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The Electric Cabaret Special Event: JUAN ATKINS @ AQUAThursday, December 17, 2009 at 10:00 PM - Friday, December 18, 2009 at 3:30 AM (ET)Washington, DC |
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Event Details
For our final installment of The Electric Cabaret of 2009 we've got something extra special for you - THE GODFATHER OF TECHNO: JUAN ATKINS! After the success of the Audion show at Aqua we quickly realized that we needed to try to get back to Aqua as soon as possible. The venue is perfect for nights like this one, and rest assured we'll be going overboard with extra sound like we did for the Audion show so that the wood dancefloor will be vibrating your legs all night long.


Featuring:
JUAN ATKINS
(Metroplex Records - Detroit)
MEASAX+DOCINDO
(88, Stirsound - DC)
AQUA NIGHTCLUB
1818 NEW YORK AVE N.E. DC
WASHINGTON DC 20002
ADVANCE TICKETS: $10
DOOR PRICE: $15
for more info:
www.eightyeightdc.com
http://www.myspace.com/theelectriccabaretdc
http://www.myspace.com/juanatkins
JUAN ATKINS BIO:
At the dawn of the 1980s, Juan Atkins began recording what stands as
perhaps the most influential body of work in the field of techno.
Exploring his vision of a futuristic music which welded the more cosmic
side of Parliament funk with rigid computer synth-pop embodied by
Kraftwerk and the techno-futurist possibilities described by
sociologist Alvin Toffler (author of The Third Wave and Future Shock),
Atkins blurred his name behind aliases such as Cybotron, Model 500 and
Infiniti — all, except for Cybotron, comprised solely of himself — to
release many classics of sublime Detroit techno.
And though it's often difficult (and misleading) to pick the precise
genesis for any style of music, the easiest choice for techno is an
Atkins release, the 1982 electro track "Clear," recorded by Atkins and
Rick Davis as Cybotron. He soon left the progressively album-oriented
Cybotron to begin working alone, and released his most seminal material
from 1985 to 1989 as Model 500 And while fellow Detroit legends Kevin
Saunderson and Derrick May were known for their erratic output during
the following decade, Atkins recorded much more during the 1990s than
he had during the '80s, soaking up new rhythmic elements from
contemporary dance music but keeping his unerring, instantly
recognizable sense of melody intact throughout.
As the electronic scene began looking back to the past to find musical
innovators, Atkins was a name much-discussed and -anthologized, hailed
as the godfather of techno. Born in Detroit in 1962 (the son of a
concert promoter), Juan Atkins began playing bass as a teenager and
then moved on to keyboards and synthesizers, after being turned on to
their use in Parliament records. Two local DJs, Ken Collier and the
Electrifyin' Mojo, first introduced Atkins to a wide range of other
synthesizer-driven bands — Kraftwerk, Telex, Gary Numan, Prince, the
B-52's — in the late '70s.
Atkins then turned on two friends he had met (initially through his
younger brother) while attending Belleville Junior High School, Derrick
May and Kevin Saunderson. He also bought his first synthesizer, a Korg
MS10, and began recording with cassette decks and a mixer for overdubs.
Hoping to learn more about the burgeoning field of musical electronics
after high-school graduation, Atkins studied at Washtenaw County
Community College in nearby Ypsilanti; there he met Rick Davis, a
Vietnam War veteran, synthesizer expert and fellow Electrifyin' Mojo
devotee — Davis had even released an experimental record used by Mojo
to open his radio show.
Juan AtkinsThe two began recording as Cybotron and released their first
single, "Alleys of Your Mind," in 1981 on their own Deep Space Records.
The clever balance of urban groove and synthesizer futurism signaled
the new electro wave in black music; though crossover success for
electro was quite limited, it went on to become one of the most
influential styles for the new electronic music of the next decade.
"Alleys of Your Mind" got immediate play from Electrifyin' Mojo and
became a big local hit, even though most listeners had no idea it was
recorded in Detroit, or America for that matter. The 1982 single
"Cosmic Cars" also did well, and Cybotron recorded their debut album,
Enter.
Then the group signed a deal with Fantasy Records to reissue the album.
One track, "Clear," was a quasi-instrumental which set the blueprint
for what would later be called techno. Instead of merely reworking
elements of Kraftwerk into a hip-hop context (which proved the basis
for many electro tracks), "Clear" was a balanced fusion of techno-pop
and club music. Unfortunately, competing visions for the future of the
group forced him to leave the group by 1983. Davis and new member Jon 5
argued to pursue a musical direction closer to rock & roll, while
Atkins wanted to continue in the vein of "Clear." (Cybotron carried on
in the direction proposed by Davis, and was promptly forgotten.)
Juan Atkins had no trouble staying busy during the mid-'80s. He
continued working with the music collective Deep Space Soundworks which
he, May and Saunderson had founded in 1981 to provide a club-based
forum for their music. Later, the Deep Space family founded their own
club, the Music Institute, in the heart of downtown Detroit. It soon
became the hub of the Motor City's growing underground family, a place
where May, Atkins and Saunderson DJed along with fellow pioneers like
Eddie "Flashin" Fowlkes and Blake Baxter. The club invigorated the
fractured sense of community in Detroit, and inspired second-wave
technocrats like Carl Craig, Stacey Pullen, Kenny Larkin and Richie
Hawtin (Plastikman).
Of course, Atkins continued recording during this time, and the period
from 1985 to 1987 proved to be his most influential period. He founded
his own label, Metroplex Records, in 1985 and recorded his first single
as Model 500, "No UFO's." Derrick May, who was living in Chicago at the
time, invited Atkins over and told him to bring his records. The duo
sold thousands of copies, and "No UFO's" soon became a hit with Chicago
mix shows like the Hot Mix Five. Later Metroplex singles like "Night
Drive," "Interference" and "The Chase" also sold well and set the
template for Detroit techno; moody and sublime machine music, inspired
by the drone of automated factories and trips down the I-96 freeway
late at night.
By 1988, Britain had caught up with the advanced music coming from
Chicago and Detroit; soon Atkins, May and Saunderson made their first
trip (of hundreds) across the Atlantic, in Atkins' case before
thousands of people at one of the open-air raves typical of England's
Summer of Love. Acts like 808 State, A Guy Called Gerald, LFO and Black
Dog began due in large part to the influence of Atkins, and the man
himself was invited to remix current pop acts like Fine Young
Cannibals, Seal, Tom Tom Club, the Beloved and the Style Council.
Juan AtkinsThough dance music in Great Britain shifted its course
radically from 1989 to 1991 (to the burgeoning, cartoonish sounds of
rave and hardcore), others in Europe were quick to take up the cause of
championing Detroit's techno elite.
First, the Belgian R&S Records began releasing stellar work by a
cast of techno inheritors including New Yorker Joey Beltram and
Europeans C.J. Bolland and Speedy J. By 1993, Berlin's Tresor Records
had picked up the baton as well, issuing American projects by
second-wave Detroit producers Underground Resistance (as X-101), Jeff
Mills, Blake Baxter and Eddie Fowlkes.
Atkins visited the label's studio in 1993 and worked with 3MB, the
in-house production team of Thomas Fehlmann and Moritz Von Oswald (both
of whom were to go on to better things, in Sun Electric and Basic
Channel/Maurizio, respectively). He returned to Berlin several years
later to begin recording what was, surprisingly, his first album since
the days of Cybotron. Finally, in mid-1995, R&S released the debut
Model 500 album, Deep Space; more importantly, the label also released
Classics, a crucial compilation of Model 500's best Metroplex singles
output.
Another retrospective, Tresor's Infiniti Collection, traced Atkins'
work as Infiniti, recorded from 1991 to 1994 for a variety of labels
including Metroplex and Chicago's Radikal Fear. Several years passed
before he released any additional material, but it came with a rush
during 1998-99. First in September 1998, Tresor released an album of
new Infiniti recordings named Skynet. One month later, the American
label Wax Trax! released a Juan Atkins mix album. Finally, in early
1999, the second full Model 500 album Mind and Body was released on
R&S Records.

Its been one hell of a year so far at The Electric Cabaret, featuring the world's best talent each and every week - including AUDION LIVE, JEFF MILLIGAN, DINKY, ALEXI DELANO, DILO, TRUS'ME, CLIVE HENRY, HOLGER ZILSKE LIVE, BURNSKI, AGNES, KENNY LARKIN, MAGDA, GLIMPSE LIVE, FIL LATORRE, MOTOR CITY DRUM ENSEMBLE, KILOWATTS, [A]PENDICS.SHUFFLE LIVE, GREEN VELVET, STACEY PULLEN, LOSOUL, RYAN ELLIOT, RICHIE HAWTIN, BAREM, AMBIVALENT, ROBERT DIETZ, LEE BURRIDGE, JUNCTION SM LIVE, JAMIE JONES, JAN KRUEGER, SHONKY, CASSY, PACO OSUNA, SPIRIT CATCHER, GUIDO SCHNEIDER, RADIO SLAVE, MARC HOULE, KONRAD BLACK, JOHN TEJADA, DAMIAN LAZARUS, JEREMY P CAULFIELD, SASCHA DIVE, DAN CURTIN, ANDREA FERLIN, JORGE HM, D-BUG, PARAVOICE, Q-BURNS ABSTRACT MESSAGE, GARTH & so many more amazing artists!
THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT - WITHOUT YOU WE ARE NOTHING!
-88
When & Where
Aqua Nightclub
1818 New York Ave NE DC
Washington,
DC 20002
Thursday, December 17, 2009 at 10:00 PM - Friday, December 18, 2009 at 3:30 AM (ET)
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Hosted By
88
www.eightyeightdc.com