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Tag Archives: 1963 in Detroit

Martha & the Vandellas

Combined with the Supremes, Martha & the Vandellas described the distaff side from the Motown sound in the ’60s. Their biggest strikes, including “High temperature Influx,” “Dance in the pub,” and “Nowhere to perform,” remain being among the most powerful and long lasting dance records from the period. The vocal …

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The Velvelettes

The Velvelettes had three small chart hits for Motown within the mid-’60s, including “He REALLY WAS Sayin’ Somethin’,” revived with great success in Britain by Bananarama in the first ’80s, and “Needle within a Haystack,” which almost made the pop Top 40. Quite definitely within the Motown girl-group mildew shared …

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Dinah Washington

Dinah Washington was simultaneously perhaps one of the most beloved and controversial singers from the mid-20th hundred years — beloved to her fans, devotees, and fellow singers; questionable to critics who still accuse her of offering out her artwork to business and bad flavor. Her primary sin, evidently, was to …

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Jeff Mills

Jeff Mills, alongside Robert Hood, Carl Craig, and Joey Beltram, is among the biggest American brands in techno. Championed for his music’s relentless quest for hardness and his extreme, almost commercial DJ pieces (often utilizing 3 or 4 turntables or Compact disc decks along with a drum machine), Mills is …

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Derrick May

From the Belleville Three, the cadre of early Detroit suppliers who tested the limits of soul within electronic dance music and changed the integrity of the proper execution forever, Derrick May’s status as an originator continued to be intact despite greater than a decade of saving inactivity. While Juan Atkins …

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