comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Militant funk - Page 1 : comparemela.com

The Big Takeover: Jack Rabid s Best of 2021 (290 Nods): Top 150 LPs (New Recordings), Top 70 Retrospective/Reissue Releases, and Top 70 Stand Alone Singles & EPs

The Big Takeover: Jack Rabid s Best of 2021 (290 Nods): Top 150 LPs (New Recordings), Top 70 Retrospective/Reissue Releases, and Top 70 Stand Alone Singles & EPs
bigtakeover.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bigtakeover.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Shake the Foundations: Militant Funk & Post-Punk Dancefloor

Search for: It’s 1981. I’m Hip. I’m British. But What Am I Dancing To? ‘Shake the Foundations’ Will Tell You Cherry Red’s Shake the Foundations: Militant Funk and the Post-Punk Dancefloor 1978-1984 is a beginner’s guide to pre-millennial, UK cool. Various Artists Shake the Foundations: Militant Funk and the Post-Punk Dancefloor 1978-1984 If you were an American citizen and fancied a little bit of dancefloor action with an edge in the late 1970s to early 1980s, you knew exactly where to go. Michael Zilkha and Michel Esteban’s ZE Records catered for all your esoteric disco needs and made you feel incredibly cool while doing it. They even gave this hipper than hell genre a name to die for – Mutant Disco. Just imagine dropping that into an animated hipster conversation. In the UK, however, everything was a bit more cut and paste and rough and ready. You could still strut your stuff to some edgy tunes, but you had to dig a bit deeper to find them. If only

Reviews: Glam Rock, Suede, Jon Anderson, The Soulless Party, Rowan Amber Mill, Soul Power, The Wall, Ashtoreth & Grey Malkin, Be Bop Deluxe, Buzzcocks, Post-punk Funk, Conflict

Reviews: Glam Rock, Suede, Jon Anderson, The Soulless Party, Rowan Amber Mill, Soul Power, The Wall, Ashtoreth & Grey Malkin, Be Bop Deluxe, Buzzcocks, Post-punk Funk, Conflict
goldminemag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from goldminemag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Those Were the Days, My Friend

(3CD, Cherry Red) In retrospect it’s clear that there was more than punk in the air in the mid and late 70s. New York, perhaps, most clearly showed the musical divergence and synchronicity, as the city birthed disco, hiphop and punk from its broken and bankrupt tenements and slums. But something similar was happening in London too: pub rock, progrock, pop, dance, new wave, funk, jazz, experimental and improvised music had, of course, continued alongside and despite the headline-grabbing antics of the Sex Pistols and others, and by 1978 anything and everything was musically possible. Punk simply let some room into the mix, and encouraged anyone and everyone to make the kind of music they wanted to. And to do it now.

FUNK S NOT DEAD! | Vive Le Rock Magazine

A new box set anthologises that period in the immediate aftermath of punk when musicians began drawing influence from US funk. Bands – most notably Gang Of Four and The Pop Group – began marrying often confrontational lyrics and exploratory, experimental sounds with the bass and drum rhythms of Funkadelic and the Fatback Band, and emboldened by New York’s no-wave movement brought post-punk to the dancefloor. Compiled and with sleevenotes by noted DJ and writer Bill Brewster, the 3-disc Shake The Foundations: Militant Funk & The Post-Punk Dancefloor 1978-1984 features a raft rarely heard floorfillers from familiar bands like THE HIGSONS (pictured), A CERTAIN RATIO, SIMPLE MINDS, 23 SKIDOO and JAH WOBBLE to the less familiar – QUANDO QUANGO, PLAYGROUP, THE CHICKEN GRANNY etc…

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.