Features
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Just two years after it began, people were asking if acid house was already dead. In i-D John Godfrey examined what might come after.
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Busloads of baggy Mancunian urchins made The Stone Roses Spike Island concert the stuff of indie dance legend.
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From DaDa to Detroit, Jon Savage details the history of techno in The Village Voice.
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The very first article on acid house, penned by Paul Oakenfold, taken from Boy's Own fanzine.
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From After Dark magazine, Vince Aletti gives us a snapshot of New York's DJs as disco sweeps the city.
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Tim Lawrence details how Chicago's "acid" records took dance music into the future
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It's cosy store is gone but Mr Bongo remains a label to reckon with: London HQ of all things Latin.
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The NME's Richard Grabel treks round the burnt-out buildings of the Bronx to introduce the Grandmaster to the world.
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To the beat y'all! As rap's earliest vinyl flies out of the Bronx, Richard Grabel surveys the scene and meets the Funky Four Plus One.
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New Yorker Richard Grabel introduces the Scroggins girls to the world, a family who most definitely don't fake the funk.
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As Run DMC take hip hop mainstream, the crack epidemic and Schooly D mark the birth of gangster rap.
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Stuart Cosgrove takes us back to the futurists, introducing Mantronix, the new noise of underground rap in 1986.
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In 1982, while Grandmaster Flash was touring the UK, the NME sent Val Wilmer to interview Sugarhill head honchess.
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Its musicians were the heart of French disco. No wonder library label Tele Music is such a collectors' favourite.
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Phil Cheeseman talks bleeps with Forgemasters, LFO and Nightmares on Wax as British techno is born.
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The first interview with Sheffield's electronic pioneers, from Sounds, by Jon Savage
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A wonderful mixtape journey through Sheffield's musical oddness, by Damon Fairclough.
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Jon Savage reports from Sheffield clubland's most famous forebear as house starts to make its presence felt.
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On the release of 'Higher Ground', his first full production, Dom Phillips pours gasoline on the Sasha legend.
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As a guy asks Sasha to snog his girlfriend, Mixmag decides DJs are pop stars and grooms Mr Coe for stardom.





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