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The Disco Files 1973-78: New York's Underground, Week By Week – Vince Aletti (2009)

With reviews of every disco record worth knowing about, weekly reports from New York’s club scene, classic magazine articles and 800 contemporary club charts, this is the definitive chronicle of disco. It's the personal memoir of Vince Aletti, the very first writer to cover the emerging scene, bringing to life the clubs, the characters, and above all the music. The first book from DJhistory.com
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Once In A Lifetime: The Crazy Days of Acid House and Afterwards – Jane Bussmann, 1998

Acid house told as sitcom, packed with memories, stories, clippings, flyers, photos, quotes and tons of priceless details you'd forgotten about. Bussmann recalls the all-out nuttiness of the summer of love better than anyone. She went on to write for The Fast Show and South Park, so prepare to laugh your eyebrows off. A brilliantly messy scrapbook with a genuine piss-yourself moment on every page.
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Wax Poetics Anthology: Vol 2

Vol 2 meets more of the powerhouse musicians who've been dug and sampled, plus the intense-looking beatmasters who’ve done the digging and sampling. Collector-stiffening pieces on Sun Ra, Deodato, Randy Muller, rap A&R wunderkind Dante Ross, and much more. Danny Krivit picks out 12s and DJ Premier confesses he’s a Smiths fan. Mind you, I still think “Wax Poetic” would have been a cleverer name.
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Wax Poetics Anthology: Vol 1

If DJhistory smoked bigger doobies, knew Pete Rock, lived in Fort Greene and did capoeira at the weekend it would be Wax Poetics. We’d be kicking back with Idris Muhammad, Bernard Purdie, the RZA, Prince Paul, cat’s like that. We’d have James Brown’s drummers, graffiti nostalgia, and acres of record porn. The best of the studious magazine’s first six years. Fine, detailed, earnest and pure.
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Social Dancing in America vol 1 & 2 – Ralph G Giordano (2007)

The author’s passion is clear, so it’s a shame he’s written this epic two-volume history in a style so neutral it might be aimed at Vulcans (at one point he even defines “house party”). From 1607 up to the twist, it’s an unbeatable academic reference, packed with social context and cultural insight. There’s not much thread to pull you along however, and it creaks badly once it reaches disco.
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