Journey Into Paradise: The Larry Levan Story

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Journey Into Paradise: The Larry Levan Story album cover
Album Information
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  • Artist: Larry Levan (See All Albums by Larry Levan)
  • Date Released: Mar 28, 2006

  • Genre: Electronic, Style: Dance

  • Label: Rhino

Total Tracks: 22   Total Length: 153:58

eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

01.11.10
Records he shaped and classics that reflected the Paradise Garage's clientele
2006 | Label: Rhino

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 »

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Barry Sanders

CharismaPoints

Sometimes buying an album is like drafting a football player. This album is like a Barry Sanders. The team gets much better with a player like this.

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Journey Into Paradise: The Larry Levan Story

Henrydm1

U can't go wrong wit these classics. Larry is the man that djing, programming records is the way it is today. These are just a small sample of what Larry treasured in those days. U need to cop THIS!!!!!!

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Larry Levan is the 1980's

Stick-Up-Artist

Download all! You can't miss a bargain like this! Talking Heads, Patrice Rushen, Change, Donald Byrd! Amazing!

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The Bomb!

TheSilky

Larry was influential in funky electro Dance. This compilation cannot be beat. Download Taana Gardner Heartbeat, NYC Peech Boys - Don't Make me Wait and David Joseph - You Can't Hide Your Love...

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They Say All Music Guide

One look at Journey into Paradise: The Larry Levan Story will incite skepticism from many longtime disco collectors. How can the Warner-distributed Rhino justify a title so definitive when the compilation is so heavily weighted toward Warner-distributed material? (Levan did happen to remix and play a lot of Warner-distributed singles.) Why are Patrice Rushen’s “Haven’t You Heard,” Talking Heads’ “Once in a Lifetime,” and Phreek’s “Weekend” — three Warner-distributed tracks played by Levan — included instead of non-Warner tracks that were both remixed and played by Levan, such as Central Line’s “Walking into Sunshine,” Padlock’s “Seventh Heaven,” and Class Action’s “Weekend”? (Rhino probably opted to save some money on licensing.) Why are so many of these songs appearing on CD for the umpteenth time? (Because they’ve never been concentrated quite like this, and some of the preceding compilations take some effort to track down.) Potential bellyaching aside, Journey into Paradise is another excellent way of commemorating the late Larry Levan, the Paradise Garage DJ, remixer, and occasional producer who exacted an immeasurable impact upon disco’s underground culture and many of the singles that would eventually bubble up to the top of the disco and club charts. The project was handled with great care, from the colorful packaging to the extensive and insightful liner notes penned by the very plugged-in Adam Goldstone. These two discs complement the anthologies that focus on Levan’s remix work for Salsoul and West End, though there is some overlap: Taana Gardner’s “Heartbeat” (one of the sexiest, sweetest, slowest post-disco singles) and Inner Life’s version of “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” (a towering, sprawling, life-affirming anthem) are too crucial to be left off, as they also exemplify Levan’s creativity as a remixer. If you were to compare Levan’s work to the original mixes of these tracks, you’d really get the full effect of his instincts and mastery. His mixes of Janice McClain’s “Smack Dab in the Middle,” Dee Dee Bridgewater’s “Bad for Me,” and David Joseph’s especially radical “You Can’t Hide (Your Love from Me)” have also appeared on CD before, but they have a very long way to go to threaten “I Will Survive” as the most-compiled disco single. Not nearly enough people have heard them, and odds are good that some clubbing vets haven’t reconnected with them in years. The addition of tracks that Levan merely spun only enhance the set, because they’re all dynamite — they include Chaka Khan’s “Clouds,” Sister Sledge’s “Lost in Music,” Trussel’s “Love Injection,” and Change’s “Paradise” (which could also be titled “The Glare of Love”). Issues or no issues, this is one of the finest compilations of late-’70s and early-’80s dance music, and it is no mere coincidence that Levan is inextricably linked to everything on it. – Andy Kellman

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