This Is A Podcast About House Music (ASMR)
Hello, my sexy listeners. I'm ThatPodcastGirl C Dub, and This Is A Podcast About House Music. Let me take you somewhere. It's a Saturday. Not morning yet — that thing after morning where the light hasn't figured out what it wants to be. You're standing in a record shop. Not browsing. Waiting. The man behind the counter is watching your face while the needle drops on something he hasn't told you the name of yet. And the kick lands, and something shifts in your chest, and you don't say anything because you don't need to. He already sees it. He pulls the sleeve from under the counter and slides it toward you like a secret. That was the whole thing. That moment was the whole thing. The search had geography. It had weather. It had train rides and phone calls and handwritten track IDs on folded pieces of paper you kept in your coat. It had standing there with headphones pressed to your ears, heart doing something, nobody naming it. Before digital files filled the booth, discovery lived in physical places. Then the map changed. In 2000, Kevin Lewandowski built something that looked, from the outside, like a database. Discogs started as an archive for electronic music. But what it really was — what it became — was a memory. A living one. A place where the credits could be corrected, the aliases finally connected, the white labels identified, the forgotten pressing traced back to a person and a session and a year. House music is full of hidden lines. One producer under five names. One vocalist uncredited on a remix that became bigger than the original. One dub that circulated for a decade before anyone pinned down who made it. Discogs didn't make the music easier to feel. It made it easier to follow. That's a different kind of gift. Don't underestimate it. Meanwhile, the booth was changing shape. DJs were moving toward laptops and CDJs and digital files — and the music they actually played, the underground stuff, the stuff with feeling in it, was almost impossible to buy cleanly. You might find it on LimeWire. You might find a mislabeled rip that sounded like it had been recorded through a wall. You might find a version that cut off before the outro. You might find a folder with someone's initials and nothing else, a file you couldn't identify until you played it on a system loud enough to matter. Eloy Lopez asked a question that sounds obvious now and wasn't obvious at all then: Why can't we buy the music we love digitally? That question became Beatport. Jonas Tempel, Eloy Lopez, and Bradley Roulier launched it out of Denver in 2004. A store built for DJs. Genre filtering. Label filtering. Charts. Release dates. The bins never closed. The shipment could arrive while you were home in your pajamas. A record could go from label to folder to booth inside a week. The crate had become searchable. And I want to sit with that for a second, because it sounds like pure progress. It was, in some ways. But something else was also happening. Discovery was becoming visible. A chart wasn't just a list — it was evidence. A DJ could see what everyone else was buying. A label could see what moved. The record shop had trained DJs through scarcity. You could only buy what reached you. The digital archive was training DJs through something else entirely. Abundance. Which sounds like freedom and sometimes is and sometimes isn't. Traxsource knew the difference. Brian Tappert and Marc Pomeroy — Jazz-N-Groove, Soulfuric, Soulsearcher, Urban Blues Project, names that mean something if you know, and if you're listening to this podcast you know — helped build Traxsource as a home for real house music in the digital marketplace. The language was deliberate. Real house music. Soulful. Deep. Vocal. Afro house. Garage-leaning records. Music that still carried the fingerprints of singers, arrangers, basslines, gospel chords, rooms where the groove needed to breathe.
31 episodes
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