SIDEBAR - MIAMI 1970S OVERVIEW


Meaning of SIDEBAR - MIAMI 1970S OVERVIEW in English

In the 1970s Miami, Florida, boomed economically, and its downtown filled with thin white skyscrapers. At ground level the city developed an infrastructure of recording studios and distributors that by the early 1990s had made it the capital of the Latin-American music business. The foundations were laid by veteran record men Henry Stone and Jerry Wexler. A goateed hustler, Stone had launched and distributed rhythm-and-blues labels since the 1950s. He finally hit the jackpot with productions by Willie Clarke, often featuring drum machines (then a new technology), such as George McCrae's gently swinging disco anthem Rock Your Baby. After licensing hits to Atlantic (notably Betty Wright's 1971 hit Clean Up Woman), from 1972 Stone released them on his own TK label. TK topped the pop chart with five boisterous dance tunes by KC and the Sunshine Banda band led by two local session players, Harry Wayne Casey (KC) and Rick Finch. Meanwhile, Atlantic's Wexler moved to sunny Florida and brought his work with him. Basing himself at the white beach villa at 461 Ocean Boulevard that housed Criteria Studios, he imported two former Atlantic cohorts, arranger Arif Mardin and engineer Tom Dowd, as his coproducing team and recruited the house band from American Sound Studios in Memphis, Tennessee, renaming them the Dixie Flyers. Fifteen years before South Beach became a trendy hub of activity, the relative isolation of Criteria worked well for such troubled talents as Aretha Franklin and Eric Clapton, whose Derek and the Dominos album with Duane Allman was produced at Criteria by Dowd. Two studio handsKarl Richardson and Albhy Galutenwent on to work with Mardin as engineers on the Bee Gees' early disco hits, culminating in their world-beating Saturday Night Fever soundtrack (which also featured KC and the Sunshine Band's Boogie Shoes). Peter Silverton

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