Woebot
Well-known member
Nice Mix
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A Guy Called Gerald Presents
NO SELL OUT
LEGEND / WIGAN PIER ELECTRO RETROSPECTIVE
MAY 1982 - DEC 1983
MIXED BY GREG WILSON FOR A GUY CALLED GERALD
www.samurai.fm
“'No Sell Out' is a fitting title, apart from being the name of the first track on the mix (Malcolm X 'No Sell Out') it reflects the controversy on the black music scene when these records were being released. Electro being dismissed by many as 'not black music', and what was happening at Legend and Wigan Pier regarded by the Soul purists as something of a sell out at the time - a direction they believed would lead to the ruination, rather than rejuvenation, of the black music scene.” Greg Wilson
LISTEN WITH REAL PLAYER (www.real.com)
http://snipurl.com/fmw0
A GUY CALLED GERALD
“Describing this music is like a fish trying to describe water. There's so many memories, smells, people - my entire teenage years were shaped by all the tracks that are in this mix. I¹m thinking of Adidas high top trainers and jogging bottoms, bruised knees and elbows, all of which were part of my breakdancing day to day.
I was 15 and always at Greg Wilson's night at Legends, Manchester, on Wednesdays. I was just a little bit underage but managed to get in. I really miss those times coz people back then had nothing else but that, the atmosphere was something I've never ever seen repeated. People would come to Legends from all over the country just for that night. At the time dancing and music was the most important thing in my life. I recognised the music as a way of basically escaping from my environment. It was a pretty harsh environment in some ways and there was a lot of judging going on. There were the typical teenage pressures - everyone was classified as either a Dub head or Funk head. It would be easy to fall into someone else's mould and do what they were doing, but in them days that was looked at as cheesy. The people that were into Electro and breakdancing were basically crazy - it was definitely a young movement. We had a kind of careless aggression about things – a Punk attitude - people would be laughing at us for washing the floor and spinning on our heads, but you could see they would never know how to break out of a system. And that's basically what we felt we were doing.
I was always attracted to an electronic sound, any kind of synthesised sound from Chick Corea to Jean Michel Jarre to Gary Numan to The Buggles. When I started to hear this type of music for the first time it was almost unbelievable for me. It was like the music was from inside my head – but what was appealing was the synthesised sounds. Early kinds of synth music seemed to me to be always trying to mimic traditional instruments or songs. Whereas this new sound, this Electro, was definitely not trying to hide the fact that it was electronic. There was something raw and exciting about it.
Legends was one of the only places that played strictly Electro, Soul and Funk, plus, of course, Jazz breaks. At the same time there were youth clubs and community halls that were playing that type of music but for me the appeal of Legends was the club environment, the dancing, and of course I had to check out Greg Wilson’s set. The club reminded me of what a space ship would be like and in the last fifteen years of djing around the globe I've not seen a club to rival it. The dance floor was an arena surrounded by a waist high wall that sloped inwards coated in silver metal material. Near the DJ box the wall was mirrored. Above the dancefloor there were rings of neon and 4 mirror balls - one in each corner and an array of mirrors all over the ceiling at different angles so that when the laser was activated it would bounce all over the club. There was a strobe built above the neon which could move in a circle around the perimeter of the dancefloor - loads of strobes, lasers, smoke machines.
The speakers were above the dancefloor facing into it - one in each corner and there must have been a rotor sound system as the DJ could trigger each speaker separately. The DJ booth was raised facing the dancefloor at the back of the arena. It seemed like the sounds were synched with the lights - you could easily lose yourself as the sounds would orbit the dancefloor with the lights - especially the high pitched sounds. I remember being on the dancefloor when the strobe was orbiting and the smoke going - no other light than that and, because there were mirrors all the way round, it would be hard to find your way off. It was amazing to see the freeze time motion from the strobe - especially when people were letting off dancing.
It was a place where you had to dress up. The extreme Soul and Funk heads would have wet perms, Lacoste or Fred Perry jumper, pair of corduroy trousers and a pair of moccasins. The Jazz Fusion guys would probably be dressed in stretched jeans, frayed at the bottom and split to cover their spat dancing shoes. The dancers would carry all their gear in camera bags - towel, talcum powder for the floor. And the dancefloor was strictly for dancing.
A couple of years ago I happened to be in Manchester city centre - hadn't been back there for 10 years at least - and I thought I'd go check out where Legends used to be as the city was completely different. We parked in the back street and as my brother walked past a skip noticed, to his surprise, one of the mirror balls. He took it for posterity and it's hanging in my studio today.
In my teenage years the name Greg Wilson was synonymous with Bank Holidays and Christmas and special times. His name would come up on Piccadilly Radio at these times. As soon as I heard there was going to be a Greg Wilson mix on the radio I would run over to Shadu’s, the local electronic shop, and buy a brand new Chrome C90 TDK cassette tape. I would make sure I was in front of the Amstrad with my finger on the pause button when that mix started. It didn't matter what was happening anywhere else. That mix would get played to death - the tape would be worn out until his next guest appearance on Piccadilly Radio. Around Christmas, he would mix all the popular club music from the entire year into one great big groove soup. There would be all sorts of things going on - plays on words - bits of melodies swimming around - intros from tracks that you'd grown to know and love and if you knew anything about dance music at the time it was almost as if he was having a conversation with you with his mix. In Legend he’d be mixing what sounded like his own versions of the tunes, using 2 or 3 copies of the record – that also inspired me.
Listening back to this stuff it seems like production-wise and idea-wise not much has really moved on musically. The technology is just a bit slicker now. I was talking to Arthur Baker the other day and he was describing to me producing Planet Rock and all of the Afrika Bambaataa productions around that time. Most of the music that you hear in these productions wasn't played with a sequencer - they were all hand played on a keyboard. They had a very basic step sequencer and they couldn't afford their own drum machine so it was borrowed from the guy working at the post office. It wasn't worth anything to anyone in those days. These people were from the ghetto - they took every opportunity to make their music. There was no big money to be made in any of it - it was more for the community. Bambaataa was making music for the Zulu Nation. So considering what they used to do to make early 80s electro sounds and the technology available to us today it seems to me that there's not enough risk-taking.
Listen carefully to Greg's mix. Each one of these tracks has its own story and individual sound. I hope this inspires people to take more risks, search for their own sounds and break out of the mould that has become dance music. “
A Guy Called Gerald, Berlin - May 2005 – http://www.aguycalledgerald.com
http://www.electrofunkroots.co.uk
------------------------------------------------
A Guy Called Gerald Presents
NO SELL OUT
LEGEND / WIGAN PIER ELECTRO RETROSPECTIVE
MAY 1982 - DEC 1983
MIXED BY GREG WILSON FOR A GUY CALLED GERALD
www.samurai.fm
“'No Sell Out' is a fitting title, apart from being the name of the first track on the mix (Malcolm X 'No Sell Out') it reflects the controversy on the black music scene when these records were being released. Electro being dismissed by many as 'not black music', and what was happening at Legend and Wigan Pier regarded by the Soul purists as something of a sell out at the time - a direction they believed would lead to the ruination, rather than rejuvenation, of the black music scene.” Greg Wilson
LISTEN WITH REAL PLAYER (www.real.com)
http://snipurl.com/fmw0
A GUY CALLED GERALD
“Describing this music is like a fish trying to describe water. There's so many memories, smells, people - my entire teenage years were shaped by all the tracks that are in this mix. I¹m thinking of Adidas high top trainers and jogging bottoms, bruised knees and elbows, all of which were part of my breakdancing day to day.
I was 15 and always at Greg Wilson's night at Legends, Manchester, on Wednesdays. I was just a little bit underage but managed to get in. I really miss those times coz people back then had nothing else but that, the atmosphere was something I've never ever seen repeated. People would come to Legends from all over the country just for that night. At the time dancing and music was the most important thing in my life. I recognised the music as a way of basically escaping from my environment. It was a pretty harsh environment in some ways and there was a lot of judging going on. There were the typical teenage pressures - everyone was classified as either a Dub head or Funk head. It would be easy to fall into someone else's mould and do what they were doing, but in them days that was looked at as cheesy. The people that were into Electro and breakdancing were basically crazy - it was definitely a young movement. We had a kind of careless aggression about things – a Punk attitude - people would be laughing at us for washing the floor and spinning on our heads, but you could see they would never know how to break out of a system. And that's basically what we felt we were doing.
I was always attracted to an electronic sound, any kind of synthesised sound from Chick Corea to Jean Michel Jarre to Gary Numan to The Buggles. When I started to hear this type of music for the first time it was almost unbelievable for me. It was like the music was from inside my head – but what was appealing was the synthesised sounds. Early kinds of synth music seemed to me to be always trying to mimic traditional instruments or songs. Whereas this new sound, this Electro, was definitely not trying to hide the fact that it was electronic. There was something raw and exciting about it.
Legends was one of the only places that played strictly Electro, Soul and Funk, plus, of course, Jazz breaks. At the same time there were youth clubs and community halls that were playing that type of music but for me the appeal of Legends was the club environment, the dancing, and of course I had to check out Greg Wilson’s set. The club reminded me of what a space ship would be like and in the last fifteen years of djing around the globe I've not seen a club to rival it. The dance floor was an arena surrounded by a waist high wall that sloped inwards coated in silver metal material. Near the DJ box the wall was mirrored. Above the dancefloor there were rings of neon and 4 mirror balls - one in each corner and an array of mirrors all over the ceiling at different angles so that when the laser was activated it would bounce all over the club. There was a strobe built above the neon which could move in a circle around the perimeter of the dancefloor - loads of strobes, lasers, smoke machines.
The speakers were above the dancefloor facing into it - one in each corner and there must have been a rotor sound system as the DJ could trigger each speaker separately. The DJ booth was raised facing the dancefloor at the back of the arena. It seemed like the sounds were synched with the lights - you could easily lose yourself as the sounds would orbit the dancefloor with the lights - especially the high pitched sounds. I remember being on the dancefloor when the strobe was orbiting and the smoke going - no other light than that and, because there were mirrors all the way round, it would be hard to find your way off. It was amazing to see the freeze time motion from the strobe - especially when people were letting off dancing.
It was a place where you had to dress up. The extreme Soul and Funk heads would have wet perms, Lacoste or Fred Perry jumper, pair of corduroy trousers and a pair of moccasins. The Jazz Fusion guys would probably be dressed in stretched jeans, frayed at the bottom and split to cover their spat dancing shoes. The dancers would carry all their gear in camera bags - towel, talcum powder for the floor. And the dancefloor was strictly for dancing.
A couple of years ago I happened to be in Manchester city centre - hadn't been back there for 10 years at least - and I thought I'd go check out where Legends used to be as the city was completely different. We parked in the back street and as my brother walked past a skip noticed, to his surprise, one of the mirror balls. He took it for posterity and it's hanging in my studio today.
In my teenage years the name Greg Wilson was synonymous with Bank Holidays and Christmas and special times. His name would come up on Piccadilly Radio at these times. As soon as I heard there was going to be a Greg Wilson mix on the radio I would run over to Shadu’s, the local electronic shop, and buy a brand new Chrome C90 TDK cassette tape. I would make sure I was in front of the Amstrad with my finger on the pause button when that mix started. It didn't matter what was happening anywhere else. That mix would get played to death - the tape would be worn out until his next guest appearance on Piccadilly Radio. Around Christmas, he would mix all the popular club music from the entire year into one great big groove soup. There would be all sorts of things going on - plays on words - bits of melodies swimming around - intros from tracks that you'd grown to know and love and if you knew anything about dance music at the time it was almost as if he was having a conversation with you with his mix. In Legend he’d be mixing what sounded like his own versions of the tunes, using 2 or 3 copies of the record – that also inspired me.
Listening back to this stuff it seems like production-wise and idea-wise not much has really moved on musically. The technology is just a bit slicker now. I was talking to Arthur Baker the other day and he was describing to me producing Planet Rock and all of the Afrika Bambaataa productions around that time. Most of the music that you hear in these productions wasn't played with a sequencer - they were all hand played on a keyboard. They had a very basic step sequencer and they couldn't afford their own drum machine so it was borrowed from the guy working at the post office. It wasn't worth anything to anyone in those days. These people were from the ghetto - they took every opportunity to make their music. There was no big money to be made in any of it - it was more for the community. Bambaataa was making music for the Zulu Nation. So considering what they used to do to make early 80s electro sounds and the technology available to us today it seems to me that there's not enough risk-taking.
Listen carefully to Greg's mix. Each one of these tracks has its own story and individual sound. I hope this inspires people to take more risks, search for their own sounds and break out of the mould that has become dance music. “
A Guy Called Gerald, Berlin - May 2005 – http://www.aguycalledgerald.com
http://www.electrofunkroots.co.uk