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| GARAGE
- What is Garage Music? |
| I have been asked this now
on quite a few times? Okay for the diehard follower of this
music, I know you are sighing at this moment in time, but
thought it only fair for other peoples interested within
this music they should be given a explanation of what it
really is! |
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Garage music in my understanding is the
continuation of Disco music by other
means. It is the Electronic sound of the T.S.O.P
( The Sound of Philadelphia) label or Salsoul
Records on electronic equipment, instead of a
40 piece Orchestra, a fabulous vocalist
and the soft stirrings of Soul music mixed in to perfection!
Although it doesn't define the whole house sound of
New York it does in some ways explains the distinctive
way of which countless New York DJ/Producers
have continued to make Disco Records.

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Garage music takes
its name from the former New York City Nightclub
called the Paradise Garage in King Street, New York Ciy,Usa
(*In fact King Street Records used the very street name
to trade under!!),where the resident DJ called
Larry Levan played (1976 to 1985) underground
Black American Disco tunes, spiced up together
with occasionally white boy tracks like the Clash's
"Radio Clash" of Talking Heads "Once in
a lifetime". Another part of the clubs'
uniqueness was the clubs legendary sound system.
Created by Richard Long. It has been
noted that this hasn't been bettered or equalled by most
clubs yet around the world!
(*In fact the world most famous
nightclub at present - "The Ministry of Sound nightclub"
(London, England) was created on the design of the Paradise
Garage nightclub set-up in New York City, Usa.) |
Although, the original
concept comes from Chicago,Usa via their hot mix
5 DJs. The early Garage records didn't makeup
a sharp break with New York's own dance style. However
there was very little difference between the early release
of 1980's releases on labels like Westend records
and Prelude records, where in-house producer
Francis Kervorkian - working with the
legendary Larry Levan on some occaisions
was fast becoming a star.

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| The first 2 official Garage
tunes are generally accepted as being.... Paul Scott's
"Off the Wall" on Ace Beat Records and
Serious Intention's "You don't Know" on
Easy Street Records, released as the Paradise Garage
was shutting! On these releases the melodies were more complex,
the arrangements were more richer, and the sound was more
soulful than on previous house records ,yet they were more
harder and more abstract than the old disco sounds. |
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