From: "atomly"
quoted 7 lines seeklektek>seeklektek
> > That was *not* the same Acid House scene as the one being discussed:
> > in fact, there was no Acid House scene there in Chicago or in Detroit,
> > per se.
>
> Uh, what are you talking about? Chicago's house scene was huge in the
> 80's.
Right: *House* not Acid House! Thanks for reinforcing my point.
quoted 1 line Also, nobody has mentioned Phuture yet. Or Armando, Adonis, etc..> Also, nobody has mentioned Phuture yet. Or Armando, Adonis, etc..
I've mentioned Phuture at least twice in this thread, including the post that
you responded to. You clipped the evidence, but here it is:
quoted 2 lines GPO introduced many of those people to Phuture's 11-minute classic,> GPO introduced many of those people to Phuture's 11-minute classic,
> 'Acid Tracks',quoted 3 lines But the energy and artistic expression present in Acid House Parties> > But the energy and artistic expression present in Acid House Parties
> > (which spawned 'raves') *were* indeed more a product of the conceptual
> > efforts of GPO and PTV, than of those others.quoted 5 lines Which were a product of the Warehouse which was a product of disco which> Which were a product of the Warehouse which was a product of disco which
> was a product of rock.. I'm so sick of these "when did a scene start"
> discussions. "Acid Trax" was the first acid record, that much is for
> sure. Everything beyond that is a judgement call.
> :: atomly ::
No, I don't entirely agree. Experience counts, when making the 'call'.
=seek=
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