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Forum nameThe Lesson Archives
Topic subjectR.I.P. Frankie Knuckles :(
Topic URLhttp://board.okayplayer.com/okp.php?az=show_topic&forum=17&topic_id=164236
164236, R.I.P. Frankie Knuckles :(
Posted by 45RPM, Mon Mar-31-14 10:18 PM
http://www.complex.com/music/2014/03/frankie-knuckles-dead-at-59

164237, WTF...RIP
Posted by dillinjah, Mon Mar-31-14 10:19 PM
164238, Incredibly sad. RIP.
Posted by Ryan M, Mon Mar-31-14 10:29 PM
164239, damn.
Posted by kinetic94761180, Mon Mar-31-14 11:03 PM
r.i.p.
164240, This shit got me real scared that Frank Knuckles died...
Posted by 1-UP, Mon Mar-31-14 11:06 PM
you know... from that NBC band, I forget their name. RIP to Frankie though.
164241, log off
Posted by cgonz00cc, Tue Apr-01-14 09:41 AM
164242, because I was concerned that a roots member died?
Posted by 1-UP, Tue Apr-01-14 12:43 PM
hmmm, respect to Frankie, and RIP as I said. But understandable mistake since this is a roots site and they have damn near the same name.
164243, no, because you're an asshole
Posted by cgonz00cc, Tue Apr-01-14 01:03 PM
You really think an RIP post is the best place to express relief that the person who died wasnt someone you *actually* care about?

164244, fair enough
Posted by 1-UP, Tue Apr-01-14 01:29 PM
respect.
164245, R.I.P.
Posted by SP1200, Mon Mar-31-14 11:14 PM
soooo glad I caught him last year in Dallas. And had him autograph my
vinyl. He rocked and inspired til his last day! LEGEND!
164246, wow, I just started getting into deep house a few weeks ago
Posted by Ray_Snill, Mon Mar-31-14 11:29 PM
and him, Masters At Work & Dimitri From Paris seem to have the best stuff.



<================================
http://stream1.gifsoup.com/view3/4837778/william-moore-wwe-tackle-o.gif
164247, I AM IN MY FEELINGS RIGHT NOW!!!!!
Posted by fire, Mon Mar-31-14 11:47 PM
this man changed my life!!!! what a genius
164248, Long Live The Godfather.
Posted by Castro, Tue Apr-01-14 01:18 AM
164249, chicago tribune swipe
Posted by soulmatic, Tue Apr-01-14 03:56 AM
http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/music/turnitup/chi-frankie-knuckles-obit-20140331,0,565674.column
Frankie Knuckles, house music 'godfather,' dead at 59

In Chicago, Frankie Knuckles was called the “godfather,” not because of any underworld connections, but because he helped build house – a style of Chicago dance music that revolutionized club culture in the ‘70s and ‘80s and still resonates around the world today.

Knuckles died Monday at the age of 59, as confirmed by his longtime business partner, Frederick Dunson. More details would be forthcoming Tuesday, Dunson said, who said in an email that Knuckles “died unexpectedly this afternoon at home.” In addition to developing the sound and culture of house music, Knuckles would go on to mix records by major artists such as Whitney Houston, Michael Jackson and Depeche Mode.

Knuckles learned his craft as a club DJ in New York City, then moved to Chicago in the late ‘70s and developed a reputation as one of the city’s most influential dance-music tastemakers. He arrived in Chicago just as disco was losing steam. For many, disco literally went up in flames between games of a Chicago White Sox double header at Comiskey Park, when radio deejay Steve Dahl blew up hundreds of disco albums.

"I witnessed that caper that Steve Dahl pulled at Disco Demolition Night and it didn't mean a thing to me or my crowd," Knuckles told the Tribune. “But it scared the record companies, so they stopped signing disco artists and making disco records. So we created our own thing in Chicago to fill the gap.”

Knuckles was mentored by the renowned DJ Larry Levan in the early ‘70s while in New York. “We would spend entire afternoons working up ideas on how to present a record so that people would hear it in a new way and fall in love with it,” Knuckles said. “To us it was an art form.”

He brought that knowledge west with him to Chicago, where he became known as “the godfather of Chicago house music” at the Warehouse and later the Power Plant. He would extend mixes of soul and R&B records and turn them into dance tracks, introduce new singles being produced by fledgling house artists and incorporate drum machines to emphasize the beat. In addition to building dynamic ebb-and-flow sets that would keep his dancefloor filled from midnight to noon on weekends, he would create theater-of-the-mind scenarios with inventive sound and lighting. “Sometimes I’d shut down all the lights and set up a record where it would sound like a speeding train was about to crash into the club. People would lose their minds.”

Knuckles was primarily known as a DJ, but he also played a key role as a tastemaker, de facto talent scout and producer. Knuckles bought his first drum machine from a young Derrick May, one of the founders of techno music, who regularly made the trip from Detroit to see Knuckles at the Warehouse. Knuckles also had a musical partnership with Chicago artist Jamie Principle, and helped put "Your Love" and "Baby Wants to Ride" out on vinyl after these tunes had been regulars on his reel-to-reel player at the Warehouse. He also produced the house classic "Tears" with Robert Owens (of Fingers, Inc.).

House was initially cruder and less polished than disco, a reflection of its blue-collar origins. Knuckles was hardly the only innovator in the scene, as Marshall Jefferson, Ron Hardy, Steve "Silk" Hurley, Farley "Jackmaster" Funk and dozens more also played key roles. By the late ‘80s, Knuckles and many of his peers were stars in Europe’s emerging rave scene.

Knuckles would often joke that he could walk down the middle of the street in Chicago and not be recognized, yet would be greeted by cheering fans when he would arrive at European airports for overseas DJ gigs.

“I wasn’t frustrated by that, not at all,” he said. “I’m not the kind of person that lives for fame and glory. If I’ve got a nice, clean home and can put a meal on my table and can entertain my friends, I’m fine. I don’t need to see my face plastered everywhere.”

Yet he took pride in Chicago’s growing recognition over the years as the home of contemporary dance music, celebrated by such mainstream hitmakers as Daft Punk and Paul Oakenfold.

"The people I meet all around the world look at Chicago and the house scene with a new romanticism," he said. "They recognize more than ever that Chicago is the core of where it all began."

In 2004, Chicago named a street after Knuckles where the old Warehouse once stood, on Jefferson Street between Jackson Boulevard and Madison Street. It was a little slice of legitimacy for a style of music that often didn’t get much love from the city, which became notorious in the dance community around the world for passing the so-called “anti-rave ordinance” in 2000 that made property owners, promoters and deejays subject to $10,000 fines for being involved in an unlicensed dance party.

Knuckles once reflected on house music’s reputation as a soundtrack for hedonism, though much of the dance music he loved had a melancholy flavor, a yearning that evoked gospel and soul. He championed house music that wasn’t just about rhythm, but that embraced humanism and dignified struggle. It was in keeping with his belief that the dancefloor was a safe haven for the gay, African-American and Hispanic communities that first embraced him.

“God has a place on the dancefloor,” he once told the Tribune. “We wouldn’t have all the things we have if it wasn’t for God. We wouldn’t have the one thing that keeps us sane – music. It’s the one thing that calms people down.

“Even when they’re hopping up and down in a frenzy on the dancefloor, it still has their spirits calm because they’re concentrating on having a good time, loving the music, as opposed to thinking about something negative. I think dancing is one of the best things anyone can do for themselves. And it doesn’t cost anything.”

greg@gregkot.com

---------
sig:
I got Chad in my heart and DJ Screw in my cup.
164250, Boiler Room nyc set
Posted by soulmatic, Tue Apr-01-14 03:58 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=644UU55eyzk&feature=youtu.be

---------
sig:
I got Chad in my heart and DJ Screw in my cup.
164251, chicago stand up.
Posted by LeroyBumpkin, Tue Apr-01-14 07:52 AM
164252, NY is standing with yall
Posted by 13Rose, Tue Apr-01-14 09:40 AM
*Salute*
164253, i heard him so many times.
Posted by SoWhat, Tue Apr-01-14 12:44 PM
man...DAMN.

DAMN!

what us gon' do for July 3rd? Thanksgiving Eve? MLK Day Sunday?

DAMN!!
164254, whistlin on repeat. R.I.P.
Posted by , Tue Apr-01-14 09:35 AM
One of the many reasons I fell in love with Deep House.
werd.
164255, My hometown....
Posted by murph71, Tue Apr-01-14 10:55 AM


hero is gone......But never forgotten....
164256, My cousins made me house tapes.
Posted by LeroyBumpkin, Tue Apr-01-14 11:16 AM
I wasn't old enough nor did I live close enough to the city to hear house music in the club. I didn't know that entire culture existed until I got older. But I did know about the tapes my cousins made me. And that's how I got introduced to house music and eventually Frankie Knuckles. Those tapes and late night mixes on WGCI shaped my youth.
164257, RIP
Posted by Buck, Tue Apr-01-14 11:17 AM
164258, sending love and positive to his love ones
Posted by boyd, Tue Apr-01-14 11:17 AM
may your bones or ashes continue to
4/4
164259, Incredibly sad day....
Posted by tully_blanchard, Tue Apr-01-14 11:23 AM

for house goodness:


http://soundcloud.com/dj-rsenal
164260, My dad used to DJ with him
Posted by MeshaMeesh, Tue Apr-01-14 01:09 PM
and worked with him and David Morales at Def Mix/For the Record, a DJ record pool. He was always so nice... and since I was so young at the time, he was like a giant to me...

Rest in Peace, Mr. Knuckles
164261, RE: R.I.P. Frankie Knuckles :(
Posted by spidey, Tue Apr-01-14 01:24 PM
RIP...
164262, RIP to a legend
Posted by My_SP1200_Broken_Again, Tue Apr-01-14 08:32 PM
164263, damn. dude was still young too. R.I.P.
Posted by araQual, Tue Apr-01-14 10:36 PM
V.
164264, Rest In Peace Francis Nicholls
Posted by Dj Joey Joe, Fri Apr-04-14 01:57 PM
I was always into house and remember buying records with his name on it without paying much attention back in the day but as I checking for names he definitely had a great catalog of dope originals, remixes, & even mixes. I remember seeing a post from him on bookface less than a month ago about the WMC and etc. but I didn't know he was having problems with his diabetes, it's sad to hear about his passing. :(


164265, R.I.P.!!!
Posted by Jakob Hellberg, Sun Apr-06-14 08:39 PM
One of the frst house-artists/producers/remixers I became aware of; lots of cool tunes, R.I.P.!!!