Klaus Nomi died at the Sloan Kettering Hospital Center in New York City on August 6, 1983, as a result of complications from AIDS. He was one of the earliest known figures from the arts community to die from the illness.[21][22] Nomi's close friend Joey Arias was executor of his estate.[23] Nomi's ashes were scattered in New York City.[11]
@begracefulonline17 күн бұрын
I started clubbing when I was 13 in the mid 80s, cuz i hung out w myy cousins who were 18+. Back then the drinking age was 18+, and clubs really didnt care. You'd get a fake ID on 42nd Street and it got you pretty much into any venue. As long as you dressed decent and acted mature they didn't care. Roxy and Devils Nest were my spots. Im from Queens and then L'Amour East (a rock club in Queens) started doing club nights, so started to hang out there as lur first stop before heading to the city or the Bronx. Wild times. I remember Jellybean @ The Funhouse and hitting Pyramid for some drinks
@danielroque850420 күн бұрын
God Bless everyone who survived the 70s/80s...Im still here in 2024!! RIP to all that passed, we are in queue, but until then, lets love~
@bmxbandito920 күн бұрын
You can always tell Crazy Legs windmill style
@bobstar6837Ай бұрын
Is that Rod stewart at 9.06. Off his tits😂
@Mikey5-OАй бұрын
These kids of today have no clue on the great times & fun we had back in the day. Sad.
@thewkovacs3162 ай бұрын
i was in grad school in ny during this time never stepped foot in a club
@gregoryallen00012 ай бұрын
@9:19 omg
@djmtgmikethegreek55052 ай бұрын
I’ve been to the Loft… Xenon…Funhouse…Zanzibar…Limelight…but when it came to sound systems. Paradise Garage. Was a regular. It was in another dimension compared to all rest. By far.
@ms.elegant45712 ай бұрын
barf
@emendoz12 ай бұрын
I can’t believe I was there at that time and had such a great time and am still here!
@AndyPandy-sj9bl2 ай бұрын
Even more anazibgvwhen yiu think that when all the people there got their tickets (back in April/May) 95% of them were signing up for a funk and jazz weekend. Remember Paul Oakenfolds Spectrum literally the first rave in the world only taking off in April 1988 (it was quiet for the first couple of months) - Shoom was earlier but was hard to get into and more like a private party and I'd never heard of it.
@nealives51062 ай бұрын
chris hill has said this is where everything changed. different vibe
@leakoe37973 ай бұрын
Always bring tears of Patriotism to my eyes with PRIDE
@PaulV5133 ай бұрын
3:34 Mark Kamins was the DJ that Madonna gave her demo reel of "Everybody" to and the rest is history!
@sugarpuddin4 ай бұрын
Soho London was the place. Not NYC
@StephenFurey-ev4le7 ай бұрын
Yes the 80s were a party for us 1960s kids
@paulomaiadj7 ай бұрын
I love her.
@Khultan8 ай бұрын
Would've been better getting the local's perspectives.
@Maatt158 ай бұрын
The Madonna debut
@pepsiq119658 ай бұрын
New York and London are now soooooo boring. I guess this generation can't bring it like past generations from the 1920s to the early 2000's
@SicilianStealth9 ай бұрын
The Saint 1980-88.
@newwavepop9 ай бұрын
the second they shows the Klaus Nomi stuff i got a little sad knowing that he had just passed not long before. always cool to see some vintage footage from The Roxy and Danceteria and a little bit of the Break groups. and of course the empty front of CBGB a little after its heyday.
@thebandit6664 ай бұрын
That hit me really hard as well. Klaus passed away in early August of 1983 😢
@strobe1559 ай бұрын
Dear..God! the soundtrack to this clip! NYC was a Blast! London too! 1983!!
@paulbacchus10159 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 I wish someone would release There's A Lot Of It About on dvd.
@ashfaq199910 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this classic tube new york club special !! Remember watching this show back in either it was october or november 1983.
@lionheart455210 ай бұрын
One night in the late eighties I vaguely remember going from the Astoria nightclub to The Shoom. There was no security & no bar. Dark with lot's of smoke. I remember tripping over a couple having sex on the floor & bumping Into a good friend John Holmes ( RIP ) We had the maddest night ever.
@edlorenzo789310 ай бұрын
Is anyone still running this KZread channel?
@DJdavejackson11 ай бұрын
Wow Sharon. Birkenheads finest.
@dianakonrad965811 ай бұрын
This was amazing
@tonemc6047 Жыл бұрын
Black lads and girls talking with a London accent ,now it’s white kids talking like a yardie.
@mrandybella11 Жыл бұрын
Hi STHLDN I am trying to find a full copy of the movie for Chris Brown who was 1 of the Funk Mafia Djs back then,& I was Froggys roadie on the sound system. Would much appreciate your help 🙂
@michaelsweeney65 Жыл бұрын
The original Bush boutique. Have lived on Stanlake Road since 84 when I was 11 and all the White City/Bush fashionistas shopped here. Always good style, quality and fun. Going there tomorrow to buy some Japanese selvedge denim. Glad it's going from strength to strength! West-side 🙂
@pendafen7405 Жыл бұрын
the middle track is kind of giving Scritti Politti
@pendafen7405 Жыл бұрын
15:07 'zerohead'? never heard anyone use that before or since
@pendafen7405 Жыл бұрын
8:26 Dags nearly got lucky there didn't he
@James-nl6fu Жыл бұрын
Very Clever manipulation of the image 👏 👌 👍 😀 😄 🙌 👏 👌 👍 Makes you feel like you have seen native Indian RainDancing.❤️
@headroomprod Жыл бұрын
AMAAAAAAAAAZING!!! Love this so much!❤
@damoclark9874 Жыл бұрын
Looks like the Broadmead Estate in Woodford Bridge Essex
@DJBobbyMay Жыл бұрын
Just got done reading "l:ife and Death On The New York Dancefloor 1980-1983" by Tim Lawrence... I was already drawn to so much of the music. That's whole damn reason I picked up the book. But learning about this scene was so inspiring. Dreaming of what a night, the dancefloor, a club can be. Happy with what I got to work with today, but damn, do wish I woulda been there.. A completely magical place and time. So many elements intersecting to create something that, surely, was a new nirvana, peak living, transcendence... I won't spend too many words on what it was (I wasn't there!!) But if I was, I surely woulda have been dancing well past sunrise...
@breakingdragon22 Жыл бұрын
I want to read this book. I grew up night clubbing as a 15 year old it was amazing Danceteria was my first club. Down the block was another spot called silver shadow. There were so many places in NYC too go to. I can’t begin to tell you how fun it was. I didn’t drink or do drugs. I just danced. In 1996 the club scene was dead. This video is absolutely just what it was like. That elevator in Danceteria where the quick interview was done brings back memories.
@robertbrown78964 ай бұрын
check out this must be the the place good book about clubbing and nyc scene from 1950s to today
@jacknjill3000Ай бұрын
I just bought the book and didn’t grow up in NYC, but we had a pretty great club scene in San Francisco and I was keeping up with the club scene in NZyC from a far. I did get finally get to visit NYC and caught much of east was going on in 87. I do regret not going to the paradise garage and got a flyer for but didn’t know about the Garage back then. The whole city was so exciting and so much going on everywhere. Glad I got to witness it and NYC was so much better than I expected,
@jjfrom2814 Жыл бұрын
Y the narrator sound like this it's weird lol
@TheTurk56523 Жыл бұрын
My regret was I didn’t get the chance to attend Danceterria.
@RennieDJ Жыл бұрын
What a year for hard house! #Trade
@seanmartin699 Жыл бұрын
😆👍
@StarBoyyX Жыл бұрын
Love videos like this , back in the good times
@chrishenniker5944 Жыл бұрын
The casuals shifted youth culture from oppositional, confrontational and hostile to consumerist. Especially when the second summer of love happened, it ended up as consumerist.
@Lawesp Жыл бұрын
This is and will always be a great moment for England!
@Gump-tion Жыл бұрын
The magic that was experienced inside those walls will never be forgotton!
Пікірлер
Sounded like a pretty cool fade at the end
Klaus Nomi died at the Sloan Kettering Hospital Center in New York City on August 6, 1983, as a result of complications from AIDS. He was one of the earliest known figures from the arts community to die from the illness.[21][22] Nomi's close friend Joey Arias was executor of his estate.[23] Nomi's ashes were scattered in New York City.[11]
I started clubbing when I was 13 in the mid 80s, cuz i hung out w myy cousins who were 18+. Back then the drinking age was 18+, and clubs really didnt care. You'd get a fake ID on 42nd Street and it got you pretty much into any venue. As long as you dressed decent and acted mature they didn't care. Roxy and Devils Nest were my spots. Im from Queens and then L'Amour East (a rock club in Queens) started doing club nights, so started to hang out there as lur first stop before heading to the city or the Bronx. Wild times. I remember Jellybean @ The Funhouse and hitting Pyramid for some drinks
God Bless everyone who survived the 70s/80s...Im still here in 2024!! RIP to all that passed, we are in queue, but until then, lets love~
You can always tell Crazy Legs windmill style
Is that Rod stewart at 9.06. Off his tits😂
These kids of today have no clue on the great times & fun we had back in the day. Sad.
i was in grad school in ny during this time never stepped foot in a club
@9:19 omg
I’ve been to the Loft… Xenon…Funhouse…Zanzibar…Limelight…but when it came to sound systems. Paradise Garage. Was a regular. It was in another dimension compared to all rest. By far.
barf
I can’t believe I was there at that time and had such a great time and am still here!
Even more anazibgvwhen yiu think that when all the people there got their tickets (back in April/May) 95% of them were signing up for a funk and jazz weekend. Remember Paul Oakenfolds Spectrum literally the first rave in the world only taking off in April 1988 (it was quiet for the first couple of months) - Shoom was earlier but was hard to get into and more like a private party and I'd never heard of it.
chris hill has said this is where everything changed. different vibe
Always bring tears of Patriotism to my eyes with PRIDE
3:34 Mark Kamins was the DJ that Madonna gave her demo reel of "Everybody" to and the rest is history!
Soho London was the place. Not NYC
Yes the 80s were a party for us 1960s kids
I love her.
Would've been better getting the local's perspectives.
The Madonna debut
New York and London are now soooooo boring. I guess this generation can't bring it like past generations from the 1920s to the early 2000's
The Saint 1980-88.
the second they shows the Klaus Nomi stuff i got a little sad knowing that he had just passed not long before. always cool to see some vintage footage from The Roxy and Danceteria and a little bit of the Break groups. and of course the empty front of CBGB a little after its heyday.
That hit me really hard as well. Klaus passed away in early August of 1983 😢
Dear..God! the soundtrack to this clip! NYC was a Blast! London too! 1983!!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 I wish someone would release There's A Lot Of It About on dvd.
Thanks for posting this classic tube new york club special !! Remember watching this show back in either it was october or november 1983.
One night in the late eighties I vaguely remember going from the Astoria nightclub to The Shoom. There was no security & no bar. Dark with lot's of smoke. I remember tripping over a couple having sex on the floor & bumping Into a good friend John Holmes ( RIP ) We had the maddest night ever.
Is anyone still running this KZread channel?
Wow Sharon. Birkenheads finest.
This was amazing
Black lads and girls talking with a London accent ,now it’s white kids talking like a yardie.
Hi STHLDN I am trying to find a full copy of the movie for Chris Brown who was 1 of the Funk Mafia Djs back then,& I was Froggys roadie on the sound system. Would much appreciate your help 🙂
The original Bush boutique. Have lived on Stanlake Road since 84 when I was 11 and all the White City/Bush fashionistas shopped here. Always good style, quality and fun. Going there tomorrow to buy some Japanese selvedge denim. Glad it's going from strength to strength! West-side 🙂
the middle track is kind of giving Scritti Politti
15:07 'zerohead'? never heard anyone use that before or since
8:26 Dags nearly got lucky there didn't he
Very Clever manipulation of the image 👏 👌 👍 😀 😄 🙌 👏 👌 👍 Makes you feel like you have seen native Indian RainDancing.❤️
AMAAAAAAAAAZING!!! Love this so much!❤
Looks like the Broadmead Estate in Woodford Bridge Essex
Just got done reading "l:ife and Death On The New York Dancefloor 1980-1983" by Tim Lawrence... I was already drawn to so much of the music. That's whole damn reason I picked up the book. But learning about this scene was so inspiring. Dreaming of what a night, the dancefloor, a club can be. Happy with what I got to work with today, but damn, do wish I woulda been there.. A completely magical place and time. So many elements intersecting to create something that, surely, was a new nirvana, peak living, transcendence... I won't spend too many words on what it was (I wasn't there!!) But if I was, I surely woulda have been dancing well past sunrise...
I want to read this book. I grew up night clubbing as a 15 year old it was amazing Danceteria was my first club. Down the block was another spot called silver shadow. There were so many places in NYC too go to. I can’t begin to tell you how fun it was. I didn’t drink or do drugs. I just danced. In 1996 the club scene was dead. This video is absolutely just what it was like. That elevator in Danceteria where the quick interview was done brings back memories.
check out this must be the the place good book about clubbing and nyc scene from 1950s to today
I just bought the book and didn’t grow up in NYC, but we had a pretty great club scene in San Francisco and I was keeping up with the club scene in NZyC from a far. I did get finally get to visit NYC and caught much of east was going on in 87. I do regret not going to the paradise garage and got a flyer for but didn’t know about the Garage back then. The whole city was so exciting and so much going on everywhere. Glad I got to witness it and NYC was so much better than I expected,
Y the narrator sound like this it's weird lol
My regret was I didn’t get the chance to attend Danceterria.
What a year for hard house! #Trade
😆👍
Love videos like this , back in the good times
The casuals shifted youth culture from oppositional, confrontational and hostile to consumerist. Especially when the second summer of love happened, it ended up as consumerist.
This is and will always be a great moment for England!
The magic that was experienced inside those walls will never be forgotton!
Lol..god I'm old..