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On Saturday August 30th 2008, Manchester District Music Archive (www.mdmarchive.co.uk) present a very special event at Islington Mill in Salford, to celebrate Manchester’s Electro-Funk and B Boy heritage. Through a mixture of talks, Q and A’s, screenings, and, of course, dancing, this event will attempt to tell the story of the city’s early ‘80s Electro-Funk scene, explaining how it sowed the seeds for subsequent developments as the decade unfolded.
Contrary to what many younger people might nowadays believe, Ibiza ’87 didn’t mark the beginning of dance culture in this country. From a Manchester perspective, the foundations were laid in clubs like The Gallery, The Playpen, Berlin and Legend, which catered to the black audience, not just from Manchester, but also places like Birmingham, Huddersfield, Sheffield, Nottingham, Bradford, Leeds, Liverpool, Stoke, Wolverhampton, Derby, even as far away as London. Manchester was always a magnet for those into the most cutting-edge black music. These nights, in turn, linked back to earlier nights at venues including Placemate 7, Rufus and Rafters. Manchester has a rich dance music heritage dating all the way back to the 60’s, when clubs like the Twisted Wheel and The Reno first opened their doors.
Whilst we hope to focus on the wider picture at a later event, taking in all aspects of the local black music scene throughout the 60’s, 70’s and 80’s, ‘Electrospective’ as the name suggests, takes its starting point as 1982, when tracks like ‘Planet Rock’ heralded a whole new epoch of electronic dance music. We will explore the legacy of the specialist black music nights, and how they influenced the city’s most famous venue, The Haçienda; what happened when Electro and Indie collided; how Manchester interconnected with other key cities like Birmingham, Nottingham and Sheffield; how Electro contributed to the House explosion of the late ‘80s; and where it went when dance culture became a whiter concern. As the missing link between the old (Northern Soul, Disco, Jazz-Funk) and the then new (Hip Hop, House, Techno), it’s only during recent times that UK dance historians have begun to acknowledge the true significance of the Electro-Funk period. This important story will be told by some of those directly involved. The event is particularly timely because 2008 marks the 25th Anniversary of the formation of the pioneering Manchester breakdance crew Broken Glass, and, in August, it will be 25 years since the then manager of Broken Glass, DJ Greg Wilson, took his Electro-Funk sound, so successful across town at Legends (also Wigan Pier), to The Haçienda, a club associated with students and indie kids rather than the black crowd that attended his other nights. Broken Glass would dance at the club on a weekly basis during Greg’s tenure, and appear as part of the Haçienda Review tour in Dec ’83, billed as ‘The Haçienda Break Dancers’.
The event was inspired by Tim ‘Bones’ Forde’s documentary film, ‘The Birth Of British B-Boys’, which will be shown in full as a main feature of the event. Tim, a member of Broken Glass, tells the story of how breakdancing made a massive impact in Manchester a quarter of a century ago, changing the lives of so many people in the process. It’s a heartfelt account, which really captures the essence of the era. In addition to the screening, Tim will also talk about what inspired him to make the documentary and other aspects of his B-Boy past.
Between 1978 and 1986, Mike Shaft’s Piccadilly Radio Soul Show, ‘Takin’ Care Of Business’ was something of a Manchester institution. Along with Greg Edwards and Robbie Vincent in London, Mike completed the trio of most influential black music presenters in the UK. Also a major force in clubland, Mike would move on to BBC Radio Manchester, before launching specialist black / dance music station, Sunset, in 1989. All these years on, he can still be heard, in his inimitable style, on Radio Manchester. http://www.electrofunkroots.co.uk/interviews/stu_allan.html
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