Tag Archives: music history

How Detroit techno is preserving the city’s beating heart in the face of gentrification

Detroit, the birthplace of techno, is facing the pressures of gentrification. Willie Orlando Ford, CC BY

Carla Vecchiola, University of Michigan-Dearborn

For over two decades, Detroit has celebrated its status as the birthplace of techno with an electronic music festival held over Memorial Day weekend.

But like the city around it, the festival has changed. At its inception, the event was free and focused on techno music and Detroit musicians, primarily the Black Americans who started techno – just as house music was developing in Chicago – in the mid-1980s. Now, the price of a weekend ticket is US$309, plus a $46.15 service fee. And some festivalgoers have noted it no longer draws as many Black attendees as it once did or as one would expect, given the racial makeup of the city. It has long since dropped “Detroit” from its name, rebranding as the Movement Electronic Music Festival in 2006.

In short, to many Detroiters, the annual festival has gentrified, as have the central corridors of the city.

As an ethnographic researcher of Detroit techno – and a self-confessed “househead” – I have watched as the city and its music have changed as more and more Black Detroiters have been forced out by rising rents. But I have also seen how the city’s underground music scene is fighting back by preserving community in the face of spatial injustice – that is, the unfair allocation of resources in a mixed society – and the pressures of systematic racism.

One such space of resistance happens every Thursday during the summer at The Congregation, a cafe built in a former church located one block from the epicenter of Detroit’s 1967 rebellion – which saw days of confrontation between police and predominantly Black residents.

At The Congregation, a grassy dance floor draws an intergenerational and diverse crowd. The event keeps the spirit of old Detroit alive, while offering newcomers a vision of what a truly inclusive city can look like.

A crowd of people dancing.
The Congregation brings together generations of Detroiters. Marius Bingue, CC BY

Techno is Black music (from Detroit)

Detroit is known universally as the birthplace of techno. The genre emerged in the 1980s, when the Rust Belt city was experiencing white flight, widespread disinvestment and the consequences of postwar government programs, such as urban renewal and highway building, that were destructive to community needs.

As one techno musician from back in those days told me, techno was the soundtrack they heard in their head while walking, and looking over a shoulder, in mostly abandoned downtown streets.

Techno emerged from two interrelated scenes: Black, gay clubs and the Black high school party scene, where people, some too young to drink, organized elaborate events with professional light shows and sound systems.

Meanwhile, inspiration and encouragement also came from the music being played by the Electrifying Mojo, a radio DJ whose nightly show demonstrated Detroit’s wide range of musical tastes, from Parliament to Peter Frampton to the B52s, and, later, techno and house.

The diversity of influences and do-it-yourself attitude of techno pioneers such as Juan Atkins, Eddie Fowlkes, Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson resulted in a form of music that is both funky and futuristic, even some 40 years later. The purpose of Detroit techno was, and still is, to make you dance, to make you sweat; it distinguishes itself from other dance music by its characteristic layered rhythms, abstract sounds and Afrofuturistic themes.

Detroit techno was always rooted in strong community bonds – especially within Detroit’s Black community – despite the city being ravaged by disinvestment.

Since the 1980s, many of the forms of electronic dance music that were inspired by Detroit and Chicago have gained mainstream popularity in Europe and white America.

But in the face of what some critics have labeled the “whitewashing” of the electronic music industry – and the disproportionate profits made by white DJs and promoters – it is important to credit the Black Detroiters behind techno. And projects such as Detroit’s Exhibit 3000, the world’s first museum dedicated to techno, which opened in 2004, help promote the city’s role in developing electronic music.

In return, the Detroit techno and house scene helps maintain a sense of community and support for Detroiters who have long faced systemic racism in the city, and are now encountering gentrification.

Gentrification’s threat to culture

The changes in Detroit over the past 15 years have been disorienting and have had negative consequences for many longtime Black Detroiters.

Seniors have been evicted, sometimes with little notice, from downtown buildings, which are then redeveloped into high-end apartments out of the financial reach of many Detroiters.

Angie Linder from Detroit, USA, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons

Meanwhile, traditionally Black neighborhoods are suffering in contrast to the booming downtown core, where white residency increased by 115% from 2000 to 2020.

Gentrification is a danger to Detroit’s underground music community, too. Not only is it making residential and commercial spaces unaffordable for longtime residents, but cultural communities are also threatened.

The high school party scene that incubated techno was possible because there was so much downtown space in 1980s Detroit. That space has been squeezed by gentrification.

‘Are you going to The Congregation?’

In response to the squeeze of gentrification, Detroit’s underground music scene has kept vibrant by creating spaces for weekly pop-up events.

I attended the very first house night at The Congregation in the summer of 2020. With a large, grassy front yard, it was perfect for social-distanced dancing during the pandemic. The three resident DJs who host the event – Marvin Prather, John Spears and Tony Dennis – are lifelong Detroiters who bring in guest DJs, including Eddie Fowlkes, who helped originate Detroit techno.

Over the four years of its existence, house night at The Congregation has become a gathering place for people who were part of the 1980s techno scene – predominantly Black Detroiters now in their 50s and 60s.

I find it remarkable that the community has maintained these connections over the decades, and that the dancers and DJs who were there from the beginning still draw inspiration from their participation.

Yet it’s a welcoming, inclusive community that incorporates newcomers – just as it did when I first moved to Detroit from California in 1998.

It is, simultaneously, a homecoming with a family cookout vibe, a great place for a weekly catch-up or a banger to work up a sweat dancing.

Midway through one such evening last summer, a young Black woman near me on the dance floor shouted with surprise, “Dad! Dad! Dad!” and then walked along the fence to greet a Black man, perhaps a bit older than me. The fact that both attended the event – and were happily surprised to see each other there – demonstrates the way in which Detroit’s music scene continues to bring generations together. And The Congregation is just one such venue. On any given night, the regular crowds at the four main dance music venues in Detroit are likely to be diverse in races, ethnicities, sexualities and – in contrast to the norm in electronic music events worldwide – age.

During the final record played on the last Thursday event of summer 2023, one of the DJs, Taz, acted as MC and asked the crowd to take out their phones as another DJ, Mark Duncan, was playing “Flashlight” by Parliament.

Many in the crowd shined their phone flashlights as they danced and sang along.

That sense of community is what makes events such as those that take place at The Congregation something that househeads like myself miss from summer to summer – and fear might be edged out completely in the face of gentrification.

I am counting down the days until it begins this year on June 6. In a gentrifying city, spaces like The Congregation represent both continuity and an honoring of all that have come before: the Black people who created techno and house, the Detroiters who didn’t leave a disinvested city, and the fierce creativity that remains one of the city’s main draws.

Carla Vecchiola, Lecturer in History, University of Michigan-Dearborn

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Soldiers of remembrance: a review of The Cargo Rebellion: Those Who Chose Freedom

The Cargo Rebellion: Those Who Chose Freedom is a fascinating read for those interested in learning about social justice warriors of the past who shaped not only our modern, free world but also the world of modern music.

Those who wield the swords of power have always rewritten history, to paint a picture that serves an image they deem most fit for their continuous reign. However, every now and then, people publish writings about the real truth and history becomes a bit more clearer. And the legacy that those once powerful people left behind, gets a bit more stained with every new story.

It is a fortunate thing, that there are those who remind us of the the real stories, the fascinating and empowering stories of the people that came before us and of those who, through incredible hardships, fought to make our present world a bit less tyrannical and more free.

The Cargo Rebellion: Those Who Chose Freedom is one of those acts of remembrance. The book is written by Jason Chang, Benjamin Barson and Alexis Dudden and illustrated by Kim Inthavong. It is part comic book and part historical essays.

It tells the story of 19th century immigrant workers from China who successfully rebelled against their employers, many of whom were southern slave owners in the US. One tool of the powerful, whether those are old or new powers, is to soften the seriousness of events and to make events seem like they happened a longer time ago then what is accurate. By 1830, more than two million African were enslaved in the US, even if the US had outlawed international slave trade in 1808. It wasn’t until 1865 that the US outright banned slavery in the country. That is less than 160 years ago. That is the lifetime of two people, back to back, reaching the age of 80.

The beautifully illustrated comic book part of the publication tells the story of Chinese indentured workers who were on the US business man Leslie Bryson’s ship, the Robert Bowne. He sailed to China to retrieve 400 indentured workers with a promise of work in San Francisco, US. At one point during the journey, the Chinese workers realised they’d been lied to and that they were being brought to the infamous Chincha Islands in Peru for the incredibly perilous work of harvesting guano. In an attempt to squash the worker’s demands, Bryson had their braided hair cut, which went against Chinese imperial laws. The worker’s rose up and killed Bryson.

“Simply put, the incident launched the first truly multinational modern legal debate involving the seas in East Asia, calling into question not just the fate of the surviving mutineers but drawing into competition at least five different legal codes: those of China’s Qing Court, The Ryukyu Kingdom, Japan’s Tokugawa Shogunate, and American and British interests.”

Another thing that those in power often do is to praise the oppressors so their legacy seems legitimate and obviously not raise a finger in memory of those who fought back. In the US, there is a headstone to commemorate Bryson. Unsurprisingly, there are no memorials in the US for the Chinese workers who fought against injustice, for their basic human rights and as a consequence helped shape the free world many of us experience today. However, in 1971, residents of Ishigaki, in Japan, built a memorial to the Chinese workers who lost their lives on those Japanese shores.

Read also: A Protest Music Interview: Afro Yaquí Music Collective

The comic part of the book tells the tale of the rebellion onboard Robert Bowne, but this unique piece of literature tells other stories as well, of for example music and instruments. The three essays that follow the comic book, for a deeper understanding of the Robert Bowne mutiny and the historical global slave trade, give a more thorough explanation of the event and how it ignited a global conversation. The third essay, by musician and academic Ben Barson, explains “how the musical traditions they carried with them served as a crucial connection to their African neighbors on plantations and led to shared songs of liberation and the making of the first drum sets.”

Workers on the southern plantations in the US found political solidarity through their protest music:

“The stories of the Cantonese opera told fables, rehearsed local politics, and spoke truth to power. This type of storytelling critiqued authoritarianism and the imperial government, providing a ready-made cultural form for understanding the American plantation.”

The essay further explains how for example the suona instrument, of Asian origin, became a fundamental part of carnival rituals in Cuba and as Barson further details how in New Orleans, “Chinese percussion became foundational to Afro-Atlantic culture at the same time that Black and Chinese laborers exercised their power to negotiate the transition to wage labor and industrialized capitalist social relations.”

The Cargo Rebellion: Those Who Chose Freedom is a stunning, highly interesting publication, but more than anything – it is an important piece of work. A story of oppressed people finding unity amid hardship and through music and culture. Books like these, serve as soldiers of remembrance and truth. They remind us that the pen truly is more powerful than the sword and that the world can be a better place, if we learn from our mistakes and move forward with more empathy and love.

Authors: Jason Chang, Ben Barson, and Alexis Dudden – Illustrated by Kim Inthavong
Series: PM Press
ISBN: 9781629639642
Published: 03/07/23
Format: Hardcover
Size: 7×10
Pages: 64


New Book Documents Pioneering Women Recording Artists In Early 20th Century India

As it so often happens, the stories of underrepresented people get lost or forcefully erased through time by those who wish to control the historical narrative.

In early twentieth century India, women were pioneering the music recording field but their results and efforts have been somewhat hidden under the radar, until now.

Because of the efforts of author and historian Vikram Sampath these women’s stories have been brought to light in the book Women of the Records. The book is accompanied by a CD on which one can hear original recordings of the artists, fully restored and reconstructed.

“Across India women, mostly from the courtesan community, were the stellar pioneers of recording technology in the early twentieth-century.

Yet, their stories have been completely lost in the sands of time.

This book revisits their lives & features the indefatigable saga of 25 inspiring Indian women musicians from across the country, from 1902 to 1947.”

In 2011 Sampath launched Archive of Indian Music, an online preservation database of Indian music, all of which can be streamed on Soundcloud, for free.

https://soundcloud.com/archive-of-indian-music/popular-tracks