a radio program that ran in the mid 1970s until the 1980s by legendary disc jockey
The Electrifying Mojo. Music heavily influenced by European Electronica (Kraftwerk, Art of Noise), early
b-boy Hip-Hop (Man Parrish, Soul Sonic Force) and Italo Disco (Doctor's Cat, Ris, Klein M.B.O.) this music was pioneered by
Juan Atkins,
Derrick May, and
Kevin Saunderson. The first group of songs to be rotated heavy in Chicago house-music circles were the 1985 releases of
NO UFOs by Juan Atkins's group Model 500 on Metroplex Records, Let's Go by Trans X-Ray (Derrick "MAYDAY" May") and "Groovin' without a Doubt" by
Inner City (Kevin Saunderson) on KMS Records.
Juan Atkins on his Label Metroplex Records followed the release of "NO UFO's" with 1986's "FUTURE", 1988's the "Sound of Stero / Off to Battle" and 1989's "The Chase".
KMS Followed with releases in 1986 of Blake Baxter's "When we Used to Play / Work your Body", 1987's "Bounce Your Body to the Box" and "Force Field", 1988's "Wiggin" by MAYDAY, "The Sound / How to Play our Music" and "the Goove that Won't Stop" and a remix of "Grooving Without a Doubt". In 1988 as House music began to go more commercial, Kevin Saunderson's group with Paris Gray released the 1988 hits "Big Fun" and
Good Life which eventually were picked up by Virgin Records. Each EP / 12 inch single sported remixes by Mike "Hitman" Wilson and Steve "Silk" Hurley of Chicago and Derrick "Mayday" May and Juan Atkins of Detroit. In 1989 KMS had another hit release of "Rock to the Beat" which was a hit overseas and in Chicago
Derrick "Mayday" May had a style that was similar to Chicago native Larry Heard (Mr. Fingers), but soon became distinct and unique and was received well in Chicago, with releases on his Transmat Label, between 1986-1989 Transmat released hits like "Nude Photo", "It is What it is" and "Beyond the Dance" by Rythim is Rythim, "The Groove" by Suburban Knights, and "Illusion" by R-Tyme. The biggest hit and most influential in the House Music scene was Rythim is Rythim's "Strings of Life" which became a cult classic in dance music clubs internationally. Derrick May also recorded with Kool Kat "Nude Photo 88" with the cult classic "Sinister".
Though Detroit Techno is a music form in its own right and part of the "Techno" worldwide music, its pioneers were also instrumental in the forwarding of House Music internationally and especially in the UK and Europe.
The British connection: late 1980s - early 1990s
In
Britain the growth of house can be divided around the "
Summer of Love" in
1988. House had a presence in Britain almost as early as it appeared in Chicago; however there was a strong divide between the House music as part of the gay scene and "straight" music. House grew in northern England, the Midlands and the South East. Founded in 1982 by
Factory Records the Hacienda in
Manchester became an extension of the "
Northern Soul" genre and was one of the early, key English dance music clubs. Until 1986 the club was a financial disaster, the crowds only started to grow when the resident DJs (Pickering, Park and Da Silva) started to play house music. Many underground venues and DJ nights also took place across the U.K. like for instance the private parties hosted by an early
Miss Moneypenny's contingent in
Birmingham and many
London venues. House was boosted in the UK by the tour in the same year of Knuckles, Jefferson, Fingers Inc. (Heard) and Adonis as the DJ International Tour. Amusingly, one of the early anthemic tunes, "Promised Land" by Joe Smooth, was covered and charted within a week by the
Style Council. The first English House tune came out in
1986 - "Carino" by
T-Coy. Europeans embraced house music, and began booking legendary American House DJs to play at the big clubs, such as
Ministry of Sound, whose resident,
DJ Harvey brought in
Larry Levan.
The underground house scene in cities such as
Birmingham,
Manchester and
London were also provided with many underground
Pirate Radio stations and DJ's alike which helped bolster an already contagious, but otherwise ignored by the mainstream, music genre.
One of the earliest and most influential UK house and techno record labels was
Network Records (otherwise known as Kool Kat records) who helped introduce Italian and U.S. dance music to Britain as well as promoting select UK dance music acts.
But house was also developing on
Ibiza. In the 1970s Ibiza was a hippy stop-over and a site for the rich, but by the mid-
1980s a distinct
Balearic mix of house was discernible. Several clubs like Amnesia with DJ Alfredo were playing a mix of rock, pop, disco and house. These clubs fueled by their distinctive sound and
Ecstasy began to have an influence on the British scene. By late 1987 DJs like
Paul Oakenfold and
Danny Rampling were bringing the Ibiza sound to UK clubs like Shoom in Southwark (
London), Heaven, Future and Purple Raines Spectrum in
Birmingham. But the "Summer of Love" needed an added ingredient that would again come from America.
In America the music was being developed to create a more sophisticated sound, moving beyond just drum loops and short samples. New York saw this maturity evidenced in the slick production of disco house crossover tracks from artists such as
Mateo & Matos and
Blaze. In Chicago, Marshall Jefferson had formed the house 'super group' Ten City (from intensity), demonstrating the developments in "That's the Way Love Is". In
Detroit there were the beginnings of what would be called
techno, with the emergence of Juan Atkins, Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson. Atkins had already scored in 1982 with
Cybotron and in 1985 he released Model 500 "No UFOs" which became a big regional hit, followed by dozens of tracks on Transmat, Metroplex and Fragile. One of the most unusual was "Strings of Life" by
Derrick May, who described his sound as "
George Clinton and
Kraftwerk jamming together in an elevator". It was a darker, more intellectual strain of house that followed its own trajectory. "Techno-Scratch" was released by the
Knights Of The Turntable in 1984 which had a similar techno sound to Cybotron and is possibly where the term
techno originated, although this is generally credited to Atkins, who borrowed the term from the phrase "techno rebels" in Cybotron's 1984 hit 'Techno City', which appeared in writer
Alvin Toffler's book
Future Shock (see Sicko 1998).
The records were completely independent of the major record labels and the parties at which the tracks were played avoided commercial music.
The combination of house and techno came to Britain and gave House a phenomenal boost. A few clubs began to feature specialist House nights - the Hacienda had "Hot" on Wednesday from July
1988, 2,500 people could enjoy the British take on the Ibiza scene, the classic "Voodoo Ray" by
A Guy Called Gerald (Gerald Simpson) was designed for the Hacienda and
Madchester. Factory boss Tony Wilson also promoted acid house culture on his weekly TV show. The Midlands also embraced the late 80s House scene with many underground venues such as multi storey car parks and more legal dance stations such as the
Digbeth Institute (now the 'Sanctuary' and home to
Sundissential).
Developments in the United States in late 1980s to early 1990s
Back in America the scene had still not progressed beyond a small number of clubs in
Chicago,
Detroit and
New York. Paradise Garage in
New York City was still the top club, although they now had
Todd Terry, his cover of Class Action's Larry Levan mixed "Weekend" demonstrated the continuum from the underground disco to a new House sound with hip-hop influences evident in the quicker sampling and the more rugged bass-line. While
hip-hop had made it onto radio play-lists, the only other choices were Rock, Country & Western or R & B. Other notable New York producers and DJs of the time were
Bobby Konders,
Tommy Musto,
Frankie Bones all of whom had their work licensed internationally in the 1980's. In fact, many of the recordings on the nascent
XL Recordings (UK) came from those artists.
Other influences from New York came from the hip-hop, reggae, and Latin community, and many of the
New York City super producers/DJ's began surfacing for the first time (Erick Morillo, Roger Sanchez, Junior Sanchez, Danny Tenaglia, Jonathan Peters) with unique sounds that would evolve into other genres (tribal house, progressive house, funky house). Producers such as
Masters At Work and
Kerri Chandler also started pioneering a richer Garage sound that was picked up on by 'outsiders' from the worlds of jazz, hip-hop and downbeat as much as it was by House afficiandos.
Influential
gospel/
R&B-influenced Aly-us released "Time Passes On" in 1993 (
Strictly Rhythm), then later, "Follow Me" which received radio airplay as well as being extensively played in clubs. Another US hit which received radioplay was the single "Time for the Perculator" by
Cajmere, which became the prototype of
Ghettohouse sub-genre.
Cajmere is held by many to be one of the revitalizing forces in Chicago Houses's rebirth of the early 1990's. Most of the 80's generation were burnt out by bad contracts or had moved to New York or Europe.
Cajmere started the Cajual and Relief labels (amongst otheres) offering a home to any producer in Chicago, no matter the style. By the early 90's artists such as
Cajmere himself (under that name as well as
Green Velvet and as producer for
Dajae),
DJ Sneak,
Glenn Underground and others were bringing out fresh records at a furious pace. Artists from the also recently-revitalised
Dance Mania such as
DJ Rush,
Robert Armani and his cousin
Paul Johnson recorded for both and were in high demand as DJs in the lucrative European club circuit.
Derrick Carter also became a deeply respected producer and a legendary DJ at this time.
Detroit was mostly known for techno but there is a very fine line between Techno and House, often impossible to find with labels such as
430 West,
KMS and
Serious Grooves with producers such as
Kevin Saunderson,
Marc Kinchen,
Octave One (as well as fellow travellers from Chicago such as
Chez Damier &
Ron Trent who released records on Detroit labels regularly). During this period
Underground Resistance were just as likely to release a pumping piano and vocals garage track as they were an electro track and had their Happy Records subsidiary.
Also at this time stirrings of a chilled dance scene relatively unconnected to the Chicago, Detroit, and New York scenes was springing up in the
Los Angeles area with parties organised by Hardkiss and UK expats like DIY and Charles Webster. House music eventually came to clubs in cities like
Boston, Massachusetts,
Providence, Rhode Island,
Philadelphia,
Baltimore, and
Washington D.C..
After the "Summer of Love": early 1990s to mid 1990s
In Britain, further experiments in the genre boosted its appeal (and gave the opportunity for new names to be made up).
House and rave clubs like
Lakota, Miss Moneypenny's and the original
C.R.E.A.M. began to emerge across Britain, hosting regular events for people who would otherwise have had no place to enjoy the mutating house and dance scene.
The idea of 'chilling out' was born in Britain with
ambient house albums like
The KLF's
Chill Out. However, this album is not house strictly speaking, because its prominent lack of percussion on most tracks. Another example would be the song "Analogue BubbleBath" by
Aphex Twin. In fact,
Chill Out electronic music is often defined as a totally different genres, such as
Ambient, or even
downtempo (later on) or
New Age (older). The unifying feature of Chill Out electronica is long sustained tones and a more tonal than percussive-noisey quality compared to other styles. Nevertheless, lots of compilation albums sprung up, no doubt, each one redefining the terminology along the way.
At the same time, a new indie dance scene full of variety was being forged by bands like the
Happy Mondays,
The Shamen,
New Order,
Meat Beat Manifesto,
Renegade Soundwave,
EMF,
The Grid and
The Beloved. In New York, bands such as
Deee-Lite furthered house music's international and multi-era cultural influence. Two distinctive tracks from this era were
the Orb's "Little Fluffy Clouds" (with a distinctive vocal sample from
Rickie Lee Jones) and the Happy Mondays' "Wrote for Luck" ("WFL") which was transformed into a dance hit by
Paul Oakenfold.
The
Criminal Justice Bill of 1994 was a government attempt to ban large events featuring music with "repetitive beats". There were a number of abortive "Kill the Bill" demonstrations. Although the bill did become law in November 1994, it had little effect. The music continued to grow and change, as typified by the emergence of acts like
Leftfield with "Release the Pressure", which introduced dub and
reggae into the house sound. In more commercial areas a mix of R&B with stronger bass-lines gained favour.
The music was being moulded, not just by drugs, but also the mixed cultural and racial groups involved in the house music scene. Tunes like "The Bouncer" from Kicks Like a Mule used sped-up hip-hop
breakbeats. With SL2's "On A
Ragga Trip" they gave the foundations to what would become
drum and bass and
jungle. Initially called
breakbeat hardcore, it found popularity in London clubs like Rage as a "inner city" music. Labels like
Moving Shadow and
Reinforced became underground favorites. One label,
Moonshine, featured impressive compilation albums entitled, "140 BPM: The Speed Limit" which showcased what was termed "London Hardcore
Techno". Showing an increased tempo around 160
bpm, tunes like "Terminator" from
Goldie marked a distinct change from house with heavier, faster and more complex bass-lines:
drum and bass (
dnb. Goldie's early work culminated in the twenty-two minute epic "Inner City Life" a hit from his debut album
Timeless.
UK Garage developed later, growing in the underground club scene from drum and bass ideas. Aimed more for dancing than listening, it produced distinctive tunes like "Double 99" from Ripgroove in
1997. Gaining popularity amongst clubbers in Ibiza, it was re-imported to the UK and in a softened form had chart success: soon it was being applied to mainstream acts like
Liberty X and
Victoria Beckham.
4 Hero went in the opposite direction - from brutal
Breakbeats they adopted more soul and jazz influences, and even a full orchestral section in their quest for sophistication. Later, this led directly to the West London scene known as
Brokenbeat or
Breakbeat. This style is also not strictly "house", but as with all electronic music genres, there is overlap.
Mid to late-1990s
Back in the US some artists were finding it difficult to gain recognition. Another import into Europe of not only a style but also the creator himself was
Joey Beltram. From Brooklyn his "Energy Flash" had proved rather too much for American House enthusiasts and he need a move to find success. The American industry threw its weight behind DJs like
Junior Vasquez,
Armand van Helden or even
Masters at Work who appeared to churn out endless remixes of mainstream pop music. Some argued that many of the formulaic remixes of Madonna, Kylie Minogue, U2, Britney Spears, the Spice Girls, Spiller, Mariah Carey, Puff Daddy, Elvis Presley, Vengaboys and other bands and pop divas did not deserve to be considered house records.
During this time many individuals and particularly corporations realized that house music could be extremely lucrative and much of the 1990s saw the rise of sponsorship deals and other industry practices common in other genres.
To develop successful hit singles, some argued that the record industry developed "handbag house": throwaway pop songs with a retro disco beat. Underground house DJs were reluctant to play this style, so a new generation of DJs were created from record company staff, and new clubs like Miss Moneypenny's,
Liverpool's
Cream (as opposed to the original underground night,
C.R.E.A.M.) and the
Ministry of Sound were opened to provide a venue for more commercial sounds.
By
1996 Pete Tong had a major role in the playlist of
BBC Radio 1, and every record he released seemed to be guaranteed airplay. Major record companies began to open "
superclubs" promoting their own acts, forcing many independent clubs and labels out of business. These superclubs entered into sponsorship deals initially with fast food, soft drinks, and clothing companies and later with banks and insurance brokers. Flyers in clubs in
Ibiza often sported many corporate logos.
House in the new millennium
Dance music arguably hit its peak at the turn of the millennium, especially in the UK. A number of reasons are seen for its decline in mainstream popularity during the
2000s:
* Many people felt that club promoters had gone too far in what they were asking people to pay on a weekly basis to enter clubs. A prime example was on
New Year's Eve at the turn of the Millennium. Some promoters had been asking upwards of £100 ($180) to attend clubs and various event venues across the country. A large number of club goers instead decided to stay away all together or go to local parties. Many in general grew tired with paying up to £20 ($35) on a weekly basis for poor quality club nights which had little variation from week to week and venue to venue.
* Older people that had been with the scene from the beginning started to move away. Many in their 30's started having families and settling down. Many younger people viewed Dance music as becoming increasingly outmoded with the same set of DJ's playing in Clubs and on the Radio year after year. This led to the term "Dad House" being applied.
* The
democratization and mainstreaming of electronic music composing through ever-cheaper computer software made electronic music as a whole less novel and more commonplace. This also affected its marketability, since most music marketing requires a high degree of novelty to drive sales and cultural interest.
* Many older clubbers who did have families remained active in the scene, and small-scale events organisers, invariably not tied to a venue, began to appear to cater to a group that was increasingly ostracised by younger clubbers, and unable to go clubbing more than once or twice a month. This scene subsequently has expanded and about half of those involved are under 30.
* A lot of the same music was being played on commercial dance shows, and in bars, supermarkets, and television advertisements. This along with a lack of invention in the mainstream left many people feeling increasingly bored with the music. This has inevitably led to the music being forced back underground to its roots.
*
Ecstasy, the drug of choice for many on the Dance scene during the late 80's and through out the 90's, started to lose its popularity to
Cocaine and
Ketamine. Both these drugs changed the nature and the atmosphere of the scene. In part this was due to the decreasing proportion of
MDMA in Ecstasy, which was increasingly being cut with
Amphetamines,
Ketamine as well as a generally greater amount of inert 'bulk' substances.
* The global rise of
hip hop during the late 90's as well as the re-emergence in the UK of a strong Rock and Indie scene drew many away from Dance Music.
*
The Glade, the UK's largest electronic dance festival, began in 2004 as an offshoot of the
Glastonbury Festival, featuring the UK's only dedicated Psytrance stage.
House music today
As of 2003, a new generation of DJs and promoters, including
James Zabiela and
Mylo, were emerging, determined to kickstart a more underground scene and there were signs of a renaissance in Atlanta, Chicago, Detroit and other racially-mixed cities, as well as in Canada, Scandinavia, Scotland and Germany. For example, in 2004 the Montreal club
Stereo, co-owned by House music legend David Morales and party aficionado Scott Lancaster, celebrated its sixth year in operation and in 2005 The Guvernment in Toronto with Mark Oliver is celebrating its 9th anniversary. Stereo, opened in 1998, was modeled after the seminal New York City club
Paradise Garage, focusing the experience on the quality of sound and lighting. The key to house music was re-invention. A willingness to steal or develop new styles and a low cost of entry encouraged innovation. The development of computers and the Internet play a critical role in this innovation. One need only to examine how house music has evolved over time to evaluate the effect computers and the Internet have had on house music and music in general.
In 2005 house music finds itself at a crossroads. The soulful black and Latin-influenced sound that enjoyed popularity in the late '90s and early '00s has lost momentum and has been alienated from almost all generic and
hit music radio stations. Audiences all over the world are fragmenting into different camps based around the old-guard house sound and a darker, more synth-driven sound influenced by '80s retro sentiment. Opinions are split on the new music that's trending in. Some consider it directionalism, and others see it as an entirely new genre of music, having more to do with techno, electronica and EBM music than house.
Just recently,
Richard Daley, Mayor of Chicago proclaimed August 10, 2005 to be House Unity Day in Chicago last July 27, 2005 in celebration of House Music's 21st anniversary. DJ's like Frankie Knuckles, Marshall Jefferson, Paul Johnson and Mickey Oliver were cited among the many other DJ's who came together to celebrate the proclamation at the Summer Dance Series event organized by Chicago's Department of Cultural Affairs.
Saturday Night Live has a recurring sketch called
Deep House Dish featuring
Kenan Thompson and
Rachel Dratch as reviewers of house music. In a typical episode, several "performers," usually including the week's guest, will each sing a parodically bad song, and then be interviewed by the hosts. Dratch's comments are never interesting, a fact often pointed out by Thompson.
*
Donna Summer - "I Feel Love" (
1977)
*:Written by
Giorgio Moroder, featuring both the machine rhythms and erotic vocal sound bites in which one recognises a germination of house music - the union of
disco and electronic. Its bassline has been sampled on numerous electronic dance records.
*
Kraftwerk - "
Trans-Europe Express" (
1977)
*:Played in
New York discos in the late 70s, inspiring house, electro and
techno DJs alike in the 80s, this track has made way for future house music and its techno off-spring.
*
New Order - "
Blue Monday" (
1983)
*:Frequently considered the missing link between
disco of the
1970s and house of the 1980s. Importantly, it bridges the gap between electronic dance music and UK
indie music fans in the
post-punk 1980s. It has been sampled, remixed and covered by electronic dance producers all over the world.
*
Lime - "Lime 3" (
1984)
*:Continuous-mix album by Lime (Denis and Denyse LePage) - no less important than the work of
New Order.
Lime's
HiNRG music was a gradual evolution that took the sounds of
Giorgio Moroder and
Kraftwerk and moulded them into epic club records with catchy beatbox programming and numererous "breakdown sections" that were often reprised throughout the mix. It's impossible to nail down a moment in time when Lime started sounding like a kissing cousin of House Mix. Most would agree that by the time 1984's "Angel Eyes" single had hit the clubs, they had one foot in the house. "Angel Eyes" contains a programmed drum fill that is very similar to that used in "Blue Monday" by
New Order, though not on the kick, as New Order's had been.
Lime would always have too many ornate and symphonic electronic elements to be considered House, but their influence on the genre cannot be overstated.
*
Jesse Saunders - "On and On" (
1984/
1985)
*:Considered the first house record pressed and sold to the public. A major presage of later electronic dance music. With original, mantra-like stripped-down synths (including a
303 and minimal vocal), this record was early house music revealing itself as more than the sum of its parts.
On and On showed the more trance-like
shamanistic side that would develop into acid house.
*
Mr Fingers - "
Can You Feel It?"/"Washing Machine"/"Mystery of Love" (
1985)
*:In late 1984,
Jazz-influenced
Larry Heard developed three lush, 'over-engineered' sounding tracks in one sitting, eeked out of equipment such as a
Roland TR-707 and
Juno 6. Heard's landmark work would set the trend for the
Deep house genre that continued early house's atmospherics and (compared with later music) slow beat, 110-125 bpm.
*
Chip E. - "It's House" (
1985)
*:Written by
Chip E. and featuring
keyboard work by
Joe Smooth, this release is often considered as the definition of
Chicago House Music. The first self-referential "house music" record. The simplistic referential lyrics go "It's House, It's House" in varying pitch, to a driving bassline and
percussion.
*
Marshall Jefferson - "Move Your Body (House Music Anthem)" (
1987)
*:The second self referential "house music" record. The referential portion of the lyrics goes: "Gotta have House Music all night long... With that House Music you can't go wrong..."
*
Phuture - "Acid Trax" (
1986)
*:The first
acid house song ever made. Made almost accidentally during
303 experimentation by
DJ Pierre, Spanky J and Herbert in
Chicago and gave birth to the whole
acid house movement.
*
Steve 'Silk' Hurley - "Jack Your Body" (
1987)
*:The first real House track to reach No.1 in the UK Top 40 pop chart in January 1987 - and was also the first to register more than half its sales on the 12" vinyl format.
*
S'Express - "Theme from S'Express" (
1988)
*:An
acid house classic. Obviously
disco-influenced, combined with
funky acid 303 baseline. Samples
Rose Royce's classic "Is it Love You're After". Reached Number one on the UK charts.
*
Technotronic - "Pump up the Jam" (
1990)
*:Probably the first house record to break the top 10 on the US pop charts.
*
Madonna - "
Vogue" (
1990)
*:Close behind "Pump up the Jam" and produced by perennial
New York DJ
Shep Pettibone, this record marked the absolute commercial breakout of House in the
United States. Went to number one on charts worldwide. Became the highest selling single on
WEA up to that time, beating
Chic's
1978 hit "Le Freak".
*
Leftfield - "Release the Pressure" (
1995)
*:The first group to truly mix house music with external influences such as dub and
reggae. Also credited with the creation of
progressive house music.
House music is uptempo music for dancing and has a comparatively narrow tempo range, generally falling between 118
beats per minute (bpm) and 135 bpm, with 127 bpm being about average since
1996.
Far and away the most important element of the house drumbeat is the (usually very strong, synthesized, and heavily equalized)
kick drum pounding on every quarter note of the 4/4 bar, often having a "dropping" effect on the dancefloor. Commonly this is augmented by various kick fills and extended dropouts (aka breakdowns). Add to this basic kick pattern
hihats on the
eighth-note offbeats (though any number of
sixteenth-note patterns are also very common) and a
snare drum and/or clap on beats 2 and 4 of every bar, and you have the basic framework of the house drumbeat.
This pattern is derived from so-called "
four-on-the-floor" dance drumbeats of the 1960s and especially the 1970's
disco drummers. Due to the way house music was developed by DJs mixing records together, producers commonly layer sampled drum sounds to achieve a larger-than-life sound, filling out the audio spectrum and tailoring the mix for large club sound systems.
Techno and
trance, the two primary dance music genres that developed alongside house music in the mid 1980s and early 1990s respectively, can share this basic beat infrastructure, but usually eschew house's live-music-influenced feel and black or Latin music influences in favor of more synthetic sound sources and approach.
* The Video game
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas includes a radio station dedicated solely to House music. The channel SFUR plays a mix of classic House selections with color provided by DJ Hans Oberlander voice acted by Lloyd Floyd.
*Sean Bidder
Pump Up the Volume: A History of House Music, MacMillan,
2002, ISBN 0752219863
*Sean Bidder
The Rough Guide to House Music, Rough Guides,
1999, ISBN 1858284325
*Bill Brewster & Frank Broughton
Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The History of the Disc Jockey, Grove Press,
2000, ISBN 0802136885
*Chris Kempster (editor)
History of House, Castle Communications,
1996, ISBN 1860741347 (A reprinting of magazine articles from the
1980s and
90s)
*Simon Reynolds
Energy Flash: a Journey Through Rave Music and Dance Culture, (UK title, Pan Macmillan,
1998, ISBN 0330350560), also released in US as
Generation Ecstasy : Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture (US title, Routledge,
1999, ISBN 0415923735)
*Hillegonda C. Rietveld
This is our House: House Music, Cultural Spaces and Technologies, Ashgate,
1998, ISBN 1857422422
*Peter Shapiro (2000)
Modulations: A History of Electronic Music: Throbbing Words on Sound, ISBN 189102406X.
*
Styles of house music*
List of notable house music artists and releases* [
1] Comprehensive history of house including DJ's producers and artists.
*
EDMWiki.org A Wiki for Electronic Dance Music.
*
House Music Awards Awards for house music.
*
Ibizaextra.com all your ibiza clubbing needs in one place Ibiza, the clubbing capital of the world
*
Fppo House mixes, online radio shows, RSS and Podcasts
*
Talks about The History of House Music - Article on Jesse Saunders and the first house record.
*
- Deep House, rare grooves, sound files, and info on the club scene.*
- UK house DJs.*
- Super 91.7 WMPH The BEAT of Wilmington*
- C895WorldWide.com*
- The Beat of New York 1.035 The New KTU