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IN THE BEGINNING, THERE WAS JACK
Part 3 of the continuing saga of pruning my record collection. This week was House.
Let me start off by unabashedly and in no uncertain terms stating: “Peace to the Nation!” We don’t really say that anymore, but it feels good. The nation being, of course, the “House Nation” – a term of community and solidarity among those that shared varying degrees of ownership of this thing, back when it was largely an underground scene connecting the next generation of would–be disco heads in Chicago, New York, Detroit, and many points in-between and eventually the world. Being a Hip Hop/Reggae kid at heart, I was only a peripheral member of the House Nation for many years, eventually seeking asylum within its borders once the dirty south militias had rendered Hip Hop territories no longer habitable.
Growing up in the midwest and moving East when I was 18, I missed the early–80s, nascent stages of House that flourished in the Black clubs of the Chicago and New York underground. Those who were there will keep you up all night telling you about the songs and dances and clothes and cliques and clubs and reel–to–reel edits and loft parties and acid-spiked punches that organically and cumulatively created a sound and scene that was and is the direct descendant of Disco. I had to play catch up, starting in 1987, which is several years late, depending on who’s telling the story, and where you are situated in the blunt rotation.
Some of you reading this may not even like House music. I’d wager you actually do, you just don’t know it yet. You take the blue pill, and this story ends. You wake up in your bed believing house music is those rubber–neck white boys from Night At The Roxbury and you die a hater (how sad for you). However… if you take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.









Nina Simone – See Line Woman is House.
Prince – Erotic City is House.
The Fatback Band – Goin’ To See My Baby is House.
Eddy Grant – Nobody’s Got Time is House.
Manuel Göttsching – E2E4 is House.
Dinosaur L – Go Bang is House.
Kraftwerk – Numbers is House.
ESG – Moody is House.
Hector Lavoe - Para Ochún is House.
War – Flying Machine is House.
Loose Joints – Is It All Over My Face? Is House.
Two Tons of Fun – Just Us is House.
Donna Summer – I Feel Love is House.
Talking Heads – Born Under Punches is House.
Big Daddy Kane – Warm It Up Kane is House.
LCD Sound System – All My Friends is House.
Roy Ayers – Running Away is House.
The Clash – Magnificent Seven is House.
Baba Olatunji – Jingo is House.
I could go on and on…House is music that moves you to move your body. Full stop.


Do these aforementioned masterpieces above also fall under their own genres and eras? Sure. Do many modern imitations fall short by comparison? No doubt. But if your ears are paying attention, you can notice that there are just enough 11 herbs and spices from all these songs in the DNA of the best House music. The same roots from the Black American church. The same percussion from the drum circles before them. The same spirits. The subtleties. The crescendos. The minor keys and moody themes. The major keys and uplifting anthems. The beats and rhythms and syncopations that lockstep with your own heartbeat. If you’re already a member of this nocturnal cult, you hold these truths to be self evident. If not, you just might need to be on a dark, foggy, pulsating dance floor at 5am to recognize it. But once you do, the ear muffs are lifted. You hear the Matrix for what it truly is. You hear and FEEL this music as part of the greater continuum. All part of that same gumbo. And I stay hungry.
My own theory as to what connects all of these different songs to house music comes down to what musicians call “the vamp”. The vamp being the essence of the groove upon which a song is built. The vamp is often employed by bands who are just warming up, or really stretching out a particular number. The JB’s “Doin’ It To Death” is classic example of this. It’s one groove, with a key change or two, where both individual musicians, and all the singers in the band, take some space to riff off of it. They isolate a good groove, a good loop, and then run with it – augmenting when needed. If you like the JB’s, you like a good vamp. And if you like a good vamp, you like House.
There are a myriad of genres and sub–genres and sub–sub–genres we could get into – each a bit further from the source. I tend to traffic in Deep House and its close 1st cousins Soulful House and Afro House – with a pinch of Detroit Techno and/or left field weirdness stirred in for good measure. Some half-jokingly call this “House, the Black kind” and/or “the Black, Gay kind”. A quick way to get people to stop asking LOL Importantly, it articulates a shared desire to reclaim this music for those that created it – as the lion’s share of wealth generated by the global EDM cringe-fest rarely trickles down to people of color. Same as it ever was.
As loose and all–encompassing as my above definition may be, organizing a wall of records required tighter, more practical parameters. This proved more straight forward than Hip Hop & Reggae, but it also required a different methodology.




For starters, My recently established formula for sorting – discarding anything whose label didn’t immediately evoke the song in my head – was out the window. I found myself staring at crates of records whose titles rang no bell and whose melody eluded me. This speaks to the fleeting nature of a great deal of House music, which is, I’m sad to say, often quickly discarded after just a few plays. This has only gotten worse in the digital age, with no barriers to entry and a flood of new, mediocre releases every damn week. I excluded club music made before 1984. This takes essential, proto–house groups off the board, sending them back to the Disco classics crates.
The NYC Peech Boys
Secret Weapon
Yazoo
Gwen Guthrie
Etc












FEMALE VOCALISTS
Ultra Naté
Dawn Tallman
Jocelyn Brown
Sandee
La India
Monique Bingham
Joi Cardwell
Michelle Weeks
Barbara Tucker
Liz Torres
Lisa Fischer
Róisín Murphy
Jeanette Thomas
Kim English
Kim Mazelle
Donna Allen
Inaya Day
Ann Nesby
Lady Alma
Norma Jean Bell
Kimblee
Fonda Rae
Sabrynaah Pope
Sophie Lloyd
Vernessa Mitchell
Dajae
Crystal Waters
Roberta Sweede
Etc












Robert Owens
Michael Watford
Kenny Bobien
Romanthony
Josh Milan
LT Brown
Byron Stingily
Arnold Jarvis
Kenny Latimore
Peven Everett
Colonel Abrams
Vikter Duplaix
Keith Thompson
Darryl D'Bonneau
BeBe Winans
Donell Rush
Gary Michael Wade
Seven Davis Jr
Roland Clark
Michael Proctor
Erro
Shaun Escoffery
Freedom Williams (yes dammit)
Etc







GROUPS
Ten City
C+C Music Factory
Jasper Street Company
Mass Order
Inner City
Dee Lite
Sounds of Blackness
Soul II Soul
Moloko
808 State
Tortured Soul
M People
Etc
Larry Heard AKA Mr Fingers
Lil Louis
Frankie Knuckles
Louie Vega
Kenny Dope
Todd Terry
DJ Spinna
Karizma
Derrick Carter
Theo Parrish
Steve Silk Hurley
Juan Atkins
Mike Dunn
Osunlade
Kerri Chandler
Sandy Rivera
Kevin Saunderson
Jerome Sydenham
Tyrone Francis
Roy Davis Jr
Chip E
Dennis Ferrer
Black Coffee
Derrick May
Chris Brann
A Guy Called Gerald
Terry Hunter
Atjazz
Doug Gomez!
Jamie Principal
Joe Clausell
Moodymann
Glenn Underground
Marshall Jefferson
DJ Disciple
Vick Lavender
Francois K
Etc







Vocals VS instrumentals.
Males VS females.
Deep VS Afro VS Techy.
House Classic (pre–1992)
The following are some songs that crystallize categories for me.
CLASSIC FEMALE VOCALS
Groove Committee – I Want You To Know
Lil' Louis & The World – Club Lonely
Inner City - Good Life
Ralphi Rosario - U Used To Hold Me
Sandee - Notice Me
The Underground Solution – Luv Dancin'
Etc






Robert Owens – I'll Be Your Friend
Donnie – The It
Boyd Jarvis – The Music Got Me
Ten City – Devotion
Fingers Inc. – Bring Down The Walls
ESP – It’s You
Etc







Mr Fingers – Can You Feel It
Lil' Louis & The World – The Conversation
Phase II – Mystery
Tyree - Acid Crash
Soft House Company – A Little Piano
After Hours – Waterfalls
Etc






Instrumental categories get a bit tricky, as I'm including tracks where I only ever play the dub and/or songs where the vocals are essentially just a sampled phrase or vocal vamp repeated. But this can muddy the waters.
K Joy – Like This (dub)
Master C & J - Face It
Jeanette Thomas – Shake Your Body
KC Flightt – Let’s Get Jazzy
Steve Poindexter – Work That Mutha Fucker
A Guy Called Gerald – Voodoo Ray
Etc






Spoken word has always had a place in House Music, rooted in Sun Ra and Gil Scott Heron and The Last Poets, who often set poetry to music – an age old tradition in the realest sense of the term. Some of these are minimalist repetitions used for texture. Others are fully formed narrative anthems.
TALK THAT TALK
Bobby Konders – The Poem
Adonis – No Way Back
Ellis D - My Loleatts
Jon Cutler feat Eman - It’s Yours
Blaze - My Beat
Sinnamon – I Need You Now
Etc






Sunkids feat Chance - Rescue Me
Cajmere Feat Dajae – Brighter Days
Black Magic – Freedom
Big Muff - My Funny Valentine
Voices - Voices In My Mind
Voices - Can You see The Light






Peven Everett - Stuck
Michael Watford - Michael’s Prayer
Amp Fiddler - Love & War
Blaze - How Deep Is Your Love
Kenny Latimore - If I Lose My Woman
Armand Van Helden feat Roland Clark - Flowerz
Etc
Kerri Chandler – Rising The Sun
Mission Control – Outta Limits
Blaze – Gloria Muse
Nuyorican Soul - The Nervous Track
Glenn Underground – Mental Black Resurrection
Jay Dee - Plastic Dreams
Edward’s World - Soul Roots
Ian Friday – Carib’s Leap
Jeremiah Santiago – Discover Feel Free
Herb Martin – Soul Drums
Eric Kupper – Latin Blues
Koloke – West African Guitar
DJ Oji – Esteban
Etc
Isolee - Beau Mot Plage
The Aztec Mystic – Knights Of The Jaguar
Mr Fingers - Washing Machine
Theo Parish - Falling Up
Aril Brikha - Groove La Chord
Vapoursace - Gravitational Arch of Ten
Rhythim Is Rhythim - Nude Photo
Etc
DASSIT FOR NOW
When it was all sorted I did manage to isolate about 5 more crates to sell - surpassing 30 in total. Not bad. I just need an army of gnomes to catalogue them all, first.
This continues to be an exhausting process, but also really enjoyable. I’m living and breathing music, all day and often all night. It’s as if I built a rare book library over the last 40 years, and I’m flipping through the pages of every single volume. Not a bad way start to the year!
After the House was wrapped I moved on to Funk/Soul/Jazz, then Rock/Punk, then Spoken Word. Ugh. It just never ends. Never collect records. Terrible idea LOL.
If you like any of this music, there is plenty for you to hear, in the mixes section of this very site. Enjoy!