Friday, April 25, 2014

Elton John AIDS Foundation Creates HIV Fund In Frankie Knuckles' Name

Via Chicago Pride:
Sir Elton John is honoring the memory of legendary DJ, record producer and remixer Frankie Knuckles by establishing the Frankie Knuckles Fund to support HIV information, testing and treatment among black communities in Africa, America and the U.K. "Frankie was such a lovely man and a great talent and his legacy provides a powerful voice to reach out to people, particularly men of color, about their essential role in helping to create an AIDS-free future," said John, founder of the Elton John AIDS Foundation.
Knuckles died of diabetes complications on March 31st.

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Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Obamas Laud Frankie Knuckles

The above letter from the President and First Lady was included in the program at yesterday's memorial service for the late gay DJ Frankie Knuckles in Chicago. Speakers at the service included Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn, who praised Knuckles for "inventing a new musical form" in house music. Windy City Times has more about the event on their Twitter feed.

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Saturday, April 12, 2014

TONIGHT: Furball 10th Anniversary

Tonight DJ Corey Craig will spin a special tribute set to the late Godfather of House, Frankie Knuckles, who performed at Furball in the past. Details.

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Thursday, April 03, 2014

Petition Of The Day

One of the petition's creators is Rob Di Stefano, the founder of the popular 90s house music labels Tribal America and Twisted Records.

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Wednesday, April 02, 2014

HomoQuotable - Rich Juzwiak

"Frankie Knuckles kept the disco in house before 'disco house' or any of the mass sub-genre-ization of house was a thing. The racist and homophobic Disco Demolition Night, held July 12, 1979, largely killed disco's mainstream cool, but Knuckles stuck with it, riding it through the '70s and well into the '90s and beyond. A maligned people had their maligned genre, and from there it grew to become a global phenomenon. Knuckles called house 'disco's revenge.'

"Today, plenty of people listen to house music (whether via EDM or otherwise) without recognizing its roots as gay black music for gay black people. But that is what it is, and that it came to prominence at a time in which the gay community was being ravaged by AIDS, is a triumph. It's but one of several examples of the gays knowing something it would take years for the rest of the world to discover. And it might not have happened without Frankie Knuckles, certainly not in the way it did. He was one of the handful of people who've been on this earth that we could point to and say, 'There. That man changed culture.'" - Rich Juzwiak, writing for Gawker.

RELATED: During last night's Tonight Show, house band The Roots played The Whistle Song in tribute to Frankie Knuckles. Roots percussionist Frank Knuckles takes his name from the late Godfather Of House. My remembrance of Frankie Knuckles is hereRolling Stone has published a lengthy retrospective of Knuckles' career and influence.

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Tuesday, April 01, 2014

Frankie Knuckles Dies At Age 59

Dance music fans poured onto social media late Monday night, hoping that reports of the death of house music legend Frankie Knuckles, 59, were an impossibly cruel April Fool's hoax. Sadly, his passing has been confirmed by the Chicago Tribune, which thus far reports only that Knuckles "died unexpectedly at home."

Knuckles was known to all as the Godfather Of House, a title bestowed because of the music style he popularized as a young DJ at Chicago's Warehouse, a club mostly patronized by black and Latino gay men. That style would soon come to dominate dance floors, radio waves, and pop charts all over the world.

More on Knuckles' early days from Complex Music:
Knuckles was born in the Bronx in 1955, and became a disco DJ in the early 1970s, spinning with childhood friend and garage pioneer Larry Levan at the Continental Baths. In 1977, the Warehouse nightclub opened in Chicago, and Knuckles moved to the city to become its premier DJ. As legend has it, the music Knuckles would spin at "The Warehouse" became extremely popular among his regular clubgoers, who would then go to record stores to request "house" music—music spun at "The Warehouse." What Knuckles would spin evolved into its own genre, as producers used drum machines to produce less expensive version of popular dance styles. Knuckles would also begin to do his own edits, lengthening disco tracks to make them work better for a dance floor. The Warehouse became the crucible of a genre that would conquer the world and can still be heard on radio stations to this day.
Beginning in the early 90s, in addition to his own popular releases, Frankie Knuckles lent his golden touch to dozens of club remixes, many of which became classics separate from the original pop singles. In gay and straight clubs around the world, it was a rare night that did not feature at least one (and sometimes several) Frankie Knuckles remixes. Pet Shop Boys, Sounds Of Blackness, Chaka Khan, Michael Jackson, Alison Limerick, Toni Braxton, Lisa Stansfeld - all of them and many more earned dance floor hits via those remixes with his trademark piano runs. At the height of his fame during those years, Frankie Knuckles was even name-checked on Absolutely Fabulous.

In 2004 Chicago named a street for Knuckles near the former location of the Warehouse.
A PERSONAL REMEMBRANCE: Shortly after I moved to NYC in the spring of 2001, I found myself alone as the packed Roxy wound towards the conclusion of its Saturday night. As I leaned on a railing above the dance floor to again ponder my decision to move across the country to a town where I only knew a handful of people, the DJ dropped the needle on the Frankie Knuckles classic The Whistle Song - a track that always did and always will evoke in me a contradictory sense of joy and melancholy - and probably the last song I needed to hear during that moment of self-pitying loneliness in a crowded nightclub. I stood up straight, eyes closed, and clutched the rail tighter, overwhelmed with images of the lost men with whom I'd twirled to that song across the dance floors of Fort Lauderdale and Miami Beach. An older man nearby read my face and leaned over to cup a hand to my ear. Motioning to the dance floor, he half-shouted, "With such gorgeous music in the world, how can ANYBODY be unhappy?" Then he bounded alone onto the floor and began to twirl. As I walked out of the Roxy a few minutes later, still smiling, I vowed that one day I would tell that story to Frankie Knuckles, if I were to ever meet him. About one year later, I got that chance.

VIDEO: The below promotional clip scarcely does justice to the full 12" version, but hey, Frankie is in it.

MORE RECENTLY:  I took this photo at Furball in April 2012. Frankie was chatting in between tracks with my pal and the event's promoter Joe Fiore. I wanted a shot for the blog so I teased Frankie to "do something DJ-y." He dramatically extended one hand to pinch a knob on his console and we all cracked up.

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Swag Tuesday II

Courtesy of Fly Life, today's second Swag Tuesday prize is Love To Love You Donna, the new Donna Summer remix tribute album from Verve Records, which is available today at iTunes and at physical retailers nationwide.
LOVE TO LOVE YOU DONNA, is a brand new remix record celebrating the life and voice of five-time Grammy Award winning singer and songwriter Donna Summer. A dozen highly sought after DJs and remixers have contributed a diverse and creative spin to some of the most beloved tracks in dance and pop music history. The first single is "Love Is In Control (Finger On The Trigger)," remixed by Chromeo & Oliver. It will be followed by legendary producer Giorgio Moroder's entirely re-imagined version of "Love to Love You Baby," the classic song he recorded with Donna, released in November of 1975. Love to Love You Donna was produced by Dahlia-Ambach Caplin, the architect of the five-volume Verve Remixed series, and Randall Poster, the legendary producer and music supervisor.
Other famed remixers that contributed to Love To Love You Donna include Frankie Knuckles (listen here), Holy Ghost!, Hot Chip, and Jacques Green. For today's giveaway we have three copies on CD and two on limited-edition vinyl. Enter to win by commenting on this post and please remember to leave an email address in the text of your comment. Entries close at midnight on Thursday, west coast time.

VIDEO: Remixer Afrojack spins his take on I Feel Love. Not one of those kids waving their hands so happily is as old as the original track. It's a good thing.

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Wednesday, September 11, 2013

JMG World Exclusive: Donna Summer's
Hot Stuff (Frankie Knuckles & Eric Kupper As Director's Cut Signature Mix)

Verve Records has selected JMG to host the exclusive world premiere of the latest release from their Donna Summer tribute remix package, which you can now pre-order at iTunes in advance of the official October 22nd release.

Here's the full track listing.

Love to Love You Donna:
01 Love to Love You Baby (Giorgio Moroder ft. Chris Cox Remix)
02 Dim All The Lights (Duke Dumont Remix)
03 Hot Stuff (Frankie Knuckles and Eric Kupper as Director's Cut Signature Mix)
04 I Feel Love (Afrojack Remix)
05 Love Is in Control (Chromeo & Oliver Remix)
06 Sunset People (Hot Chip Dub)
07 Working The Midnight Shift (Holy Ghost! Remix)
08 Bad Girls (Gigamesh Remix)
09 MacArthur Park (Laidback Luke Remix)
10 I Feel Love (Benga Remix)
11 On the Radio (Jacques Greene Remix)
12 Last Dance (Masters at Work Remix Short Version)
13 La Dolce Vita (Donna Summer & Giorgio Moroder)

"Exclusive world premiere." Fancy!

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