Stacey Hotwaxx Hale | Selector https://selector.news The Electronic Music Journal Wed, 12 May 2021 20:55:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.5 https://selector.news/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cropped-selectorIcon-32x32.png Stacey Hotwaxx Hale | Selector https://selector.news 32 32 MEMCO Share Black History Month Symposium on Detroit Techno https://selector.news/2020/07/25/memco-black-history-month-symposium/ https://selector.news/2020/07/25/memco-black-history-month-symposium/#respond Sat, 25 Jul 2020 01:34:22 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=3043 The Michigan Electronic Music Collective (MEMCO) have shared a recording of the Black Lives Matter Symposium they held in February. The talk, given by “Mad” Mike Banks and Stacey “Hotwaxx” Hale, was moderated by DJ Jungle 313 and uploaded to MEMCO’s SoundCloud account.

Opening the dialogue, DJ Jungle 313 (real name Ron Johnson) talked about his own history in electronic music. As with many Detroit techno mainstays, he was inspired early on by radio DJ Charles Johnson A.K.A. The Electrifying Mojo, who exposed him to the likes of CybotronKraftwerk and Prince. When stationed in Germany during military service in 1989, he experienced a full-circle moment upon hearing Detroit techno played in Frankfurt nightclub Dorian Gray.

When asked “What is techno,” Banks touched on the genre’s history while sharing a philosophical perspective on the genre’s evolution. “It’s a little bit of this and a little bit of that, but I don’t think there was any genius in it,” he said. “Techno occurred because Detroit was abandoned by major music. I think the market was so uninteresting to them that our DJs got allowed a lot of freedom to play what they felt the community needed.”

For her part, Hale recounted stumbling into Detroit nightclub Heaven and falling in love with the concept of continuous mixing. Ahead of her time, she developed a method she called “sneak-a-mix” to make songs blend seamlessly into one other without the audience being able to tell that a transition took place. Hale has gone on to mentor countless up-and-coming DJs – among them Brooklyn hard techno artist Gia.

Johnson closed out by asking what Banks and Hale would like the audience to take with them from the Symposium. The former artist encouraged them to take responsibility for the future and not turn a blind eye to the unchecked greed of the system. “Detroit is the model for blind, immoral capitalism,” he said.

Banks and Hale’s credentials as figureheads of Detroit techno speak for themselves. A founding member of Underground Resistance, a collective greatly responsible for techno’s history as protest music, Banks has contributed to the genre’s afrofuturistic vision. Hale is often called the “Godmother of House Music” and performed in such seminal clubs as The Warehouse and Studio 54 before techno was a glimmer in any Detroiter’s eye.

MEMCO’s Black History Month Symposium was partly funded by Arts at Michigan and The Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives.

]]>
https://selector.news/2020/07/25/memco-black-history-month-symposium/feed/ 0
Detroit and Cape Town DJs to Unite for All-Day Live Stream Event https://selector.news/2020/07/08/electric-unity-dj-live-stream-roots-screening/ https://selector.news/2020/07/08/electric-unity-dj-live-stream-roots-screening/#respond Wed, 08 Jul 2020 12:46:34 +0000 https://selector.news/?p=2790 An upcoming live stream event looks to strengthen the musical bond between Detroit and Cape Town. Electric Unity DJ Live Stream will run from 1:00-9:00 PM EST on Saturday, July 11th, 2020 via Twitch before a virtual screening of the 2014 documentary Electric Roots: The Detroit Sound Project. A portion of proceeds from ticket sales will be donated to Black Lives Matter.

The digital event is a collaboration between the Michigan Electronic Music Collective and the TAROTE’ Foundation. Among the Detroit acts billed are Stacey Hotwaxx HaleReggie Dokes and Whodat. Representing Cape Town will be Niskerone and Killer Robot.

Following the performances will be an exclusive viewing of Electric Roots via online screening platform OVEE. The documentary explores the bonds forged by Kristian Hill and Jennifer Washington with South African musicians and includes interviews with artists like Richie Hawtin and Black Coffee at Capetown Electronic Music Festival.

Tickets for the Electric Roots screening and additional information on Electric Unity DJ Live Stream can be found via Eventbrite.

]]>
https://selector.news/2020/07/08/electric-unity-dj-live-stream-roots-screening/feed/ 0