Everywhere. I first heard it at an indoor tennis court in the deepest whitest heart of Ohio, waiting for my mom to finish her match and nursing one of those Danish cookies while watching my man Jeff put in work on a table-top Mr. Do. I even remember the song that came on after it: your boy Phil Collins's "I Don't Care Anymore."
Man, don't get me started. "Planet Rock" is probably the single most important record of my lifetime.
I read an article where Marley Marl said he played some drum machine at a party and Luke was open and jacked it.
This was way after Planet Rock.
DocMcCoy"Go and laugh in your own country!" 5,917 Posts
Jspr said:
Where do the Jive Rhythm Trax fit in with Planet Rock, OG Euro/Kraftwerk Electro and Miami Bass?
Prolly somewhere after Planet rock and before Miami Bass?
I'd say so, yeah. The Jive Rhythm Trax record was definitely post-Planet Rock (and obv. Kraftwerk too), but probably a little bit before Miami Bass formulated itself into a recognised genre. Pretty sure I once read it was a key record for that scene too.
I read an article where Marley Marl said he played some drum machine at a party and Luke was open and jacked it.
This was way after Planet Rock.
I think I read the same article where Marley talks about doing gigs in Miami that Luke and them would put on and taking the 808 down there which he played while Shante freestyled for hours. After the show Luke asked him about the drum machine and Marley says the next time they went to Miami EVERYONE had an 808.
I remember being in grade school when Planet Rock dropped and that song was EVERY WHERE here in B-More. It got played at school assemblies, public events, I don't think there was a single venue, event, party (any age), etc. that this song didn't get played at. It wound up being the "go-to" song to interest or appeal to the young demographic. For all you young cats that were born after those days, I don't think it can be expressed in words how big of song Planet Rock truly was then.
I remember reading someone saying how ubiquitous it was over that summer and beyond, they said something like "you could hear that hi hat no matter where you were, you could be one end of the beach and you'd hear it being played from a box at the other"
Where do the Jive Rhythm Trax fit in with Planet Rock, OG Euro/Kraftwerk Electro and Miami Bass?
Prolly somewhere after Planet rock and before Miami Bass?
I'd say so, yeah. The Jive Rhythm Trax record was definitely post-Planet Rock (and obv. Kraftwerk too), but probably a little bit before Miami Bass formulated itself into a recognised genre. Pretty sure I once read it was a key record for that scene too.
The Jive Rhythm trax record was a UK group (Wilsden dodgers) and is from 1982, so it's after 'Planet rock' but predates Miami bass. Great record BTW.
"Planet Rock" is probably the single most important record of my lifetime.
There are two moments in my life as a young person that made such an impact that they are as clear and palpable now as when they first happened to me.
One is watching the doctor sew my pinky finger that was was split open by my cousin shutting an iron gate on it and the second is standing in front of the stereo, putting in the tape that was going around the neighbourhood and hearing Planet Rock for the first time. Everyone was losing their shit over The Message, but it was Planet Rock that blew my mind.
DocMcCoy"Go and laugh in your own country!" 5,917 Posts
Craig said:
DocMcCoy said:
Jspr said:
Where do the Jive Rhythm Trax fit in with Planet Rock, OG Euro/Kraftwerk Electro and Miami Bass?
Prolly somewhere after Planet rock and before Miami Bass?
I'd say so, yeah. The Jive Rhythm Trax record was definitely post-Planet Rock (and obv. Kraftwerk too), but probably a little bit before Miami Bass formulated itself into a recognised genre. Pretty sure I once read it was a key record for that scene too.
The Jive Rhythm trax record was a UK group (Wilsden dodgers) and is from 1982, so it's after 'Planet rock' but predates Miami bass. Great record BTW.
:feelin_it:
Y'know, I wasn't certain about that, but I had a feeling it might have originated out of Jive's London office - probably the work of the house engineers at Battery Studios in Willesden. A friend of mine worked there for a while, and did a few "UK remix" type things for the likes of R. Kelly and the Fu-Schickens, alongside Tosh from Vinyl Solution. I'll ask him if he knows anything about that record, although it could have been before his time.
Comments
Man, don't get me started. "Planet Rock" is probably the single most important record of my lifetime.
harvey knows. this song was huge everywhere. the first record that crossed over big time from new york.
This was way after Planet Rock.
I'd say so, yeah. The Jive Rhythm Trax record was definitely post-Planet Rock (and obv. Kraftwerk too), but probably a little bit before Miami Bass formulated itself into a recognised genre. Pretty sure I once read it was a key record for that scene too.
I think I read the same article where Marley talks about doing gigs in Miami that Luke and them would put on and taking the 808 down there which he played while Shante freestyled for hours. After the show Luke asked him about the drum machine and Marley says the next time they went to Miami EVERYONE had an 808.
or something like that
The Jive Rhythm trax record was a UK group (Wilsden dodgers) and is from 1982, so it's after 'Planet rock' but predates Miami bass. Great record BTW.
:feelin_it:
There are two moments in my life as a young person that made such an impact that they are as clear and palpable now as when they first happened to me.
One is watching the doctor sew my pinky finger that was was split open by my cousin shutting an iron gate on it and the second is standing in front of the stereo, putting in the tape that was going around the neighbourhood and hearing Planet Rock for the first time. Everyone was losing their shit over The Message, but it was Planet Rock that blew my mind.
Y'know, I wasn't certain about that, but I had a feeling it might have originated out of Jive's London office - probably the work of the house engineers at Battery Studios in Willesden. A friend of mine worked there for a while, and did a few "UK remix" type things for the likes of R. Kelly and the Fu-Schickens, alongside Tosh from Vinyl Solution. I'll ask him if he knows anything about that record, although it could have been before his time.