For many who are familiar with electronic music and rave culture, House is a name synonymous with deep passion. In 1977, it became an independent extension of the dancehall music scene from the late 1960s. As a result of its unique urban underground presence, it spread like wildfire through the nightclubs and dancefloors starting at the Warehouse in Chicago, then onward to New York, Philly, Washington DC and surrounding cities. What it did was brought together hipsters from communities of LGBTQ, African Americans, Latinos, Caucasians and other nationalities together to form a new culture of love and peace.
Nowadays, every sports event, get-together, workout center, and lobby across the globe plays house music in the background. Still most don't know how it started!
The house genre has accomplished the following:
Gave local DJs in inner-cities more exposure
Lent a hand in desensitizing the taboo of LGBT communities
Combined African, Latino and Caribbean dance music and styles
Opened the doors for underground singers, performers, and others behind the scene in the music field to spread their talents
Created a new subculture that preached love and peace after Woodstock
Gave the fashion world music to express bodily expressions
House Music grew so rapidly that it brought in a variety of music artists from Pop, R&B, Soul, Jazz, Rock N Roll, Hip Hop, and other genres to create a new sound fusion.
Top musical artists like Kym Mazelle, Madonna, Janet Jackson, Whitney Houston, Cece Peniston, The Jungle Brothers, Queen Latifah, Chrystal Waters and many others have contributed to the history of House Music.
This is a must-read EDM history book that pays homage to the originator and godfather of House Music; the late Frankie Knuckles as well as its legends, Larry Levan, LLRoy, Phuture, Larry Heard, and many others.
Topics: house music, edm, electronic dance music, music history, dance music, club culture, dj culture, techno, rave culture, music production, music technology, chicago house, detroit techno, acid house, trance music, dubstep, music evolution, underground music, dance music culture, music documentary, music biography, cultural history, music industry, music genres, music innovation, nightlife history, music revolution, sound engineering, music subcultures, musical movements
Readers of: Dan Sicko, Simon Reynolds, Matthew Collin, Bill Brewster, Frank Broughton, Michaelangelo Matos, Laurent Garnier, Sheryl Garratt, Tim Lawrence, Dave Haslam, Tricia Romano, Erin Osmon, Richie Hawtin, Frankie Knuckles, David Guetta, Armin van Buuren, Deadmau5, Skrillex, Diplo, Carl Cox, Paul Oakenfold, Tiësto, Daft Punk, Kaskade, Pete Tong, Sasha, John Digweed, Fatboy Slim, Calvin Harris, Avicii, Swedish House Mafia, Underworld, The Chemical Brothers, Moby, Aphex Twin