Last edited by Sammy Ambrose (2014-10-26 05:35:41)
formby - I'm afraid you lose by quoting the Stones as an authority. You are slipping
We have a rigorous drug testing program I'll have you know.
How did this thread end up in the Wardrobe anyway?
Last edited by Yuca (2014-10-26 07:15:58)
I should point out: last time I went to a n soul night it was one of the worst nights I've ever experienced. Horrible function room, some of the most forgettable music ever recorded, crappy sound system and DJs with no idea how to use it, few people dancing, and a special guest DJ (who looked as if he had escaped from a mental institution) shouting indecipherable noise between each tune, and playing utter crap. Memorable in retrospect I suppose, but not much fun at the time (except in a car crash sort of way).
However for personal reasons I would not like to condemn all DJs who look like they may have escaped from a mental institution.
The Jamaican DJs were primarily using new music, both US and Jamaican releases. They generally weren't scouting intently or curating old music.
I stand by my assertion regarding Hip Hop 'collectors'. The late Bob Abrahamian in Chicago was an obsessive record collector, moving from funk to sweet soul and encompassing many of the same records the Northern or Rare Soul collectors sought out. He had as good as any insight into Hip Hop collections. He counted the serious rivals in the US as about six in number—people like Brad Hales in Detroit or Andy Noble in Milwaukee. Compare that to the Northern scene where there are hundreds of people with truly serious collections and a number at the top end like Mark Dobson or Andy Dyson where there are hundreds of thousands of impossibly obscure examples of Black American music. They would sell to people like Shadow or Madlib routinely. The Americans would accept that there was nothing like that depth or breadth of knowledge in the States except in extreme isolation—like Bob A. Bob was never given to hyperbole or overstatement and treated his subject with the forensic skills and stringent logic of the Northwestern Computer Sciences Professor he was. He will be sadly missed.
Most Hip Hop producers used second or third hand samples, often from official and unofficially released CDs, once Hip Hop had reached the commercial mainstream. In fact the lack of a depth of knowledge is one of the key factors which eventually took it up a blind alley artistically.
Last edited by Yuca (2014-10-26 07:54:57)