BBC6 Dave Pearce Streetsounds Special Morgan Khan in interview

Posted by Waxer | Posted in Audio, Dave Pearce, Dave Pearce GLR, Electro, Memorabilia, UK Hip Hop History, UK Hip Hop Radio Shows | Posted on 21-06-2010

Listened to this interview this morning and thought it was important for those that don’t know about this label to learn their history and those that do to refresh their memories.  The Electro series of records on this label basically shaped my youth and I can honestly say they are the most played LPs in my entire collection.  I own them all on original wax, almost all bought when they first came out, usually from Woolies in Petersfiels, or if I was in Pompey, Our Price in the Tricorn.  There really was nothing like getting a new Electro… the first 10 and the Crucials, plus Electro UK are so fundamental in my Hip Hop experience in the UK I can’t bang the drum loud enough!!!

Well, this Dave Pearce interview was fairly interesting, Morgan Khan is animated and relaxed and he covers most of the series of releases on the label, sectioned into genre.  Readers of Disco Scratch will mostly only be interested in the Electro section, commencing with Planet Rock, so if you want you can skip forward to 00:42:27 to hear this section, although the entire interview is worth listening to as there are other areas that tie in.

I also have to say that the last half hour of Dave’s choice is particularly dodgy.  Not because of the selection of  music, but he has clearly played these in software that time stretches on the fly while maintaining pitch, like Traktor or Serato and there are some awful slow downs and speed ups, the Aleem track is all over the place and it seems unnecessary as it speeds up and slows down in the middle of the track without being mixed in.  Seems like Dave got taught to mix by his mate from GLR days KCJ….

Here’s the blurb from the BBC6 site, download after the tracklist, enjoy…

Dave Pearce presents a 6 Mix special charting the history of the Street Sounds compilation albums which dominated UK dance music in the early 1980s. Started in 1982 by London based Streetwave Records as a way for people to get hold of expensive, rare dance and hip-hop 12 inch records only in available in the USA, Streetsounds compilation albums bought previously underground music onto Britain’s high streets with a new album every three month. Street Sounds compilations soon became essential for anyone into hip hop, house, rare groove or electro music, at a time when the British charts were dominated by the New Romantic bands like Visage and Spandau Ballet.
Founder Morgan Khan licensed early tracks from Grandmaster Flash, Afrika Bambaatta and The Fatback Back as well as opening the doors for US labels like Def Jam and Profile recordings, at a time when the UK music industry was still a closed shop for anyone but the traditional major labels. Morgan Khan joins Dave in the studio to tell the incredible story of how a Hong Kong-born Indian who grew up in 1970s London came to be so influential in the early days of dance music and how Street Sounds helped bring hip hop and electronic music to the mainstream. Dave and Morgan also play and talk about seminal tracks from the Street Sounds back catalogue including D-Train, Scott La Rock, Roy Ayers and Todd Terry.

1.Raw Silk – Do It To The Music
2.Roy Ayers – Running Away
3.Candi Staton – You Got The Love
4.Fatback Band – I Found Lovin
5.Grandmaster & Melle Mel – White Lines
6.Masquerade – Set It Off
7.Rose Royce – Magic Touch
8.Chuck Brown – Bustin Loose
9.Hashim – Al Naayfish
10.Afrika Bambaataa & The Soulsonic Force – Planet Rock
11.Joe Smooth – Promised Land
12.Todd Terry – Bango (To The Batmobile)
13.Stakker – Humanoid
14.BDP – South Bronx
15.The Egyptian Lover – Do U Wanna Get Down?

Dave’s Street Sounds Mix

1.Dayton – The Sound Of Music
2.Cheryl Lynn – Encore
3.The Staple Singers – Slippery People
4.Class Action – Weekend
5.Aleem – Get Loose
6.Peter Black – My Love Is Free

 

UK Fresh 97 Programme

Posted by Waxer | Posted in Memorabilia, UK Hip Hop History | Posted on 06-09-2009

If you had a time machine and went back to Folkestone in the UK on valentines day 1997 sometime early afternoon, you’d see a red nosed skinhead in a work jacket suffering from sinusitis that made his FACE CREAK in a queue of other True School heads waiting to get into the best event I’ve ever been to.

Fresh_97_1_Web

Fresh 97 ran for 3 days and was a legendary jam. There is no real way I can capture the essence of that jam by writing, putting videos up, literally there’s nothing I can do. If you were there maybe this post will jog some memories.  Basically when I was there I decided to get as many acts to sign my programme as possible, I got most of ‘em…  So the other week I scanned my entire programme, trimmed the images in photoshop then created a PDF document from the images.  So I’ve decided to put it up for download for your perusal.  All the images are high res so this PDF with only 8 images weighs in at just under 30MB.

I hope you enjoy a slice of UK History, maybe leave a comment if you were there?

I was going to post where the DVD is available from, but the place I got mine from doesn’t exist any more and I ended up giving it away in a competition on the radio!  (I’ll be asking him for a copy!)

Here’s some YouTube action of Trix presenting “Out Of Control”

YouTube Preview Image

So anyway, enough twoddle, here’s the download of the PDF:

Waxer UK Fresh 97 Programme (634)

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