RE: (313) Waxpoetics

2008-11-14 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
If anyone is interested in subscribing to the magazine - and if you do it
online - please put my name in the comment field as a referrer

I highly suggest subscribing to the magazine - best music magazine out
there right now

MEK



RE: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-13 Thread Dan Bean
Yup, still here. Only one article by me for Wax Poetics though...

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 06 November 2008 16:17
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

It's rare that I don't read it from cover to cover and plus, Dan Bean, whom
I think is a 313 list member - Dan, you're out there right? Well, he's
written some solid articles for them.




Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-10 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight


kent williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/09/2008 10:26:46 PM:

 I don't say this to start a debate, because 'disco only lasted 10-15
 years at best' is nominally correct.  But I can't really pinpoint the
 death of Disco, especially since deep house has been plowing the same
 row since ... forever.   Disco as a mass phenomenon in the United
 States was really brief, coming into the pop consciousness around 1974
 and going way out by 1979.

Actually, I'd say that disco came into pop consciousness around '76 and
if you weren't aware of it by then, you were definitely made aware of it by
'77 when Saturday Night Fever came out.

a minor detail

MEK



Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-10 Thread Michael Kuszynski
It's not a music history, but it's a book featuring the compositional
methods of detroit techno artists.

Seems like a pretty serious academic effort at capturing much of what
compositional structures define founding techno, and some cultural
comment.

It was on the Indiana U press, which I gather is where a lot of the
academic work that actually exists on the matter is centered.

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 9:48 AM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Haven't read it - what about it?

 Michael Kuszynski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/09/2008 09:20:22 PM:

 How about that book Unlocking the Groove?

 On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 4:31 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
  I have to agree with you.  The forward thinking innovation that was
  present in techno/house at their beginnings has moved on - it doesn't
 exist
  in the music that is sticking to the original blueprint.
  What is sort of funny in all of this, for me, is now I'm listening and
  buying mostly 60s  70s funk, jazz-funk, soul, etc. and I find more of
 that
  urgency and immediacy in music from 30+ years ago.
  Most techno from the last three or so years leaves me cold.  There's a
 lot
  of let's do another Basic Channel/Maurizo tune going on...
 
  MEK
 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/07/2008 09:55:53 PM:
 
  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 Sat, November 8, 2008 2:40 am, /0 wrote:
   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 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, 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 that almost looks at it from an
   ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
   records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
   The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in
 my
   opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a
 313
   dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from
 the
   other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
   waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in
 nyc,
   partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza
 stuff,
   imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
   record y.
   and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
   wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.
  
   Alex
  
  
  
  
  
   --
   Denise Dalphond
   Ph.D. Candidate
   Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
   Indiana University
   www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com
  
  
 
 
 
 
 



 --
 ---
 Michael Kuszynski
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 http://www.planerecordings.com
 New York, NY





-- 
---
Michael Kuszynski
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.planerecordings.com
New York, NY


Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-10 Thread Denise Dalphond
Unlocking the Groove is an excellent book by Mark Butler.  It does not
focus entirely on Detroit music, rather Butler includes Detroit techno
within a larger frame of electronic dance music in general.  His
analysis of the music and compositional methods is really fascinating
and, at least for me, one read through has not been enough to fully
grasp his analysis.  I plan to sit down with it again soon.

On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 11:21 AM, Michael Kuszynski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 It's not a music history, but it's a book featuring the compositional
 methods of detroit techno artists.

 Seems like a pretty serious academic effort at capturing much of what
 compositional structures define founding techno, and some cultural
 comment.

 It was on the Indiana U press, which I gather is where a lot of the
 academic work that actually exists on the matter is centered.




-- 
Denise Dalphond
Ph.D. Candidate
Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
Indiana University
www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com


Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-10 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
Haven't read it - what about it?

Michael Kuszynski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/09/2008 09:20:22 PM:

 How about that book Unlocking the Groove?

 On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 4:31 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
  I have to agree with you.  The forward thinking innovation that was
  present in techno/house at their beginnings has moved on - it doesn't
exist
  in the music that is sticking to the original blueprint.
  What is sort of funny in all of this, for me, is now I'm listening and
  buying mostly 60s  70s funk, jazz-funk, soul, etc. and I find more of
that
  urgency and immediacy in music from 30+ years ago.
  Most techno from the last three or so years leaves me cold.  There's a
lot
  of let's do another Basic Channel/Maurizo tune going on...
 
  MEK
 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/07/2008 09:55:53 PM:
 
  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 Sat, November 8, 2008 2:40 am, /0 wrote:
   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 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, 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 that almost looks at it from an
   ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
   records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
   The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in
my
   opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a
313
   dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from
the
   other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
   waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in
nyc,
   partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza
stuff,
   imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
   record y.
   and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
   wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.
  
   Alex
  
  
  
  
  
   --
   Denise Dalphond
   Ph.D. Candidate
   Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
   Indiana University
   www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com
  
  
 
 
 
 
 



 --
 ---
 Michael Kuszynski
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 http://www.planerecordings.com
 New York, NY



Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-09 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
I have to agree with you.  The forward thinking innovation that was
present in techno/house at their beginnings has moved on - it doesn't exist
in the music that is sticking to the original blueprint.
What is sort of funny in all of this, for me, is now I'm listening and
buying mostly 60s  70s funk, jazz-funk, soul, etc. and I find more of that
urgency and immediacy in music from 30+ years ago.
Most techno from the last three or so years leaves me cold.  There's a lot
of let's do another Basic Channel/Maurizo tune going on...

MEK

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/07/2008 09:55:53 PM:

 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 Sat, November 8, 2008 2:40 am, /0 wrote:
  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 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, 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 that almost looks at it from an
  ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
  records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
  The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in my
  opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a 313
  dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from the
  other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
  waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in nyc,
  partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza stuff,
  imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
  record y.
  and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
  wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.
 
  Alex
 
 
 
 
 
  --
  Denise Dalphond
  Ph.D. Candidate
  Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
  Indiana University
  www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com
 
 






Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-09 Thread Michael Kuszynski
How about that book Unlocking the Groove?

On Sun, Nov 9, 2008 at 4:31 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I have to agree with you.  The forward thinking innovation that was
 present in techno/house at their beginnings has moved on - it doesn't exist
 in the music that is sticking to the original blueprint.
 What is sort of funny in all of this, for me, is now I'm listening and
 buying mostly 60s  70s funk, jazz-funk, soul, etc. and I find more of that
 urgency and immediacy in music from 30+ years ago.
 Most techno from the last three or so years leaves me cold.  There's a lot
 of let's do another Basic Channel/Maurizo tune going on...

 MEK

 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/07/2008 09:55:53 PM:

 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 Sat, November 8, 2008 2:40 am, /0 wrote:
  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 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, 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 that almost looks at it from an
  ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
  records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
  The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in my
  opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a 313
  dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from the
  other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
  waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in nyc,
  partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza stuff,
  imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
  record y.
  and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
  wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.
 
  Alex
 
 
 
 
 
  --
  Denise Dalphond
  Ph.D. Candidate
  Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
  Indiana University
  www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com
 
 








-- 
---
Michael Kuszynski
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.planerecordings.com
New York, NY


Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-09 Thread kent williams
I don't say this to start a debate, because 'disco only lasted 10-15
years at best' is nominally correct.  But I can't really pinpoint the
death of Disco, especially since deep house has been plowing the same
row since ... forever.   Disco as a mass phenomenon in the United
States was really brief, coming into the pop consciousness around 1974
and going way out by 1979.   But nothing changed in the underground --
people still wanted to dance, but all those disco clubs in strip malls
in the suburbs closed down.

And around the world, there never was a disco backlash to the extent
there was here in the states. Italo didn't go into hiding, and in the
eastern block Disco stayed a huge thing, perhaps to this day.

House and Techno seem to me to not descendents of disco but direct
links in the chain that goes back forever -- they serve the same
functional purpose with a different musical vocabulary.  And whatever
new things crop up as time goes by are going to be different and the
same all over again.  And don't forget, a whole new crop of kids whose
starting point was early 90s techno are going to be coming on line
soon enough.

Just out of curiosity, when you're playing stuff besides house and
techno what are you playing?

On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 9:55 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 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.


RE: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread Odeluga, Ken
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] On
Behalf Of Southern Outpost
Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2008 7:39 PM
To: 313
Subject: Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines


I'm 100% behind you on that Micheal, have subscribed to  Waxpoetics for
many years it's usually never too far out of reach. I do remember a few
years ago they did a story on Detroit Techno, but rather focused on the
Beat Down crew. From memory there wasn't much mentioned abut Juan,
Kevin, Derrick etc and i'm hoping one day there will be an article at
the very least that tells the story to the Waxpoetics crowd.

P.

On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 8:17 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:

 I'm a subscriber to Waxpoetics and I think it's one of the best music 
 rags out there for all things soulful and funky. It's rare that I 
 don't read it from cover to cover and plus, Dan Bean, whom I think is 
 a 313 list member - Dan, you're out there right? Well, he's written 
 some solid articles for them.

 Alright - getting to the point

 Came across another mag online called In The Basement via Dusty 
 Grooves //www.btinternet.com/~inthebasement/itb.html

 Anyone read this one?
 Is it comparable to Waxpoetics?  Pluses - minuses?  Is it more of a 
 Northern Soul thing?

 MEK




--
--
Southern Outpost
Sydney - San Francisco - Berlin
http://www.southernoutpost.com
--


Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread \
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, radio shows, and the like..
The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in my
opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a 313
dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from the
other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in nyc,
partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza stuff,
imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
record y.
and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.

Alex




On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 3:08 AM, Odeluga, Ken [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 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] On
 Behalf Of Southern Outpost
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2008 7:39 PM
 To: 313
 Subject: Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines


 I'm 100% behind you on that Micheal, have subscribed to  Waxpoetics for
 many years it's usually never too far out of reach. I do remember a few
 years ago they did a story on Detroit Techno, but rather focused on the
 Beat Down crew. From memory there wasn't much mentioned abut Juan,
 Kevin, Derrick etc and i'm hoping one day there will be an article at
 the very least that tells the story to the Waxpoetics crowd.

 P.

 On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 8:17 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:

 I'm a subscriber to Waxpoetics and I think it's one of the best music
 rags out there for all things soulful and funky. It's rare that I
 don't read it from cover to cover and plus, Dan Bean, whom I think is
 a 313 list member - Dan, you're out there right? Well, he's written
 some solid articles for them.

 Alright - getting to the point

 Came across another mag online called In The Basement via Dusty
 Grooves //www.btinternet.com/~inthebasement/itb.html

 Anyone read this one?
 Is it comparable to Waxpoetics?  Pluses - minuses?  Is it more of a
 Northern Soul thing?

 MEK




 --
 --
 Southern Outpost
 Sydney - San Francisco - Berlin
 http://www.southernoutpost.com
 --



Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread \
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 that almost looks at it from an
 ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
 records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
 The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in my
 opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a 313
 dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from the
 other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
 waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in nyc,
 partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza stuff,
 imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
 record y.
 and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
 wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.

 Alex




 On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 3:08 AM, Odeluga, Ken [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 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] On
 Behalf Of Southern Outpost
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2008 7:39 PM
 To: 313
 Subject: Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines


 I'm 100% behind you on that Micheal, have subscribed to  Waxpoetics for
 many years it's usually never too far out of reach. I do remember a few
 years ago they did a story on Detroit Techno, but rather focused on the
 Beat Down crew. From memory there wasn't much mentioned abut Juan,
 Kevin, Derrick etc and i'm hoping one day there will be an article at
 the very least that tells the story to the Waxpoetics crowd.

 P.

 On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 8:17 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:

 I'm a subscriber to Waxpoetics and I think it's one of the best music
 rags out there for all things soulful and funky. It's rare that I
 don't read it from cover to cover and plus, Dan Bean, whom I think is
 a 313 list member - Dan, you're out there right? Well, he's written
 some solid articles for them.

 Alright - getting to the point

 Came across another mag online called In The Basement via Dusty
 Grooves //www.btinternet.com/~inthebasement/itb.html

 Anyone read this one?
 Is it comparable to Waxpoetics?  Pluses - minuses?  Is it more of a
 Northern Soul thing?

 MEK




 --
 --
 Southern Outpost
 Sydney - San Francisco - Berlin
 http://www.southernoutpost.com
 --




Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread Denise Dalphond
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, 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 that almost looks at it from an
 ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
 records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
 The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in my
 opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a 313
 dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from the
 other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
 waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in nyc,
 partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza stuff,
 imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
 record y.
 and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
 wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.

 Alex





-- 
Denise Dalphond
Ph.D. Candidate
Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
Indiana University
www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com


RE: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
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
article.  I think there are plenty of other magazines they can and have
done it already.
Wired magazine for starters.

MEK


Odeluga, Ken [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 11/07/2008 02:08:19 AM:

 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] On
 Behalf Of Southern Outpost
 Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2008 7:39 PM
 To: 313
 Subject: Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines


 I'm 100% behind you on that Micheal, have subscribed to  Waxpoetics for
 many years it's usually never too far out of reach. I do remember a few
 years ago they did a story on Detroit Techno, but rather focused on the
 Beat Down crew. From memory there wasn't much mentioned abut Juan,
 Kevin, Derrick etc and i'm hoping one day there will be an article at
 the very least that tells the story to the Waxpoetics crowd.

 P.

 On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 8:17 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
 
  I'm a subscriber to Waxpoetics and I think it's one of the best music
  rags out there for all things soulful and funky. It's rare that I
  don't read it from cover to cover and plus, Dan Bean, whom I think is
  a 313 list member - Dan, you're out there right? Well, he's written
  some solid articles for them.
 
  Alright - getting to the point
 
  Came across another mag online called In The Basement via Dusty
  Grooves //www.btinternet.com/~inthebasement/itb.html
 
  Anyone read this one?
  Is it comparable to Waxpoetics?  Pluses - minuses?  Is it more of a
  Northern Soul thing?
 
  MEK
 



 --
 --
 Southern Outpost
 Sydney - San Francisco - Berlin
 http://www.southernoutpost.com
 --



RE: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread Michael . Elliot-Knight
So I take it nobody here has ever read In the Basement magazine then?

MEK



Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread /0
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 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, 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 that almost looks at it from an
ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in my
opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a 313
dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from the
other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in nyc,
partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza stuff,
imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
record y.
and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.

Alex






--
Denise Dalphond
Ph.D. Candidate
Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
Indiana University
www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com



Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-07 Thread anthony
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 Sat, November 8, 2008 2:40 am, /0 wrote:
 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 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, 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 that almost looks at it from an
 ethnomusiclogical perspective as well as one that goes through
 records, records broken by mojo, radio shows, and the like..
 The glaring omission of a realdeal article about 313 has much in my
 opinion to do with the fact that its still undercover...i mean, a 313
 dj will get booked in nyc and i dont see any of the people from the
 other techno parties there.  also, many of the people who read
 waxpoetics intently for the other kinds of articles, at least in nyc,
 partially think that those early 313 names play mostly ibiza stuff,
 imho, even if they have, you know, c2 remix x or dmay or cybotron
 record y.
 and the vast majority of those people havent seen any of the first
 wave 313ers kill it.  maybe i'm off, but i dont think so.

 Alex





 --
 Denise Dalphond
 Ph.D. Candidate
 Department of Folklore  Ethnomusicology
 Indiana University
 www.denisedjsdetroit.blogspot.com







Re: (313) Waxpoetics vs In The Basement magazines

2008-11-06 Thread Southern Outpost
I'm 100% behind you on that Micheal, have subscribed to  Waxpoetics for many
years it's usually never too far out of reach. I do remember a few years ago
they did a story on Detroit Techno, but rather focused on the Beat Down
crew. From memory there wasn't much mentioned abut Juan, Kevin, Derrick etc
and i'm hoping one day there will be an article at the very least that tells
the story to the Waxpoetics crowd.

P.

On Thu, Nov 6, 2008 at 8:17 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I'm a subscriber to Waxpoetics and I think it's one of the best music rags
 out there for all things soulful and funky.
 It's rare that I don't read it from cover to cover and plus, Dan Bean, whom
 I think is a 313 list member - Dan, you're out there right? Well, he's
 written some solid articles for them.

 Alright - getting to the point

 Came across another mag online called In The Basement via Dusty Grooves
 //www.btinternet.com/~inthebasement/itb.html

 Anyone read this one?
 Is it comparable to Waxpoetics?  Pluses - minuses?  Is it more of a
 Northern Soul thing?

 MEK




--
--
Southern Outpost
Sydney - San Francisco - Berlin
http://www.southernoutpost.com
--