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  <title>B4 (classic club songs from 80s and early 90s)</title>
  <description>Before there was a DJ Bigdirty. The Classics Mix “Where words fail, music speaks.” 1.&amp;amp;nbsp;[00:00] intro 2. [00:33] Rob Base &amp;amp;amp; DJ EZ Rock- It Takes Two 3. [05:13] Lisa Lisa &amp;amp;amp; Cult Jam- Let The Beat Hit ‘Em 4. [08:48] C&amp;amp;amp;C Music Factory Feat Freedom Williams &amp;amp;amp; Zelma Davis- Here we Go 5. [11:26] The Cover Girls- Show Me 6. [14:52] Sweet Sensation- Hooked On You 7. [18:30] Shannon- Let The Music Play 8. [21:15] Lisa Lisa &amp;amp;amp; Cult Jam- Take Me Home 9. [26:20] Noel- Silent Morning 10. [27:56] Gino Latino- Welcome 11. [31:32] Lisette Melendez- Together Forever 12. [33:39] Information Society Vs AKA- What’s on Your Mind Cruel Loving (DJ Bigdirty Torment &amp;amp;amp; Pain Mash-up) 13. [35:30] Yaz- Situation 14. [39:58] Depeche Mode- Strange Love 15. [45:47] The Beat Club- Security 16. [48:40] Freestyle- Don’t Stop The Rock 17. [50:36] Debbie Deb- When I Hear Music 18. [52:16] Debbie Deb- Lookout Weekend 19. [55:31] Trinere- I Know You Love Me 20. [58:09] Freestyle- The Party Has Begun 21. [01:00:42] Nice &amp;amp;amp; Wild- Diamond Girl 22. [01:04:44] Will To Power- Say It’s Gonna Rain 23. [01:07:28] Johnny O- Fantasy Girl 24. [01:11:07] Stevie B- Dreaming Of Love 25. [01:13:29] Will To Power- Dreamin’ 26. [01:15:43] Lil Suzy- Take Me In Your Arms 27. [01:18:05] Afrika Bambaataa &amp;amp;amp; The Soul Sonic Force- Planet Rock 28. [01:21:54] Egyptian Lover- Egypt Egypt 29. [01:23:39] Maurice- This Is Acid 30. [01:26:06] Lil Louis- French Kiss 31. [01:28:54] Sir Mix A Lot- Baby Got Back 32. [01:34:08] Clay D &amp;amp;amp; The get Funky Crew- Shake Them Ti**ies 33. [01:38:43] 2 Live Crew- Pop That P 34. [01:42:14] Kyper- Tic Tac Toe 35. [01:47:12] Kyper- (What Gets your Body Hyped) XTC 36. [01:50:08] Salt &amp;amp;amp; Pepa- Push It 37. [01:56:14] Gilette- Short D**k Man 38. [01:57:44] New Order- Blue Monday 39. [02:02:50] Depeche Mode- I Just Can’t Get Enough 40. [02:05:21] Yaz- Don’t Go 41. [02:10:18] Duran Duran- Hungry Like The Wolf 42. [02:14:16] DJ X Vs The Outfield- Your Love 43. [02:16:16] The Cure- Just Like Heaven “Where words fail, music speaks.” There’s no such thing as a perfect story.&amp;amp;nbsp; I’ve been trying to create it since the mixtape began.&amp;amp;nbsp; It’s what keeps me creating.&amp;amp;nbsp; A blank TDK cassette tape was my canvas.&amp;amp;nbsp; Records were my tool.&amp;amp;nbsp; Some of you were my inspiration.&amp;amp;nbsp; My parent’s got me my first duel turntables for Christmas during junior year of high school (1985).&amp;amp;nbsp; One had pitch control &amp;amp;amp; the other not so much. Trying to beat mix was an event, but looking back on it, it was practice man (Allen Iverson 200?).&amp;amp;nbsp; There was hope though.&amp;amp;nbsp; A new kid just moved across the street from Panama that knew how to properly beat mix.&amp;amp;nbsp; Tim Huggins aka The Lonesome Cowboy had the equipment for the job.&amp;amp;nbsp; This is where I got my first taste of real beat mixing.&amp;amp;nbsp; After countless hours of trying to mix Madonna, Tears For Fears &amp;amp;amp; Soul Sonic Force together I was getting there. Us and few other fellas used to battle for spinnin’ time during Youth Center dances. &amp;amp;nbsp; While there I realized my niche’ was house/freestyle music not really hip-hop.&amp;amp;nbsp; Back then hip hop was mainly drum beats and samples.&amp;amp;nbsp; Freestyle and House had electronic swirls, melodies, samples, and disco meets a hard hip hop breakbeat, but faster.&amp;amp;nbsp; At times I felt like I was floating/flying. Then came my failed attempt at college.&amp;amp;nbsp; But hey, the music was great!&amp;amp;nbsp; In the Fall of ’87 I moved into a dorm room in Eddy Hall at ENMU (the only co-ed dorm on campus- cool).&amp;amp;nbsp; I showed up with my music. By now in my mind I was a mixtape specialist.&amp;amp;nbsp; But who has time for that when you’re out on your own for the first time? Eat. Sleep. Basketball. Party. Repeat. I lived on the 2nd floor and I remember consistently sticking my big ass speakers out the window so we’d have music to ball to and dance between games.&amp;amp;nbsp; Every pickup game was a dance party. I landed a couple of gigs for some frats for free.&amp;amp;nbsp; Hell, I DJ’d at a damn football stadium for a football game.&amp;amp;nbsp; What a time to be alive!&amp;amp;nbsp; I just loved DJing and discovering what I could do with all this music I had. I must give credit to music for all the people I met.&amp;amp;nbsp; I was social, but not as much as music helped me. &amp;amp;nbsp; By Fall ’88 all that music, mixtape business and partying led me to one of the best decisions of my life. I joined the Air Force. My first assignment was Keesler AFB, Mississippi.&amp;amp;nbsp; Once again I found myself on the 2nd floor of the dorms.&amp;amp;nbsp; I was making mixtapes for late night work shifts, room parties &amp;amp;amp; car rides.&amp;amp;nbsp; We all used to go Fiesta or Take Two nightclubs on the beach.&amp;amp;nbsp; I wasn’t just there to dance, but I was checking out what the DJ’s were playing and then going to the record store the next payday and picking up those tracks. I probably drove the DJs crazy asking for the name of the track they were playing. This also included a bunch of people loading into a car go to New Orleans almost every payday weekend and heading to The Blue Crystal- an industrial, goth, alternative club.&amp;amp;nbsp; We’d wear all black and do a million stupid things in the streets of New Orleans or go to the nightclub in Jax Brewery. Dancing until 4 &amp;amp;amp; 5 in the morning. I was always so curious about what the DJ was gonna play in a big city.&amp;amp;nbsp; So many discoveries in those joints.&amp;amp;nbsp; Just trying to expand my musical taste and what would make the perfect mix. Since then, I learned tempo &amp;amp;amp; keys by ear of all this stuff I was listening to. There was so much more to making a mixtape. This mix has been put off for years.&amp;amp;nbsp; It’s truly hard to capture a snapshot of not just my life but those around you during our huge transition(s). I don’t like letting people down, so that fear of failure put this “mixtape” off for years.&amp;amp;nbsp; This mix isn’t just about me but for the people that lived it. It incorporates the people I met during those times before I was a club DJ (it took me took til 1997 after giving up around 1993).&amp;amp;nbsp; I hope it takes you back. As with every mix I hope it tells a story. Music does most of my talking.&amp;amp;nbsp; It’s not perfect, but is anything.&amp;amp;nbsp; Enjoy… </description>
  <author_name>dj bigdirty's: night club musical</author_name>
  <author_url>https://www.djbigdirty.com</author_url>
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