In the book "Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The history fo the Disc Jockey"
the terms rave and jockey, etc are discussed in relation to their origin.
Rave was merely a term for all night party, it first being used around the
20s i think. So, the probability of a radio announcer saying such, would be
pretty good, i think.

----- Original Message -----
From: "darw_n" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <313@hyperreal.org>
Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2001 3:32 PM
Subject: [313] jazz...


> got this off of the MW list, thought some of you might think it to be an
> interesting comment...
>
> From: "pixie" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> > --- "Hugh G. Blaze" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Plus, just to keep this on-topic, I was lsitenig
> > > last night when they
> > > replayed some old radio footage, during which the
> > > radio announcer described
> > > Duke Ellington as "the king of rave music."
> > > Who knew?
> >
> > well, according to the segment i watched, "nobody else
> > really understood what was happening, to them, it just
> > sounded like noise."
> >
> > the amazing multi-thread,
> > pixie
> >
>
>
> Now I target that same thought at people who think this all has, and will
> be, just a party and some DJ's...
>
> darw_n
>
> "create, demonstrate, toneshift..."
>
> search for "djdarwin" on napster
> www.sphereproductions.com
> www.mannequinodd.com
> www.mp3.com/darw_n
>
>
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