Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-16 Thread nathan goode
Likewise, I would also like a copy of the series.

Email me privately if anyone can help

cheers

nath

Jonny McIntosh wrote:

 It was a great bit of TV - hopefully the rest of the series will be as good.
 They also played the accapella with bells and bongos of Candi Staton's You
 Got The Love that Tristan is after and which several of us here have been
 puzzling over. Anyone know where it is from? I tried to look at the label
 but alas! Can't remember who it was, either, that was in that bit of footage
 (demonstrating what you can do with an accapella and a beat). They also
 bizarrely played Love Break followed immediately by Word Is Love, two
 records I have just ordered from one guy. And Time to Jack, which was on
 my turntable.

 Or maybe I'm just house as f**k.

 Jonny.

 P.S. I missed the beginning, so I wouldn't mind a video copy too.

 - Original Message -
 From: Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: 313 mailing list 313@hyperreal.org
 Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 9:57 AM
 Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

  Yeah, it was cool. What I particularly liked was that all the talking
 heads
  used (Marshall Jefferson, Chip E, Derrick May, Larry Sherman, Earl Smith,
  various clubgoers etc) were people who were actually there and part of it,
  not just pundits and commentators. The narrative was a bit overblown
  occasionally, though.
 
  I think the last quarter, which as I remember followed the section about
  house's transition to vinyl via Jesse Saunders' 'On And On', was basically
  about Phuture discovering acid and Marshall Jefferson releasing 'Move Your
  Body'. The argument was that House was now poised to - dum dum der! - take
  over the world!
 
  On the whole, they stuck to the main players/clubs: Disco, Paradise
  Garage/NYC, Warehouse/Knuckles, Muzic Box/Ron Hardy (I never knew Muzic
 Box
  was spelled with a Z), Trax, Jesse Saunders/Vince Lawrence, Marshall J
 etc.
 
  My favourite bit was when Saunders and Lawrence told how they went down to
 a
  record shop with a thousand copies of 'On And On' and offered them to the
  buyer. They expected to sell the guy a few copies and to have to haggle
 over
  the price; instead he took them all at the price they named. He wrote out
 a
  cheque for $4000 on the spot. We went back outside, got in the car and
  screamed!
 
  I'll be watching next week. By the way, I'll be getting all the music
  channels on cable soon - what, if any, shows cater to the
  underground/electronic/dance fan?
 
  TOM

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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Toby Frith
Did anyone see Pump up the Volume last night?

I thought it was well made, although I'll readily admit that I have little
knowledge of the early roots of house music.  Good to see Del Boy May
getting a few words in there. I missed the last quarter though, anyone care
to enlighten on the content?


www.bleep43.co.uk


- Original Message -
From: Mann, Ravinder [CCS] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Jason Donnelly' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: '313' 313@hyperreal.org
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 11:01 AM
Subject: RE: [313] For those in the U.K.


 Jason,

 Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?

 Rav

  -Original Message-
  From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
  To: 313@hyperreal.org
  Subject: [313] For those in the U.K.
 
  If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.
 
 
  Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
  PUMP UP THE VOLUME
  A TIME TO JACK!
  
  Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music from
  its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its explosion
as
  a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players,
  punters and places that made this sound happen.
  
  Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes right
  back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then
moved
  underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This
produced
  some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the
times,
  including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall
Jefferson.
  
  By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume
gives
  a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs, dramatic
  DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house music
and
  club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre,
Steve
  'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
  http://www.talk21.com
  
  
  ___
  global-techno mailing list
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  http://lists.ffwd.cx/mailman/listinfo/global-techno
  
  FFWD internet - web hosting, custom programming and more - www.ffwd.cx
 
 
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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Gary_Girard



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I thought Pump Up The Volume was excellent, I really enjoyed watching it.
It's good to the the people that started the whole House thing off and to
be able to put faces to names.
 The last part of the show described how drum machines and 303's started to
be used on House tracks by the likes of DJ Pierre, and also how the
artist's got ripped off by the Trax record pressing plant.
 Looking forward to the next one : - )

GG


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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Mark Hughes
If anybody happened to tape the programme, then I
would be more than willing to pay for a copy.  My
video was playing games with me last night.

Cheers all
Mark

__
Do You Yahoo!?
Everything you'll ever need on one web page from News and Sport to Email and 
Music Charts
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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet
Yeah, it was cool. What I particularly liked was that all the talking heads
used (Marshall Jefferson, Chip E, Derrick May, Larry Sherman, Earl Smith,
various clubgoers etc) were people who were actually there and part of it,
not just pundits and commentators. The narrative was a bit overblown
occasionally, though.

I think the last quarter, which as I remember followed the section about
house's transition to vinyl via Jesse Saunders' 'On And On', was basically
about Phuture discovering acid and Marshall Jefferson releasing 'Move Your
Body'. The argument was that House was now poised to - dum dum der! - take
over the world!

On the whole, they stuck to the main players/clubs: Disco, Paradise
Garage/NYC, Warehouse/Knuckles, Muzic Box/Ron Hardy (I never knew Muzic Box
was spelled with a Z), Trax, Jesse Saunders/Vince Lawrence, Marshall J etc.

My favourite bit was when Saunders and Lawrence told how they went down to a
record shop with a thousand copies of 'On And On' and offered them to the
buyer. They expected to sell the guy a few copies and to have to haggle over
the price; instead he took them all at the price they named. He wrote out a
cheque for $4000 on the spot. We went back outside, got in the car and
screamed!

I'll be watching next week. By the way, I'll be getting all the music
channels on cable soon - what, if any, shows cater to the
underground/electronic/dance fan?

TOM


Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


 Did anyone see Pump up the Volume last night?

 I thought it was well made, although I'll readily admit that I have little
 knowledge of the early roots of house music.  Good to see Del Boy May
 getting a few words in there. I missed the last quarter though, anyone
care
 to enlighten on the content?


 www.bleep43.co.uk


 - Original Message -
 From: Mann, Ravinder [CCS] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: 'Jason Donnelly' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: '313' 313@hyperreal.org
 Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 11:01 AM
 Subject: RE: [313] For those in the U.K.


  Jason,
 
  Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?
 
  Rav
 
   -Original Message-
   From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
   To: 313@hyperreal.org
   Subject: [313] For those in the U.K.
  
   If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.
  
  
   Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
   PUMP UP THE VOLUME
   A TIME TO JACK!
   
   Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music
from
   its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its
explosion
 as
   a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players,
   punters and places that made this sound happen.
   
   Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes
right
   back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then
 moved
   underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This
 produced
   some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the
 times,
   including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall
 Jefferson.
   
   By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume
 gives
   a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs,
dramatic
   DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house
music
 and
   club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre,
 Steve
   'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
   http://www.talk21.com
   
   
   ___
   global-techno mailing list
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   http://lists.ffwd.cx/mailman/listinfo/global-techno
   
   FFWD internet - web hosting, custom programming and more -
www.ffwd.cx
  
  
   -
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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Toby Frith
What was the name of that DJ who led the Disco Sucks movement in that
Baseball Stadium?  I can't believe that sort of thing would have happened in
1976.




- Original Message -
From: Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 313 mailing list 313@hyperreal.org
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 9:57 AM
Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


 Yeah, it was cool. What I particularly liked was that all the talking
heads
 used (Marshall Jefferson, Chip E, Derrick May, Larry Sherman, Earl Smith,
 various clubgoers etc) were people who were actually there and part of it,
 not just pundits and commentators. The narrative was a bit overblown
 occasionally, though.

 I think the last quarter, which as I remember followed the section about
 house's transition to vinyl via Jesse Saunders' 'On And On', was basically
 about Phuture discovering acid and Marshall Jefferson releasing 'Move Your
 Body'. The argument was that House was now poised to - dum dum der! - take
 over the world!

 On the whole, they stuck to the main players/clubs: Disco, Paradise
 Garage/NYC, Warehouse/Knuckles, Muzic Box/Ron Hardy (I never knew Muzic
Box
 was spelled with a Z), Trax, Jesse Saunders/Vince Lawrence, Marshall J
etc.

 My favourite bit was when Saunders and Lawrence told how they went down to
a
 record shop with a thousand copies of 'On And On' and offered them to the
 buyer. They expected to sell the guy a few copies and to have to haggle
over
 the price; instead he took them all at the price they named. He wrote out
a
 cheque for $4000 on the spot. We went back outside, got in the car and
 screamed!

 I'll be watching next week. By the way, I'll be getting all the music
 channels on cable soon - what, if any, shows cater to the
 underground/electronic/dance fan?

 TOM


 Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


  Did anyone see Pump up the Volume last night?
 
  I thought it was well made, although I'll readily admit that I have
little
  knowledge of the early roots of house music.  Good to see Del Boy May
  getting a few words in there. I missed the last quarter though, anyone
 care
  to enlighten on the content?
 
 
  www.bleep43.co.uk
 
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Mann, Ravinder [CCS] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: 'Jason Donnelly' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Cc: '313' 313@hyperreal.org
  Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 11:01 AM
  Subject: RE: [313] For those in the U.K.
 
 
   Jason,
  
   Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?
  
   Rav
  
-Original Message-
From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: [313] For those in the U.K.
   
If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.
   
   
Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
PUMP UP THE VOLUME
A TIME TO JACK!

Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music
 from
its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its
 explosion
  as
a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key
players,
punters and places that made this sound happen.

Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes
 right
back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then
  moved
underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This
  produced
some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the
  times,
including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall
  Jefferson.

By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume
  gives
a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs,
 dramatic
DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house
 music
  and
club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre,
  Steve
'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.







talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
http://www.talk21.com


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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet
Can't remember, Steve something-or-other, but the dialogue from his
anti-Disco burn-in appears on the latest Parallax Corporation CD from I-F,
and probably about a hundred others as well.


Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


 What was the name of that DJ who led the Disco Sucks movement in that
 Baseball Stadium?  I can't believe that sort of thing would have happened
in
 1976.




 - Original Message -
 From: Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: 313 mailing list 313@hyperreal.org
 Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 9:57 AM
 Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


  Yeah, it was cool. What I particularly liked was that all the talking
 heads
  used (Marshall Jefferson, Chip E, Derrick May, Larry Sherman, Earl
Smith,
  various clubgoers etc) were people who were actually there and part of
it,
  not just pundits and commentators. The narrative was a bit overblown
  occasionally, though.
 
  I think the last quarter, which as I remember followed the section about
  house's transition to vinyl via Jesse Saunders' 'On And On', was
basically
  about Phuture discovering acid and Marshall Jefferson releasing 'Move
Your
  Body'. The argument was that House was now poised to - dum dum der! -
take
  over the world!
 
  On the whole, they stuck to the main players/clubs: Disco, Paradise
  Garage/NYC, Warehouse/Knuckles, Muzic Box/Ron Hardy (I never knew Muzic
 Box
  was spelled with a Z), Trax, Jesse Saunders/Vince Lawrence, Marshall J
 etc.
 
  My favourite bit was when Saunders and Lawrence told how they went down
to
 a
  record shop with a thousand copies of 'On And On' and offered them to
the
  buyer. They expected to sell the guy a few copies and to have to haggle
 over
  the price; instead he took them all at the price they named. He wrote
out
 a
  cheque for $4000 on the spot. We went back outside, got in the car and
  screamed!
 
  I'll be watching next week. By the way, I'll be getting all the music
  channels on cable soon - what, if any, shows cater to the
  underground/electronic/dance fan?
 
  TOM
 
 
  Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.
 
 
   Did anyone see Pump up the Volume last night?
  
   I thought it was well made, although I'll readily admit that I have
 little
   knowledge of the early roots of house music.  Good to see Del Boy May
   getting a few words in there. I missed the last quarter though, anyone
  care
   to enlighten on the content?
  
  
   www.bleep43.co.uk
  
  
   - Original Message -
   From: Mann, Ravinder [CCS] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   To: 'Jason Donnelly' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Cc: '313' 313@hyperreal.org
   Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 11:01 AM
   Subject: RE: [313] For those in the U.K.
  
  
Jason,
   
Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?
   
Rav
   
 -Original Message-
 From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
 To: 313@hyperreal.org
 Subject: [313] For those in the U.K.

 If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.


 Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
 PUMP UP THE VOLUME
 A TIME TO JACK!
 
 Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house
music
  from
 its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its
  explosion
   as
 a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key
 players,
 punters and places that made this sound happen.
 
 Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes
  right
 back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and
then
   moved
 underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This
   produced
 some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of
the
   times,
 including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall
   Jefferson.
 
 By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the
Volume
   gives
 a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs,
  dramatic
 DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house
  music
   and
 club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ
Pierre,
   Steve
 'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
 http://www.talk21.com
 
 
 ___
 global-techno mailing list
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 http://lists.ffwd.cx/mailman/listinfo/global-techno
 
 FFWD internet - web hosting, custom programming and more -
  www.ffwd.cx


   
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RE: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Colette Lewis
I thought it was excellent and thoroughly enjoyable!!  I think Tom has
summed it up completely to be honest!!!

Must admit though, up until now I wasn't aware of the anti Disco movement!!
That was a little disturbing, though I can't remember the name of the guy,
Steve something or other I think!!



-Original Message-
From: Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 1:58 AM
To: 313 mailing list
Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


Yeah, it was cool. What I particularly liked was that all the talking heads
used (Marshall Jefferson, Chip E, Derrick May, Larry Sherman, Earl Smith,
various clubgoers etc) were people who were actually there and part of it,
not just pundits and commentators. The narrative was a bit overblown
occasionally, though.

I think the last quarter, which as I remember followed the section about
house's transition to vinyl via Jesse Saunders' 'On And On', was basically
about Phuture discovering acid and Marshall Jefferson releasing 'Move Your
Body'. The argument was that House was now poised to - dum dum der! - take
over the world!

On the whole, they stuck to the main players/clubs: Disco, Paradise
Garage/NYC, Warehouse/Knuckles, Muzic Box/Ron Hardy (I never knew Muzic Box
was spelled with a Z), Trax, Jesse Saunders/Vince Lawrence, Marshall J etc.

My favourite bit was when Saunders and Lawrence told how they went down to a
record shop with a thousand copies of 'On And On' and offered them to the
buyer. They expected to sell the guy a few copies and to have to haggle over
the price; instead he took them all at the price they named. He wrote out a
cheque for $4000 on the spot. We went back outside, got in the car and
screamed!

I'll be watching next week. By the way, I'll be getting all the music
channels on cable soon - what, if any, shows cater to the
underground/electronic/dance fan?

TOM


Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


 Did anyone see Pump up the Volume last night?

 I thought it was well made, although I'll readily admit that I have little
 knowledge of the early roots of house music.  Good to see Del Boy May
 getting a few words in there. I missed the last quarter though, anyone
care
 to enlighten on the content?


 www.bleep43.co.uk


 - Original Message -
 From: Mann, Ravinder [CCS] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: 'Jason Donnelly' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: '313' 313@hyperreal.org
 Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 11:01 AM
 Subject: RE: [313] For those in the U.K.


  Jason,
 
  Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?
 
  Rav
 
   -Original Message-
   From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
   To: 313@hyperreal.org
   Subject: [313] For those in the U.K.
  
   If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.
  
  
   Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
   PUMP UP THE VOLUME
   A TIME TO JACK!
   
   Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music
from
   its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its
explosion
 as
   a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players,
   punters and places that made this sound happen.
   
   Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes
right
   back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then
 moved
   underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This
 produced
   some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the
 times,
   including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall
 Jefferson.
   
   By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume
 gives
   a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs,
dramatic
   DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house
music
 and
   club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre,
 Steve
   'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
   http://www.talk21.com
   
   
   ___
   global-techno mailing list
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   http://lists.ffwd.cx/mailman/listinfo/global-techno
   
   FFWD internet - web hosting, custom programming and more -
www.ffwd.cx
  
  
   -
   To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
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RE: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread John Bush
Steve Dahl.  A friend just told me that the on-air buddy on his show was
black *and* homosexual *and* a friend of Steve's -- so no more using him as
the stick to beat up on the anti-disco movement (at least for the usual
black/homosexual reasons). Maybe he really *did* dislike the music!

John

Wishing he had his Salsoul stuff in today...


-Original Message-
From: Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 5:14 AM
To: 313 mailing list
Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


Can't remember, Steve something-or-other, but the dialogue from his
anti-Disco burn-in appears on the latest Parallax Corporation CD from I-F,
and probably about a hundred others as well.


Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.




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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight

I'd love a copy of the series myself ( I can do the format conversion here
in the US) so if anyone is up to the task.

MEK





Mark Hughes 

[EMAIL PROTECTED]To: 313@hyperreal.org 

hoo.co.ukcc:   

  Subject: Re: [313] For those in 
the U.K.  
11/14/01 03:53  

AM  









If anybody happened to tape the programme, then I
would be more than willing to pay for a copy.  My
video was playing games with me last night.

Cheers all
Mark

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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Jonny McIntosh
It was a great bit of TV - hopefully the rest of the series will be as good.
They also played the accapella with bells and bongos of Candi Staton's You
Got The Love that Tristan is after and which several of us here have been
puzzling over. Anyone know where it is from? I tried to look at the label
but alas! Can't remember who it was, either, that was in that bit of footage
(demonstrating what you can do with an accapella and a beat). They also
bizarrely played Love Break followed immediately by Word Is Love, two
records I have just ordered from one guy. And Time to Jack, which was on
my turntable.

Or maybe I'm just house as f**k.

Jonny.

P.S. I missed the beginning, so I wouldn't mind a video copy too.

- Original Message -
From: Tom Robbins/Tom Magic Feet [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 313 mailing list 313@hyperreal.org
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 9:57 AM
Subject: Re: [313] For those in the U.K.


 Yeah, it was cool. What I particularly liked was that all the talking
heads
 used (Marshall Jefferson, Chip E, Derrick May, Larry Sherman, Earl Smith,
 various clubgoers etc) were people who were actually there and part of it,
 not just pundits and commentators. The narrative was a bit overblown
 occasionally, though.

 I think the last quarter, which as I remember followed the section about
 house's transition to vinyl via Jesse Saunders' 'On And On', was basically
 about Phuture discovering acid and Marshall Jefferson releasing 'Move Your
 Body'. The argument was that House was now poised to - dum dum der! - take
 over the world!

 On the whole, they stuck to the main players/clubs: Disco, Paradise
 Garage/NYC, Warehouse/Knuckles, Muzic Box/Ron Hardy (I never knew Muzic
Box
 was spelled with a Z), Trax, Jesse Saunders/Vince Lawrence, Marshall J
etc.

 My favourite bit was when Saunders and Lawrence told how they went down to
a
 record shop with a thousand copies of 'On And On' and offered them to the
 buyer. They expected to sell the guy a few copies and to have to haggle
over
 the price; instead he took them all at the price they named. He wrote out
a
 cheque for $4000 on the spot. We went back outside, got in the car and
 screamed!

 I'll be watching next week. By the way, I'll be getting all the music
 channels on cable soon - what, if any, shows cater to the
 underground/electronic/dance fan?

 TOM



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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-14 Thread Gary_Girard



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I think that was Farley'Jackmaster'Funk demonstrating the accapella / beat
mix.


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[313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-13 Thread g . j . robinson
Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
PUMP UP THE VOLUME
A TIME TO JACK!
 
Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music from its 
underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its explosion as a global 
commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players, punters and places 
that made this sound happen.

Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes right back to 
the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then moved underground to 
a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This produced some of the 
greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the times, including Derrick 
May, Farley ‘Jackmaster’ Funk, and Marshall Jefferson.

By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume gives a 
taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs, dramatic DJs, and 
musical experimentation - which paved the way for house music and club culture. 
The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre, Steve ‘Silk’ Hurley, Jamie 
Principle, and Joe Smooth. 
 





talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at 
http://www.talk21.com


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[313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-13 Thread Jason Donnelly

If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.



Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
PUMP UP THE VOLUME
A TIME TO JACK!

Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music from 
its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its explosion as 
a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players, 
punters and places that made this sound happen.


Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes right 
back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then moved 
underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This produced 
some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the times, 
including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall Jefferson.


By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume gives 
a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs, dramatic 
DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house music and 
club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre, Steve 
'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.








talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at 
http://www.talk21.com



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RE: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-13 Thread Mann, Ravinder [CCS]
Jason,

Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?

Rav

 -Original Message-
 From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
 To:   313@hyperreal.org
 Subject:  [313] For those in the U.K.
 
 If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.
 
 
 Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
 PUMP UP THE VOLUME
 A TIME TO JACK!
 
 Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music from 
 its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its explosion as 
 a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players, 
 punters and places that made this sound happen.
 
 Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes right 
 back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then moved 
 underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This produced 
 some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the times, 
 including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall Jefferson.
 
 By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume gives 
 a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs, dramatic 
 DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house music and 
 club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre, Steve 
 'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at 
 http://www.talk21.com
 
 
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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-13 Thread Toby Frith
I believe it's a three part series. Looks good though.


- Original Message -
From: Mann, Ravinder [CCS] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Jason Donnelly' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: '313' 313@hyperreal.org
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 11:01 AM
Subject: RE: [313] For those in the U.K.


 Jason,

 Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?

 Rav

  -Original Message-
  From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
  To: 313@hyperreal.org
  Subject: [313] For those in the U.K.
 
  If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.
 
 
  Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
  PUMP UP THE VOLUME
  A TIME TO JACK!
  
  Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music from
  its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its explosion
as
  a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players,
  punters and places that made this sound happen.
  
  Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes right
  back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then
moved
  underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This
produced
  some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the
times,
  including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall
Jefferson.
  
  By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume
gives
  a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs, dramatic
  DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house music
and
  club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre,
Steve
  'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
  http://www.talk21.com
  
  
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Re: [313] For those in the U.K.

2001-11-13 Thread Jason Donnelly

heres what the Guardian had to say:

11.05pm Pump up the Volume New series. An exploration of house music, which 
has evolved from its early Seventies roots into a global and commercial 
phenomenon. The first episode concentrates on how it was adopted by a 
primarily gay, black, and Latino club scene. By concentrating on the 
success of the emerging clubs, the programme shows just how house music - 
along with its unique culture - became such a massive hit and a popular 
area for musical experimentation (888)



jason


At 10:56 13/11/01 +, Toby Frith wrote:

I believe it's a three part series. Looks good though.


- Original Message -
From: Mann, Ravinder [CCS] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Jason Donnelly' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: '313' 313@hyperreal.org
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 11:01 AM
Subject: RE: [313] For those in the U.K.


 Jason,

 Is this a series of programmes or a one of production ?

 Rav

  -Original Message-
  From: Jason Donnelly [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2001 9:07 AM
  To: 313@hyperreal.org
  Subject: [313] For those in the U.K.
 
  If this has been posted already, sorry, I only get the digest.
 
 
  Tonight on Channel 4 at 11.05 p.m.
  PUMP UP THE VOLUME
  A TIME TO JACK!
  
  Pump Up the Volume traces the history and evolution of house music from
  its underground roots in Chicago and New York right up to its explosion
as
  a global commercial phenomenon. The series features the key players,
  punters and places that made this sound happen.
  
  Travelling between Chicago and New York, the first programme goes right
  back to the roots of house in 1976. House grew from disco and then
moved
  underground to a primarily gay, black and Latino club scene. This
produced
  some of the greatest, pioneering musical innovators and DJs of the
times,
  including Derrick May, Farley 'Jackmaster' Funk, and Marshall
Jefferson.
  
  By focusing on the key clubs and their creators, Pump Up the Volume
gives
  a taste of their recipe for success - non-stop dancing, drugs, dramatic
  DJs, and musical experimentation - which paved the way for house music
and
  club culture. The programme also features Joey Beltram, DJ Pierre,
Steve
  'Silk' Hurley, Jamie Principle, and Joe Smooth.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
  http://www.talk21.com
  
  
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  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  http://lists.ffwd.cx/mailman/listinfo/global-techno
  
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