This is the story of how I got into dance music.
I’ve always been a fan of electronic music in general. When I was ten my favorite artists were Brian Eno, Thomas Dolby, Devo, Laurie Anderson, and Jean Michel Jarre (probably the most influential artist for me – check out Oxygene Pt. 2 – mindblowing), and I wore the cassettes out listening to them under the covers at night. As a high school senior in 1990-91 I was listening to a lot of alt rock, goth (Cure, Smiths, Joy Division, Sisters of Mercy), and electronic pop (New Order, Seal, KLF, Primal Scream, Deee-Lite).
[singlepic id=580 w=320 h=240 float=right]During my freshman at college in Boston I went to industrial shows (Meat Beat Manifesto, Ministry, Front 242, KMFDM) and got turned on to some techno like Aphex Twin, The Future Sound of London, and Orbital. While home for the summer after my freshman year at college, I picked up a flier for A Rave Called Sharon, to be held in San Francisco. I had not at that point been to a rave, nor was I really sure what raves were, but I was eager to go. Alas, I couldn’t find a ride, but I held on to that flier (notice the ‘no whistles’ policy – funny).
Then in the fall of 1992 I went to an after-hours club called The Loft and my life was immediately and drastically changed. This is where I first heard real underground dance music in the context it is meant to be heard. Many of those reading this will remember this venerable institution and have similar tales to tell. But for those that don’t it was a brownstone at 21 Stanhope Street in Boston’s Back Bay neighborhood. Tall and narrow, a tight stairwell rose from the street entrance past dancefloors on the second and third floors to an amazing rooftop patio surrounded by skyscrapers. The place was open from midnight to 6am and on Fridays DJs Brian Mayhem, 333, and MGee played rave music upstairs for a mostly caucasian audience; progressive house, breakbeat, and trance. Downstairs the crowd was mostly black and latino and the sound was straight-up deep, domestic house music. The djs were Armand Van Helden, Bruno, and Craig Rainey.
The crowds didn’t mix much; the heads downstairs thought rave music was too crazy and the kids upstairs were intimidated by the attitude downstairs. Though I spent most of my time dancing upstairs, I often went to the house floor because the music was so good. I didn’t necessarily feel welcome but I felt tolerated and that was good enough. The sound system was warm and powerful (nothing sounds as good as a wall of wooden W-bins), and when the djs dropped big tracks the reactions were fantastic – the whole room jumped up and down grinning and cheering. The Loft was an exceptional way to begin my journey through dance music and in an industry that became more and more fragmented by genre I always carried both dance floors in my heart.
I attended Fridays religiously for two or three years. I learned to dj and by 1994 was traveling around for professional gigs. Overload and Jason Mouse took over as resident djs upstairs and would occasionally let my partner (DJ Caseroc) and I fill in for them. Having become so close with the music on that dance floor, those sets were a real honor. One of my favorite memories is playing Timothy Leary’s “Tune In Turn On Drop Out” over the Plastikman Acid House Remix of 777 “Alphawave” at peak hour (you can approximate my mix by opening both youtube links at the same time). Packed floor, smoke so dense you can’t see your hand in front of your face, strobes firing, cheers and screams growing louder as Richie’s acid epic reached a fever pitch…
By the time I started going to The Loft, Armand (or DJ AV8 as he was also known) was already an experienced producer with releases on seminal deep house labels Strictly Rhythm and Nervous Records, and within a year of my first visit to The Loft he moved to New York to produce more accessible dance music. This mixtape is from the days when Armand rocked the deep sh*t.
Of particular interest is the transition from “Brighter Days” to “Show Me Love;” it’s brilliant. That single blend taught me quite a lot about djing.
As always, help with the tracklist is appreciated. Question for those that might know: did this mixtape have a title? Thanks, Joe.
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Tracklist
00:00 | Mood II Swing | I Need Your Luv (Right Now) (Lem's Church Mix) |
03:23 | MAW & Company feat. Xaviera Gold | Gonna Get Back To You (Mood II Swing "Big Thick" Dub) |
06:40 | Sultans Of Swing | Move It To The Left (3rd Level Banji Mix) |
10:58 | The S.O.U.L. S.Y.S.T.E.M. | It's Gonna Be A Lovely Day (Palladium House Anthem I) |
18:43 | Happy Mondays | Stinkin Thinkin (Junior Style) |
22:21 | Jazzy | Lonely (Underground Goodie Mix) |
24:50 | Cajmere feat. Dajae | Brighter Days (Underground Goodie Mix) |
27:04 | Robin S. | Show Me Love (Stonebridge Club Mix) |
32:56 | Nightcrawlers | Push The Feeling (The Dub Of Doom) |
37:10 | T.M.V.S. | Don't Be Shy |
38:39 | Todd Terry | Desire - What I Want |
41:22 | Martha Wash | Carry On (Masters at Work Dub Mix) |
43:31 | Martha Wash | Carry On (Tee's Dub) |
48:23 | Happyhead | Digital Love Thing (Underground MK Mix) |
50:23 | Armand Van Helden | Te-Quiero (Casa Cabesa Mix) |
54:53 | unknown | unknown |
57:44 | J. | Keep The Promise (MK Deep Dub) |
59:14 | Kenny "Dope" Gonzales | All I'm Askin' (Roger S. Remix) |
1:01:30 | House Of Gypsies | Samba |
1:03:40 | Frank Ski | Whores In This House |
1:05:07 | Uncanny Alliance | I Got My Education (Kenlou Mix) |
1:09:58 | Trey Lorenz | Photograph Of Mary (MAW Dub) |
1:13:06 | Aly-Us | Follow Me (Club Mix) |
1:16:37 | unknown | unknown |
1:18:22 | Karen Pollack | You Can't Touch Me (Murk Remix) |
1:21:51 | Liberty City | Some Lovin' |
1:24:21 | Coral Way Chiefs | Release Myself |
Ahh…thanks for the memories 🙂
Very entertaining story as usual. Cant wait to check out this mix. Thanks!
Yes! I lost this tape when I moved to SF and have looked for it in vain a million times. Armand kicked ass on this one. Thank you!!
big fun HOUSE! I have goosebumps right now. hugz.
Gawd, I love all this stuff, especially the lil windows into a part of the rave scene I missed, as I arrived a bit late!
Thanks as always, Shannon, for keeping the music alive.
Thanks so much for posting these classic mixes! Loving this mix so far…
Hey Shannon,
Nice to see these memories preserved. I found your page through an article about a space I used to throw parties in with the Cabrera Brothers that then got took over by some MIT cats. Obviously Redlight was mentioned as the space had been in Chinatown as well.
Those were some heady days in the early 90’s. So glad I was there to see the music develop and evolve. Erry once in a while I’ll break out the trance crate and make a tape, uh mix, and it never passes muster as I think back and compare it too the trance sets you rocked. You really set a bar for me with that extra smooth mixing style and impeccable track selection.
I hope life is good for you.
Peace
Respect
Thanks for the kind words!
Good stuff here. Good memories. The Loft was the bomb. Best parts of this mix are toward the end when he goes from Latin House to Handbag House to Diva House. Armand’s got chops.
nice!!!!
here are some of the tracks your missing..
1st track – Mood II Swing – I Need Your Luv (Right Now) (Lem’s Church Mix)
2nd track – MAW & Company Featuring Xaviera Gold – Gonna Get Back To You (Mood II Swing “Big Thick” Dub)
10th track – T.M.V.S. – Don’t Be Shy
19th track – House Of Gypsies – Samba
22nd track – Trey Lorenz – Photograph Of Mary (MAW Dub)
Thank you, Paul!
Great mix. It was the house music from this era that got me hooked. I still have my gold loft card (in a shoe-box).
48:23 – Happyhead – Digital Love Thing (Underground MK Mix)
You the man, Shawn. Hunting this down now.
i feel exactly the same about the “brighter days” into “show me love” mix. thats the LESSON. permanently part of our collective conscience. thanks for the inspiration.
As someone who arrived on the scene more than a decade later (and first favorite house track was by Armand) I am loving this mix and story! Thank you for sharing 🙂 BOTH
1:05:07 Uncanny Alliance – I Got My Education (Kenlou Mix)
Thank you so much for this mixtape!!!
18:43 = Happy Mondays – Stinkin’ Thinkin’ (Junior Style Mix)
41:22 = Martha Wash – Carry On (Masters At Work Dub Mix)
57:44 = J. – Keep The Promise (MK Deeb Dub)
Funnily enough all vinyls that I submitted on Discogs years ago :^)
Fantastic set by the way – thanx a bunch for this!
Thank you!! That Dub of Carry On is so smoking.
Oh btw, I am running a Myspace page which is dedicated to the legendary FRONT club in Hamburg, Germany which existed between 1983 and 1998. It had been the first real House club in continental Europe and people such as Master At Work, Tony Humphries, the Murks, Robert Owens and other spun there between 1990 and 93. On my page I have at least 10 sets from around the same time which are extremely close to Armand’s set stylewise. If you like the above set then you should check out the page at Myspace.com/FrontHamburg
Sorry – don’t wanna spam around but I thought I’d let you know if you love that kind of music – 1992 had been the Best year in House music anyway :^)
Armand van Helden rocks. His track, Entra mi Casa, is perhaps my fav from him. I saw him live with Bad Boy Bill, Tall Paul and the Crystal Method at The Docks club on the shores of Lake Ontario in downtown Toronto by the Harbour front around 2001 or 2002. Awesome vibe.
I liked Armand more when he was on the Nervous/Strictly deep house tip. I wasn't really into the big pop remixes he did like Sneaker Pimps etc. But I really liked Entra Mi Casa. I rocked the shit out of that record.
Reading your description to this mix I couldn't help think of how these very same tracks played an integral part in deepening my Love for this genre. I have tapes from the early 90's that include at 16 of these trax in the same set. Good times……….. CARLOSCOLOGNE
wow.
you did this
thanks so much
daym, the LOFT was my spot to be faithfully every weekend!!! this mix is taking me back. thanks for posting this.
sez
I think 54:53 might be one of the L'll Louis – I'm Hot For You mixes. I can't check my record since it's in storage. Same baseline and beats that I remember. http://www.discogs.com/Lll-Louis-Im-Hot-For-You/r…
What do you mean, storage? Don\’t you have all your recs in the man cave?
Van Helden was already in a bit of creative slump by that point, but the disregard of that album must have really sunk his spirits, because he was simply nowhere to be heard from for years
rather late to the party but i think the track at 38.39 is this http://www.discogs.com/Todd-Terry-The-Unreleased-…
the track being Desire — What I Want
excellent mix. thanks for sharing.
Thank you, Lee!
Only two left to identify!
AMAZING mix! such energy! love the music of this era – thanks for sharing this!