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Frankie Bones performing at Club Moog in Barcelona, Spain (2018) Frankie ‘Bones’ Mitchell is a prominent figure in the development of dance music within the United States. Widely regarded as the "Godfather of American Rave Culture". Throughout the 80s & 90, Frankie played a major role in developing NYC's underground party scene (primarily ...
Tommy Musto is an American record producer from New York, who gained fame throughout the 1980s and 1990s in the dance music scene as a DJ and producer. [1] [2] In 1990, he collaborated with fellow New York DJ Frankie Bones as 'Musto and Bones', yielding the club hit "Dangerous on the Dance Floor".
One of the most influential uses of the term was made by DJ Frankie Bones in June 1993. In response to a fight in the audience of one of his Storm Raves in Brooklyn, Bones took the microphone and proclaimed: "If you don't start showing some peace, love, and unity, I'll break your faces."
Frankie Bones (real name Frank Mitchell, born 1966), first American DJ who played the early U.K. scene in the late 80s Frankie Knuckles (real name Francis Nicholls, 1955–2014), helped to develop and popularize the electronic, disco -influenced dance music style called house music
In 1992 Heart began Djing, first under the name "Heather Heather," later changing it to Heather Heart. She became famous especially for djing the Storm Raves founded by fellow DJ Frankie Bones. The three have been called "The forefathers (and foremother) of New York techno." [7] In 1995 they moved the store to Manhattan, and renamed it Sonic ...
The album came about as a result of a 1998 guest DJ appearance by Howlett on Mary Anne Hobbs's Breezeblock show on BBC Radio 1, producing a similar set. In a bid to stop popular bootleg copies of the show, an official album was released, essentially an extended version of the Breezeblock mix.
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However, rave culture's major expansion in North America is often credited to Frankie Bones, who after spinning a party in an aircraft hangar in England, helped organise some of the earliest American raves in the 1990s in New York City called "Storm Raves". Storm Raves had a consistent core audience, fostered by zines by fellow Storm DJ (and co ...