eMusic Review 0
The popular mythology is that everyone was dancing madly to the Bee Gees one moment and then suddenly froze in place at the end of summer 1979 for the Knack. In disco's North American strongholds — New York, Chicago, Miami, San Francisco and Montreal — the transition was far more gradual, and Larry Levan was one of the reasons why. DJ at downtown Manhattan's Paradise Garage, Levan had the ear of Frankie Crocker, the programming director and star DJ of the city's (and therefore America's) most popular station, WBLS. If Levan championed a certain record, it would end up on WBLS's adventurous playlist, and then spread to similarly adventurous stations and clubs.
Whereas Manhattan's other influential clubs preferred either New Wave (Danceteria) or hi-NRG (the Saint), the Garage's defining sound was soul with avant-garde quirks, many of them pioneered and popularized via Levan's remixes and productions. Spanning from 1978-86 to reflect the Garage's own '77-87 timeline, Journey Into Paradise includes both records Levan reshaped and created as well as other Garage classics that represent key motifs in his aesthetic. It features artists known for R&B (Chaka Khan, Patrice Rushen, Womack & Womack), funk (Positive Force), jazz… read more »