The History continues from Volume 1.
Expansion.
Pressure.
Movement.
House refuses to stay local.
It crosses borders.
Pioneers: Jovonn, K. Alexi Shelby, Merlin Bobb, Ray "Pinky" Velazquez, and Robert Williams trace how the House sound evolved across cities, clubs and studios, without surrendering its soul.
From The Warehouse, The Shelter, Club Ipanema, Zanzibar and the Winter Music Conference, House music refuses containment and fractures lines into globalization.
Kyeatta Nailah and Linda Robinson reveal the unseen labor of continuing the movement.
Lady Alma frames Philadelphia as a foundation, not a footnote.
Marcia Carr becomes London's Vinyl Vanguard.
Ultra Naté's "Free" and "Deep Sugar parties" sweeten the continental expansion.
This is the Sisterhood in motion.
At NYC's Limelight, J.P. Steinberg "White Owl" stands at the fault line where House collides with alternative culture, and sub-genres begin to take shape.
In Newark, Naeem Johnson and DJ Punch hold the line through advocacy, festivals, and sound system culture, preserving what others attempt to dilute.
Osunlade charts a necessary departure from commercial structures to spiritually rooted, grounded in frequencies that move both body and soul.
Loft alumni Mike G, "The Loft Bus Driver" moves through decades of continuity alongside Stacy "Not a DJ", students of David Mancuso, Larry Levan, and Timmy Regisford, bringing you into corners of the dancefloor that were never documented.
They lived it.
Expansion without erasure.
Before the world branded it, this is their story marking every page.
Featured Interviews & Stories
- K Alexi Shelby
- Kyeatta Nailah
- Lady Alma (Alma Horton)
- Linda Robinson
- Marcia Carr
- Merlin Bobb
- Micheal Groneveldt aka Mike G
- Naeem Johnson
- Osunlade
- Ray "Pinky" Velazquez
- Robert Williams (Owner)
- Stacy James - "Not A DJ"
- Ultra Naté