Yeah I want that article to be published by them too. Can't think why
they've failed to do this to date. A glaring - perhaps telling -
omission if you ask me. Surely there can be little doubt that it's been
considered.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I'm building an archive with recordings from Andrew Duke's In The Mix
(the radio show I did from 1987-2004); if you're interested in checking
out exclusive material from Daniel Bell and Minto George (DJ mixes),
Aux 88's Tom Tom (interview and lots of songs from Aux 88), and
Stewart Walker (live
Come here and hear me play some mad detroit house and techno, shameless
promotion perhaps, but should be a fun night. It is a builder for Santiago...
http://blipswitch.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=944
I totally have been wanting to see or write myself an article that
isnt a summary of whats out there, thats got new interviews with key
players of the early 313, and that almost looks at it from an
ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
records, records broken by mojo,
and please take what i say with a grain of salt, however large. ;)
On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 3:49 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I totally have been wanting to see or write myself an article that
isnt a summary of whats out there, thats got new interviews with key
players of the early 313, and
You can also hear Sonic Sunset's Dave Siska spinning in SF tonight,
at a bar called Swig on Geary near Jones. Looks like the 313 will
be represented across its wide musical spectrum in the 415 tonight!
On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 12:46 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Come here and hear me play some
I totally have been wanting to see or write myself an article that
isnt a summary of whats out there, thats got new interviews with key
players of the early 313, and that almost looks at it from an
ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
records, records broken by mojo,
Ethnomusicology!!
I think a full on, comprehensive article about major well known
Detroit artists and lots of the lesser known artists from the 1970s to
the present would be great to see - I know, crazy high expectations.
Maybe that's why I'm writing my dissertation on this...
Denise
On Fri,
Well, the beat down stuff is more closely related to older
disco/funk/soul - even more so than techno.
Being that Waxpoetics isn't about techno modern electronic music I can
see why an article on techno hasn't appeared yet.
Personally, I think it's fine that they haven't done a Detroit techno
So I take it nobody here has ever read In the Basement magazine then?
MEK
techno is dead.
- Original Message -
From: Denise Dalphond [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: 313 313@hyperreal.org
Sent: Friday, November 07, 2008 4:29 PM
Subject: Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines
Ethnomusicology!!
I think a full on, comprehensive article
Most genre's do not last very long before becoming ec=xtinct. I mean disco
only lasted 10-15 years at best. House and techno have been around over
twenty years. whats left to say?
I can't remember the last time i dj'd and only played house and techno.
hasn't happend in 4-5 years maybe.
A
On
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