electro funk - what did it all mean?
by
Greg
WilsonElectro-Funk
is undoubtedly the most misunderstood of all UK Dance genres, yet probably
the most vital with regards to its overall influence. Central to the
confusion is the term itself, which during 82/83 (before it was shortened
to Electro) was specific to the UK. From a US perspective this music would
come under a variety of headings (including Hip-Hop, Dance, Disco,
Electric Boogie and Freestyle), arriving on import here in the UK mainly
on New York labels like West End, Prelude, Sugarhill, Emergency, Profile,
Tommy Boy, Streetwise, plus numerous others. Just as Northern Soul was a
British term for a style (or group of styles) of American black music, so
was Electro-Funk, and, like Northern, the roots of the scene are planted
firmly in the North-West of England.
Although
this has been documented in a number of books and publications down the
years, often with a fair degree of insight, the subject is rarely
approached with any true depth and attention to detail, the information
all in fragments.
Perhaps the main reason that Electro-Funk remains a mystery to so many
people is because it’s audience was predominantly black at a time when
cutting-edge black music (and black culture in general) was very much
marginalized in the UK, and as a result essentially underground. To
keep up to date with what was happening on the British black music scene
in 82/83 you’d have had to have been a reader of a specialist
publication like Blues & Soul or Black Echoes.
In the UK
scheme of things Electro-Funk eventually took over from Jazz-Funk as the
dominant force on the club scene, but not without major controversy and
upheaval. The purists regarded ‘electronic’ or ‘electric’ (as they
called it) with total contempt, rejecting its validity on the grounds that
it was, in their opinion, ‘not real music’ due to its technological
nature (although Marvin Gaye’s ‘Sexual Healing’ would put paid to
that theory). However, as time went on and audience tastes began to
change, even the most hostile DJ’s were forced to play at least some
Electro-Funk. Despite all the resistance, the movement slowly but surely
began to gain momentum, sweeping down from the North, through the Midlands
and eventually into London and the South. The reason the Electro scene
took so long to fully establish itself in the capital was down to the
stranglehold the all-powerful Soul Mafia DJ’s held on the Southern
scene. The Soul Mafia, with big names like Chris Hill, Robbie Vincent,
Froggy, Jeff Young and Pete Tong, continued to concentrate on Jazz-Funk
and Soul grooves (later referred to as ‘80’s Groove’). It wouldn’t
be until 84 that their virtual monopoly of the clubs, radio, and the black
music press began to erode as a new order of music replaced the old,
laying the foundations not only for Hip-Hop, but also the subsequent UK
Techno and House scenes.
As has
often been said, Electro is the missing link of Dance music. All roads
lead back to New York where the level of musical innovation and
experimentation throughout the early 80’s period was quite staggering.
It wasn’t one narrow style that never strayed from within the confides
of an even narrower BPM range, Electro-Funk was anything goes! The
diversity of records released during this period was what made it so
magical, you never knew what was coming next. The tempo of these tracks
ranged from under 100 beats-per-minute to over 130, covering an entire
rhythmic spectrum along the way. There was no set template for this new
Dance direction, it just went wherever it went and took you grooving along
with it. It was all about stretching the boundaries that had begun to
stifle black music, and its influences lay not only with German Technopop
wizards Kraftwerk, the acknowledged forefathers of pure Electro, plus
British Futurist acts like the Human League and Gary Numan, but also with
a number of pioneering black musicians. Major artists like Miles Davis,
Sly Stone, Herbie Hancock, Stevie Wonder, legendary producer Norman
Whitfield and, of course, George Clinton and his P Funk brigade, would all
play their part in shaping this new sound via their innovative use of
electronic instruments during the 70’s (and as early as the late 60’s
in Miles Davis’s case). Once the next generation of black musicians
finally got their hands on the available technology it was bound to lead
to a musical revolution as they ripped up the rule book with their twisted
Funk.
Before
Afrika Bambaataa & The Soul Sonic Force’s seminal Electro classic,
‘Planet Rock’ (Tommy Boy) exploded on the scene in May 82, there had
already been a handful of releases in the previous months that would help
define this new genre. D Train’s ‘You’re The One For Me’
(Prelude), which was massive during late 81, would set the tone, paving
the way for ‘Time’ by Stone (West End),
‘Feels
Good’ by Electra (Emergency) and two significant Eric Matthew / Darryl
Payne productions, Sinnamon’s ‘Thanks To You’ (Becket) and, once
again courtesy of Prelude, ‘On A Journey (I Sing The Funk Electric)’
by Electrik Funk (the term Electro-Funk originally deriving from this
track, ‘electric-funk’ being amended to Electro-Funk following the
arrival of Shock’s ‘Electrophonic Phunk’ on the Californian Fantasy
label in June). However, the most significant of all the early releases
was ‘Don’t Make Me Wait’ by the Peech Boys (West End), for this was
no longer hinting at a new direction, it was unmistakably the real deal.
An extreme chunk of vinyl moulded by Paradise Garage DJ Larry Levan,
‘Don’t Make Me Wait’ would quickly become a cult-classic, and
eventually even manage to scrape into the top 50 of the British Pop chart,
purely on the back of underground support (as would a number of subsequent
Electro-Funk releases).
As
the first British DJ to fully embrace this new wave of black music, I came
in for a lot of personal criticism. Having already become an established
name on the Jazz-Funk scene I was seen as a heretic for playing these
‘soulless’ records, especially those that were regarded as the more
‘blatant’ ones (for example, the dreaded ‘Planet Rock’ and the
rest of the Tommy Boys stuff, Warp 9 ‘Nunk’ (Prism), Extra T’s ‘ET
Boogie’ (Sunnyview), Man Parrish ‘Hip Hop, Be Bop (Don’t Stop)’ (Importe/12),
and Italian Zanza 12”, ‘Dirty Talk’ by Klien & MBO). I generally
opted for the Dub or instrumental versions, mixing them in alongside the
more orthodox Funk, Soul and Jazz-Funk releases of the time at my weekly
residencies, Legend in Manchester and Wigan Pier, where the scene first
took root. These venues, both state-of-the-art US styled clubs, would
become central to the movement throughout the 82-84 period, attracting
people from all over the country. The music would also gain further
exposure via my regular mixes for Manchester’s Piccadilly Radio
(beginning in May 82), and in August 83 I’d introduce Electro to a new
audience, when I became the first Dance resident at the now world-famous
Hacienda club.
Electro-Funk’s legacy is huge. It
announced the computer age and seduced a generation with its drum
machines, synthesizers and its sequencers, its rap, cut and scratch, its
breaking and popping, its Dub mixes, its bonus beats and its innovative
use of samples. Made to be mixed it inspired a new breed of British DJ’s
to cut the chat and match the beats. Now legendary names like Grandmaster
Flash, Tee Scott, Tony Humphries, Larry Levan, Francois Kevorkian, Shep
Pettibone, John ‘Jellybean’ Benitez and Double Dee & Steinski
became role-models for tuned-in DJ’s and would-be remixers, whilst
pioneers of the new digital sampling technology, including New York
producer Arthur Baker and his collaborator John Robie, British producer
Trevor Horn (via ‘Buffalo Gals’) and, of course, the Herbie Hancock /
Bill Laswell combination, with their Grammy winning ‘Rockit’
(Columbia), not only revolutionized black music but instigated a whole new
approach to popular music in general.
Electro-Funk was the channel that finally
brought the Hip-Hop movement, and all its various creative components,
firmly into the UK mainstream, helping to spread its message throughout
Europe and beyond. To all intents and purposes Electro-Funk pre-dates
Hip-Hop in a British context, the term not coming into common use here
until much later. We were more or less clueless when it came to Hip-Hop
until late 82, when Charisma Records in the UK unleashed Malcolm McLaren
& The World’s Famous Supreme Team’s ‘Buffalo Gals’ video,
which came as something of a culture-shock to say least, bringing the
full-force of NYC street-style out of The Bronx and into our living rooms,
and inspiring a carnival of breakdancing in cities and towns throughout
Britain during the summer of 83. Eventually we’d learn of its origins
with Kool DJ Herc, spinning his famous ‘merry-go-round’ of breaks for
the b boys. Before this, most people had presumed that the break in
breakdancing referred to the damage you might do to your bones if you got
the move wrong!
Although the media
gradually latched onto this ‘new dance craze’, the scene that
surrounded it wouldn’t receive any serious attention here in the UK
until 1984. This followed the runaway success of the Street Sounds
‘Electro’ compilations (Volume 1 released in October 83), which would
take the music to a much wider audience, and result in The Face announcing
‘Electro – The Beat That Won’t Be Beaten’ across its entire front
page in May 84, a full two years on from the US release of ‘Planet
Rock’. This substantial delay in recognition went a long way towards
obscuring Electro-Funk’s essential role in kick-staring the 80’s Dance
boom, with many UK club historians bypassing the pivotal early 80’s
period and mistakenly citing Detroit Techno as the trigger. Even the track that gave birth to Techno, the Juan Atkins / Rick Davies
12” ‘Clear’ by Cybotron (Fantasy), was regarded as an Electro
classic here in 83, way before the Techno scene began to take shape, and
would feature on the first Street Sounds ‘Crucial Electro’ compilation
the following year. Little mention is ever made of the fact that its
remixer, Jose ‘Animal’ Diaz, was immersed in NY Electro, with previous
mix credits including ‘We Are The Jonzun Crew’ for Tommy Boy, and
‘Hip Hop Be Bop (Don’t Stop)’, which gained a new lease of life
following his much sought-after limited edition mix for Disconet (the DJ
Only format affiliated to Sugarscoop).
Electro’s
star burnt very brightly, initially on the underground and eventually with
the club masses. In 1984 the London scene took off in a big way, both in
the clubs and on the radio, with the emergence of DJ’s like Herbie from
Mastermind (who mixed the Street Sounds albums), Paul Anderson, Tim
Westwood and Mike Allen confirming a radical shift in power on the
capital’s black music scene. With the substantial weight of London
behind it, the Electro movement quickly went overground enticing an
ever-increasing number of switched-on white kids in its on-going search
for the perfect beat. With a significant proportion of the British youth,
regardless of colour, now grounded in Hip-Hop culture, the new UK Dance
era was well and truly under way and it wouldn’t be long before
musicians and DJ’s here began to create their own hybrid styles, most
notably in Bristol where Electro was fused with the Reggae vibes of Dub
and Lovers Rock, to bring about a unique flavour that would later be known
as Trip-Hop. By the end of the decade cities like Manchester and London
had become major players on the now global Dance scene, with the UK a
veritable hotbed of creativity both in the clubs and the recording studios.
Electro-Funk
was the
prototype, and Hip-Hop, Techno, House, Jungle, Trip-Hop, Drum & Bass,
UK Garage, plus countless other Dance derivatives, all owe their debts to
its undoubted influence. Without it’s inspiration, it’s unlikely that
British acts such as Coldcut, 808 State, A Guy Called Gerald, Soul To
Soul, Massive Attack, The Prodigy, William Orbit, Goldie, the Chemical
Brothers, Underworld and Fatboy Slim, to name but a few, would have
emerged. When all’s said and done, Electro-Funk (or Electro or whatever
people choose to call it) was the catalyst, the mutant strain that bridged
the British Jazz-Funk underground to the Acid-House mainstream, Until this
fact is fully recognized the UK Dance jigsaw will remain incomplete and
confused, with countless clubbers, twenty years on, having no idea of the
true roots of the music they’re dancing to.
Copyright
Greg Wilson – November 2002
http://www.electrofunkroots.com
ESSENTIAL
BEATS 82/83
D
TRAIN you’re the one for me (US Prelude)
DR
JECKYLL & MR HYDE genius of love (US
Profile)
STONE
time (US West
End)
P-FUNK
ALL STARS hydraulic pump pt III (US Hump)
ELECTRIK
FUNK on a journey (I sing the funk electric) (US
Prelude)
PEECH
BOYS don’t make me wait (US
West End)
SINNAMON
thanks to you (US Becket)
AL
McCALL hard times (US West End)
ELECTRA
feels good (US Emergency)
ATLANTIS
keep on movin’ and groovin’ (US Chaz Ro)
AFRIKA
BAMBAATAA & THE SOUL SONIC FORCE planet rock (US
Tommy Boy)
SHOCK
electrophonic phunk (US Fantasy)
SECRET
WEAPON must be the music - remix (US
Prelude – from the LP Kiss FM Mastermixes vol 1)
GUNCHBACK
BOOGIE BAND funn (US Prelude)
THE
SYSTEM it’s passion (US Mirage)
ROCKERS
REVENGE walking on sunshine (US
Streetwise)
GRANDMASTER
FLASH & THE FURIOUS FIVE the message (US
Sugarhill)
RAW
SILK do it to the music (US West End)
THE
JONZUN CREW pack jam (look out for the ovc) (US
Tommy Boy)
SHARON
REDD beat the street – remix (US Prelude)
KLIEN
& MBO dirty talk (Italian
Zanza)
Q
the voice of q (US
Philly World)
EXTRA
T’s e.t boogie (US
Sunnyview)
GEORGE
CLINTON loopzilla (US Capitol)
WARP
9 nunk (US Prism)
TYRONE
BRUNSON the smurf (US Believe In A Dream)
PLANET
PATROL rock at your own risk (US
Tommy Boy)
WHODINI
magic’s wand (US Jive/Zomba)
STONE
girl I like the way that you move (US
West End)
ORBIT
the beat goes on (Canadian Quality)
DR
JECKYLL & MR HYDE the challenge (US
Profile)
TONEY
LEE reach up (US
Radar)
GRANDMASTER
FLASH & THE FURIOUS FIVE scorpio (US
Sugarhill)
MALCOLM
McLAREN / WORLD’S FAMOUS SUPREME TEAM buffalo gals (UK Charisma)
NAIROBI
& THE AWESOME FOURSOME funky soul makossa (US
Streetwise)
MAN
PARRISH hip hop be bop (don’t stop) (US
Importe/12 – later on Disconet 12”)
INDEEP
last night a dj saved my life (US
Sound Of New York)
REGGIE
GRIFFIN & TECHNOFUNK mirda rock (US
Sweet Mountain)
MELLE
MEL & DUKE BOOTEE message II (survival) (US
Sugarhill)
PRINCE
CHARLES & THE CITY BEAT BAND the jungle stomp (US
MJS)
THE
WEBBOES under the wear (US Sam)
THE
JONZUN CREW space is the place (US
Tommy Boy)
SANDY
KERR thug rock (US Catawba)
KLIEN
& MBO wonderful (US Atlantic)
EX
TRAS haven’t been funked enough (UK
Excellent)
VANITY
6 nasty nasty girls (US Hot Tracks –
originally on Warner Brothers LP)
AFRIKA
BAMBAATAA & THE SOUL SONIC FORCE looking for the perfect beat (US
Tommy Boy)
JOHNNY
CHINGAS phone home (US Columbia)
PURE
ENERGY spaced out (US Prism)
VISUAL
the music got me (US Prelude)
C.O.D
in the bottle (US Emergency – later on Disconet 12”)
THE
JONZUN CREW we are the jonzun crew (US
Disconet – later on Tommy Boy 12”)
RUN
DMC it’s like that / sucker mc’s (krush-groove
1) (US Profile)
WARP
9 light years away (US Prism)
D
TRAIN music (US Prelude)
SHIRLEY
LITES heat you up - meltdown mix (US West
End)
WEEKS
& CO if you’re looking for fun (US
Salsoul)
FEARLESS
FOUR just rock (US Elektra)
MIDNIGHT
STAR freak-a-zoid (US
Solar)
FREEEZE
I-dub-u (US Streetwise)
SINNAMON
I need you now (US Jive/Zomba)
ROCK
MASTER SCOTT & THE DYNAMIC THREE it’s life (you gotta think
twice) (US Reality)
ELECTRIC
POWER BAND papa smurf (US Bee Pee)
NEWTRAMENT
london bridge is falling down (UK
Jive/Zomba)
S.O.S
BAND just be good to me (US Tabu)
TONEY
LEE love so deep (US Radar)
NEWCLEUS
jam on revenge (the wikki wikki song) (US
Sunnyview – originally on US May Hew)
HERBIE
HANCOCK rockit (US Columbia)
PROJECT
FUTURE ray-gun-omics (US Capitol)
TWO
SISTERS high noon (US Sugarscoop)
THE
RAKE street justice (US Profile)
WUF
TICKET the key (US Prelude)
TIME
ZONE the wildstyle (US Celluloid)
CANDIDO
jingo breakdown (US Salsoul)
UNIQUE
what I got is what you need (US Prelude)
THE
PACKMAN I’m the packman (eat everything I can) (US
Enjoy)
CYBOTRON
clear (US Fantasy)
PLANET
PATROL cheap thrills (US
Tommy Boy)
NEW
ORDER confused beats (UK Factory)
HOT
STREAK body work (US Easy Street)
WEST
STREET MOB break dancin’ – electric boogie (US
Sugarhill)
GARY’S
GANG makin’ music (US Radar)
CAPTAIN
ROCK the return of captain rock (US
NIA)
B
BOYS two, three, break (US Vintertainment)
ARCADE
FUNK search and destroy (US
D.E.T.T)
DIMPLES
D sucker dj’s (I will survive) (US
Partytime)
G.L.O.B.E
& WHIZ KID play that beat mr dj (US
Tommy Boy)
TOM
BROWNE rockin’ radio (US Arista)
GRANDMASTER
& MELLE MEL white lines (don’t don’t do it) (US
Sugarhill)
CAPTAIN
RAPP bad times (I can’t stand it) (US
Saturn)
TWILIGHT
22 electric kingdom (US
Vanguard)
RUSSELL
BROTHERS the party scene (US Portrait)
SHANNON
let the music play (US
Emergency)
DJ
DIVINE get into the mix (US West End)
THE
ART OF NOISE beat box (UK ZTT)
HASHIM
al-naafiysh (the soul) (US
Cutting)
B
BOYS cuttin’ herbie / rock the house (US
Vintertainment)
MALCOLM
X / KEITH LeBLANC no sell out (US
Tommy Boy)
XENA
on the upside (US Emergency)
PUMPKIN
king of the beat (US Profile)
The
above is a list of 100 of the biggest tunes played at Legend in Manchester
and Wigan Pier during 1982 and 1983. The tracks are listed in
chronological order (the first 3 entries arriving on import in late 81).
Who is Greg Wilson?
MANCHESTER
DJ GURUS – THE FACE 1990
“Greg
Wilson is an honorary Manc born in Liverpool who is generally acknowledged
as the godfather of the early eighties Manc electro scene. He is one of
the first British DJ’s to have used three turntables. Remembered for his
nights at Legend and the Hacienda”.
FROM
SLEAZE NATION MAGAZINE (AMANDA CAZA) 1998
“By
1982 he was established at Wigan Pier, thrilling all and sundry with his
brew of electronica and soul. He was given a dying Wednesday at Legend,
Manchester’s most influential black music venue, and blew enough life
into it to spread queues round the block and gain punters countrywide.
Forget the Hacienda, where Wilson began the first full-on dance night –
Legend was the start of it all. His secret? The dastardly mixing
techniques he’d picked up in Europe plus this weird and wonderful new
form of music sweeping across from New York”.
FROM
THE BOOK ‘THE NINETIES – WHAT THE F**K WAS THAT ALL ABOUT’ (JOHN
ROBB) 1999
“Greg
Wilson was entranced by the stripped down electronic sounds that were
coming out of New York where, in one of the weirdest quirks in rock
history, black kids in the ghetto started to get hip to Kraftwerk. Taking
the atmospheric synth music of the German outfit, they re-invented it as a
dance music of their own. The computer age was dawning and here was a
music that matched the nu digital times…Electro is one of the key
forebears of nineties pop culture”.
FROM
THE BOOK ‘MANCHESTER, ENGLAND – THE POP CULT CITY’ (DAVE HASLAM)
1999
“Wilson’s
work on the decks every Wednesday (at Legend) drew the attention of Mike
Shaft, who was then fronting a black music show on Piccadilly Radio.
Although not a big fan of the new dancefloor sounds, he invited Wilson to
do mixes for the radio show. These were probably some of the most taped
programmes in Manchester radio history”
FROM
REVIEW OF ‘CLASSIC ELECTRO MASTERCUTS’ – BLUES & SOUL (BOB
KILLBOURN) 1994
“Compiled
by famed deejay Greg Wilson who was one of the chief protagonists in the
early development of electro in the UK. Greg helped pioneer the early
stages as resident deejay at the legendary Wigan Pier and Manchester
Legends venues. Greg was one of the first British deejays to consider
seriously the art of deejaying and mixing was beyond the simple act of
sticking a platter on a turntable before swilling ale and checking out the
available talent (although I’m pretty sure Greg did his fair share of
these activities too!). Greg’s mixes on Manchester Piccadilly Radio were
significant interludes and he was also the first British deejay to mix
live on TV when appearing on the now defunct The Tube show”.
FROM
THE BOOK ‘AND GOD CREATED MANCHESTER’ (SARAH CHAMPION) 1990
“’The
whole black side of Manchester has been completely ignored’ says Greg
Wilson, Manchester’s first electro DJ, on the wheels of steel at Wigan
Pier and Legends in ’82. A disco-chemist, he experimented with mixing
and NY’s new styles…Legends stepped out a whole 18 months before The
Face’s cover feature caught up…By the start of ’83, white hipsters
were changing channels, switching from doom-rock to dance beats. ACR, New
Order, Swamp Children and the like tuned into Legends…’In all things
that have been written about Manchester, the thing that led the way
hasn’t even been mentioned! The black-white mix! Even when the students
arrived (on the scene) the black side kept its identity and everyone began
bouncing ideas around’ argues Greg”.
FROM
THE BOOK ‘SHAUN RYDER, HAPPY MONDAYS, BLACK GRAPE & OTHER TRAUMAS’
(MICK MIDDLES) 1997
“Kermit
was here there and everywhere. Everyone knew Kermit. Everyone knew Kermit
stories. Everyone knew that one day this man would turn into something
important. The story begins way back in the early eighties, at
Manchester’s Legends nightspot. On Wednesday night Manchester
grandmaster of Electro, Greg Wilson, held hardcore funk sessions sussed
enough to educate even the hippest of dudes from old Hulme. All the while,
down the road, the Hacienda remained a vast, cold, empty shell, full of
echoey indie sounds and a few straggly raincoated students. Greg Wilson
was where it began and Kermit would soak in his influences”.
FROM
THE SLEEVENOTES OF ‘CLASSIC ELECTRO MASTERCUTS’ (IAN DEWHIRST) 1994
“Before
retiring from deejaying in 1984, Greg had kicked off the first weekly
dance night at The Hacienda and was managing Britain’s best known
breakdance crew, Manchester’s Broken Glass. In ’84 he produced Street
Sounds’ experimental ‘UK Electro’ album, and has since produced the
Ruthless Rap Assassins”.
Another article by Gregg Wilson:
»
never mind the bollocks...here's the bronx
|