A-Z Of Electro
March 2011

In its original incarnation, Electro was black science fiction teleported to the dancefloors of New York, Miami and LA; a super-stoopid fusion of video games, techno-pop, graffiti art, silver space suits and cyborg funk. Now that Electro is back, David Toop provides a thumbnail guide to the music that posed the eternal question: "Watupski, bug byte?" This article originally appeared in The Wire 145 (March 1996).
A
"Al-Naafiysh (The Soul)" stands as prime contender for the
weird-titles-in-pop award. Released on Aldo and Amado Marin's
Cutting Records label, Hashim's glacial, squelching track become a
breaker's anthem in the UK. Also "Arkade Funk" by Tilt, Trouble
Funk's Washington DC hybrid of arcade games, Electronics, live
go-go percussion, and Vocoded, pitchshifted lyrics: "I am an arkade
funk machine... search and destroy".
B
Urban spaceman Afrika Bambaataa and producer Arthur Baker, plus
musician John Robie, were the trio behind a musical revolution
called "Planet Rock", Bambaataa's 1982 single with Soul Sonic
Force. Following the impact of "Planet Rock", UK groups made
Electro-boogie pilgrimages to Baker's studio in Manhattan: Freeze's
"IOU" rocketed jazz funk into the infosphere but more
significantly, New Order's "Blue Monday" launched indie dancing and
sold massively on 12". Also breaking and robot dancing, the
acrobatic and simulated machine dances that drew many adolescents
into the alien zone of black science fiction. Bleep music was one
consequence of this. Hardly adequate to describe and encompass the
protozoic chaos of New York Nu Groove, Detroit Techno, Chicago
House, Sheffield post-industrial (Sweet Exorcist and Xon), Leeds
Techno (LFO) and Bradford HipHop (Unique 3) propagated by Network
Records in Birmingham and Warp in Sheffield, bleep's Electro
connections were indisputable. Next came Techno.
C
Cybotron, the Detroit brainchild of Juan Atkins and Rick Davies,
alias 3070, creators of "Clear", "Techno City" and "Cosmic Cars".
Cold Crush Brothers were old-school South Bronx pioneers but they
joined the beat wave with "Punk Rock Rap" and "Fresh, Wild, Fly And
Bold". Captain Rock, Captain Rapp and Captain Sky did their space
cadet thang, but nobody could go further out into the phunkosphere
than George Clinton. Role model for young American blacks who
wanted to dress up in tinfoil and join Outer Spaceways
Incorporated, George proved there was life in the old bionic dog by
releasing the analogue squelching Computer Games in 1992.
D
Davy DMX, Queens DJ, multi-instrumentalist and creator of "The DMX
Will Rock", named himself after the Oberheim DMX, drum machine of
choice in mid-80s HipHop.
E
Electro-pop, British style: Depeche Mode, Ultravox, Human League,
Gary Numan, Thomas Dolby et al. The one-finger keyboard techniques
of Depeche Mode were an inspiration to a generation of scratch DJs
across the Atlantic. 808 (as in Roland), the beatbox whose
artificiality liberated Electroids from drum cliches.
F
Futura, Fab Five Freddy, Face 2000 and Phase II, all graffiti
artists who recorded Electro-rap tracks on Celluloid. The Funhouse,
Manhattan's temple of futurist Electro. Freestyle, late 80s New
York dance music, very post-Electro/pre-Garage, Latin flavoured,
frequently softcore ("Talk Dirty To Me", "Vanessa Del Rio") as
recorded by Corporation Of One, Bad Boy Orchestra and Tommy
Musto.
G
After Grandmaster Flash and "Scorpio" came Grandmaster Melle Mel
with Electro hits - "White Lines" and "Survival" - followed by
Grandmixer D.ST's "Grand Mixer Cuts It Up", a storm of
stereo-panned arcade bleeps. D.ST went on to perform live on
turntables with Herbie Hancock's Rockit group. Forming the golden
triangle of Electro in the late 80s were Miami Bass, New York Latin
freestyle and in LA - pre-gangsta - Dr Dre and DJ Yella cutting
production teeth on "Planet Rock" clones such as World Class
Wrecking Cru and the fast, juvenile sub-bass of JJ Fad's
"Supersonic".
H
With 70s albums such as Sextant, Thrust and Headhunters, Herbie
Hancock anticipated many tropes and tricks of Electro. His Electro
tracks with Bill Laswell - particularly the smash hit "Rockit" -
were not such a future shock, and his earlier music has aged
better. In Hollywood, the cinematic possibilities of robot beats
and moves in the doomed megalopolis were ill-served by such films
as Beat Street, Breakin' and Flashdance. As (almost) always, the
best ideas were the cheapest, a principle suggested by one scene in
Breakin' (renamed Breakdance 1 in the UK): a dance routine with a
broom and Kraftwerk's "Tour De France". Post-Electro, the human
beatbox, exemplified by Dougie Fresh and The Fat Boys, was a
biological response to the drum machine.
I
For glorious one-offs it's hard to beat "We Come To Rock" by the
Imperial Brothers, "Running" by Information Society (a Latin
freestyle prototype followed up by relentlessly dull
quasi-'British' Electro-pop albums) or "Inspector Gadget" by The
Kartoon Krew.
J
Boston's Jonzun Crew, led by Michael Jonzun, were literally the
most wigged-out Electro act of all, basing their stage appearance
on Beethoven. For mutant cyberian phunk, their Lost In Space album,
particularly the menacing "Pack Jam", remains chilly the most.
Regrettably, Jonzun and his brother, Maurice Starr, went on to
produce lukewarm mainstream R&B. Jonzun Crew, along with
virtually everybody who was anybody, were mixed or remixed by
Jellybean. DJ at The Funhouse, John 'Jellybean' Benitez met Madonna
in the DJ booth one night, stepped out with her for two years and
mixed her records, thus drawing a strong link between Electro and
the biggest female star in music.
K
Kraftwerk, the showroom dummies who caused Bambaataa to scratch his
head and say, "'Scuse the expression, this is some weird shit". For
"Planet Rock", Bam used the melody from "Trans Europe Express".
Over the distinctive 808 beat, the effect was spectral. The idea of
making music from pocket calculators appealed to kids accustomed to
scratching vinyl. Meanwhile, in the UK, Morgan Khan made a
developing genre of music financially accessible to an entire
generation with his Streetsounds Electro series of compilation
albums.
L
Since young Hispanics - male and female - formed the US core
audience of instrumental Electro, the cyber-salsa teen romance of
Latin HipHop was an inevitable evolution. Notable for thunderous
dub mixes, slushy chords and sentiments, melodrama and bad clothes,
this mid-80s phenomenon was represented in New York by Shannon,
Amoretto, Cover Girls, TKA et al; in Miami, Expose were brand
leaders. Central to the scene due to their Electro edits, Latin
HipHop production and remixing were the Latin Rascals - Albert
Cabrera and Tony Moran - who made the endearingly trashy Back To
The Future album (titles include "A Little Night Noise" and "Yo,
Elise!").
M
Miami Bass took up Electro after NYC had finished with it, turned
up the sub-bass on the kick drum, filled cars and jeeps with
woofers and tweeters, and drive around the hot streets of their
Fourth World, postmodern city in a nomadic ecstasy of boom. Tracks
by Bose and Gucci Crew II fetishised loudspeaker power, perpetual
movement, Robocop and similar urban dislocations; DJ Extraordinaire
And The Bassadelic Boom Patrol's "Drop The Bass (Lower The Boom)"
went over the edge with its info-bites; The Beat Club's "Security"
merged Planet Patrol and Human League into a heaving epic of sci-fi
emotions; Maggatron, who combined awesome bass drum boom with
rampant George Clinton influences, manic scratch 'n' sniff
production, screaming Metal guitar solos and a selfless dedication
to Electro cliches. Their Bass Planet Paranoia (1990) boasts titles
such as "Pygmies In Devilles", "Temple Of Boom" (the original) and
a cover of Clinton's "Maggot Brain" that the late, great Eddie
Hazel would have been proud of. Mantronix (Man + Electronix) came
just after Electro. The musical combination of raps, vocoded
choruses, sequenced basslines, clap delays and crashing beatbox
snares suggests they were influential on 90s drum 'n' bass. Also
hail Man Parrish for the all-time Electro classic "Hip Hop De Bop
(Don't Stop)".
N
Gary Numan, the eyelinered squadron leader of British Techno-pop,
whose "Cars" struck an unlikely chord in the hearts of
Electro-HipHoppers. Buried in the archives but never to be
forgotten: Nitro DeLuxe, who briefly fused Electro, experimental
House and Techno, apparently without knowing it; Newtrament, whose
"London Bridge Is Falling Down" was the first (and one of the few)
credible UK Electro records; Newcleus, whose "Jam On It" can still
bring nostalgic tears to the eyes of the chilliest Brit-based
technocrat or hardass rapper.
O
Bobby O, New York (Mostly hi-energy) producer who released the
awesome, surreal Beat Box Boys Electro-minimalist 12"s "Give Me My
Money", "Einstein" and "Yum Yum - Eat 'Em Up". Bobby Orlando also
signed and produced The Pet Shop Boys in the same year.
P
"Planet Rock" for the party people convening on fonky Pluto, and
Planet Patrol, a Boston vocal quartet shamelessly transformed into
an extra-terrestrial mutation of The Stylistics by Arthur Baker and
John Robie in order to sing Electro versions of Gary Glitter's "I
Didn't Know I Loved You (Till I Saw You Rock And Roll)" and Todd
Rundgren's "It Wouldn't Have Made Any Difference". Their "Play At
Your Own Risk" was one of the great Electro singles. RIP Pumpkin,
"King Of The Beat", who played all the Electro-tech on Enjoy
singles by The Fearless Four and others. Post-Electro, which has to
include, for greater or lesser reasons, LFO, Black Dog, Shut Up
& Dance, Metalheadz, Bandulu, Moody Boyz, Plaid, As One, A Guy
Called Gerald, 808 State, Carl Craig, Bally Sagoo, Massive Attack,
Tricky, Portishead, Depth Charge, Chemical Brothers, Underworld,
The Shamen, Talvin Singh's Future Sound Of India, Future Sound of
London, Jedi Knights, the Clear and Mo'Wax labels, and even, at a
pinch, M People.
Q
"Queen Of Rox", otherwise known as Roxanne Shante, who bridged the
gap between the Electro era and those crashing Brooklyn beats of
the mid-80s.
R
"Rockin' It" by The Fearless Four was one of Electro's greatest
moments. Iconoclasts who borrowed riffs from Gary Numan, Cat
Stevens, Gamble & Huff and Herbie Hancock, they took
Kraftwerk's "The Man Machine" for "Rockin' It", added a phrase from
Poltergeist and created future R&B. John Robie was one of the
musical architects of Electro, playing keyboards on "Planet Rock",
"Looking For The Perfect Beat" and "Renegades Of Funk", Planet
patrol's "Cheap Thrills", "Body Mechanic" by Quadrant Six, C-Bank's
"Get Wet" and "Walking On Sunshine" by Rocker's Revenge. Run-DMC
may have sounded like stripped down, hard Electro when they
started, but by turning the emphasis back on words and beats they
blew Electro into the outer darkness.
S
Smurfs were diminutive Hanna-Barbera cartoon people for whom smurf
served as a verb: ie "My potion is wearing off. We'd better smurf
out of here." In 1982, Tyrone Brunson, a DC born bass player, made
a dance craze record called "The Smurf". More jazz fusion than
Electro, "The Smurf" was answered in an orgy of copyright-busting
spelling variations by "The Smirf", "Pappa Smerf" and, with far
more class, "Salsa Smurph" by Special Request, "Smerphie's Dance"
by Spyder-D and "(I Can Do It... You Can Do It) Letzmurph
Acrossdasurf" by The Micronawts (an alias for journalist and
eventually New Jack City scriptwriter Barry Michael Cooper). Also
Shango, the Afro-cybernetic fusion of Bambaataa and Material; Sir
Mix-A-Lot, an Electro pioneer who went ballistic with "Baby's Got
Back"; Sly Stone, exploiting the machine feel of rhythm boxes on
There's A Riot Goin' On back in 1971; all things spacey, such as
Star Wars, Close Encounters, space suits knocked up from leather
and tinfoil, and Sun Ra, credited on The Jonzun Crew's Lost In
Space album. Not forgetting the itch to scratch and not excluding
"Was Dog A Doughnut", a rare fling at Techno-pop-fusion by Cat
Stevens, transmuted into Electro by Jellybean and The Fearless
Four.
T
Techno Techno Techno, the man/woman-machine interface, the
inevitable spread of music inspired and haunted by technology. For
an example of the Techno diaspora, listen to Off's "Electric Salsa"
- pure Electro, recorded in Germany in 1986 and featuring vocals by
a young blond named Sven Vath. Tommy Boy Records was the New York
company run by Tom Silverman and Monica Lynch that released a
string of Electro classics, beginning with "Planet Rock". Down in
the sunbelt, Luke Skywalker's 2 Live Crew traded in tits 'n' ass,
took Miami Bass to the masses, got sued by George Lucas, were taken
to court for obscenity, pioneered rumpshaker videos, and generally
gave Electro a filthy reputation.
U
UTFO, robot dancers for Whodini who progressed to a career as
rappers by launching the Roxanne saga of the mid-80s. Also, UK
House, whose roots, as early tracks by the likes of Hotline, Zuzan
and Krush show, were as much in NYC Electro as they were in Chicago
House.
V
Video Games from Space Invaders to PacMan, Defender to Galaxian.
"We live in a time of extraterrestrial hopes and anxieties," wrote
Martin Amis, looking for answers to questions raised by the
so-called blank-screen generation in his Invasion Of The Space
Invaders. Some vid-kids took inspiration from the alien voices,
blips, squirts and mantric melodies of arcade games and made music
from it. "Waaku-waaku" went The Packman on "I'm The Packman (Eat
Everything I Can)". Amis wrote about Defender as having the best
noises: "The fizz of a Baiter, the humming purr of a Pod, the
insect whine of the loathed mutants as they storm and sting." Part
Gorf command, part Kraftwerk effect, the Vocoder was Techno's
primary instrument. A studio device that combines voice sounds and
synthesizer, thus symbolising the human-machine interface.
W
"Woof woof", a barking noise made by B-Boys in lieu of applause
when the Electro shuttle lifted off. Often preceded by "Hey buddy
buddy", "Wicki wicki wicki" or similar. Warp 9, whose spacey
productions by Richard Scher, Lotti Golden and Jellybean reached
warpspeed on the "Light Years Away" dub mix. West Street Mob,
Whodini and Whiz Kid all saw their moment and grabbed it.
Wildstyle: the film, the record, the mode of behaviour. Back on the
beach, "Whoomp! There It Is" by Tag Team was a 90s "Planet Rock"
soundalike that revived old-school Electro with a vengeance,
selling more than four million copies to go quadruple platinum.
X
Xena's "On The Upside", along with Shannon's "Let The Music Play",
were quintessential examples of the Mark Liggett/Chris Barbosa
sound, the booming, jerky diva-Electro that launched Latin HipHop.
Xploitation as in Jheri curl and Zapata-tashed soul bands such as
Midnight Starr going for Electro hits. Also xploitation as in
Spaghetti Westerns, kung fu, porno and science fiction, all of
which provided Electro with its mise en scene. Down in Miami,
R&B and disco veteran (soon to be Miami Bass entrepreneur)
Henry Stone jumped on the ET boom of 1982 with the Extra Ts and
their weird "ET Boogie". "It hurts", said the Extra Ts; King
Sporty's EX Tras answered with the stun gun Electro-bass of
"Haven't Been Funked Enough".
Y
Yellow Magic Orchestra, who inspired Afrika Bambaataa back in the
days. YMO's cover version of Martin Denny's "Firecracker" can be
heard on the Bambaataa turntables on the notorious "Death Mix" 12".
In fact, Ryuichi Sakamoto's "Riot In Lagos" had anticipated
Electro's beats and sounds in 1980, while Haruomi Hosono's 1983
Video Game Music took the musical use of game noise to a further,
maddening conclusion: "Digital sound with body and spontaneity had
game-character, no, is music as a game" (album notes).
Z
Zulu Nation, Afrika Bambaataa's vision of a global brotherhood
linked by a passion for the cyber-street arts of HipHop culture.
Inspired by Malcolm X, Martin Luther King and George Clinton's "One
Nation Under A Groove", it was the predecessor to today's invisible
engloballed info-community of New Headz.
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