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Archive for November, 2008

Prince Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 27 - 2008

Prince Few artists have created a body of work as rich and varied as Prince. During the ’80s, he emerged as one of the most singular talents of the rock & roll era, capable of seamlessly tying together pop, funk, folk, and rock. Not only did he release a series of groundbreaking albums; he toured frequently, produced albums and wrote songs for many other artists, and recorded hundreds of songs that still lie unreleased in his vaults. With each album he released, Prince has shown remarkable stylistic growth and musical diversity, constantly experimenting with different sounds, textures, and genres.

Occasionally, his music can be maddeningly inconsistent because of this eclecticism, but his experiments frequently succeed; no other contemporary artist can blend so many diverse styles into a cohesive whole.

Prince‘s first two albums were solid, if unremarkable, late-’70s funk-pop. With 1980′s Dirty Mind, he recorded his first masterpiece, a one-man tour de force of sex and music; it was hard funk, catchy Beatlesque melodies, sweet soul ballads, and rocking guitar pop, all at once. The follow-up, Controversy, was more of the same, but 1999 was brilliant. The album was a monster hit, selling over three million copies, but it was nothing compared to 1984′s Purple Rain.

Purple Rain made Prince a superstar; it eventually sold over ten million copies in the U.S. and spent 24 weeks at number one. Partially recorded with his touring band, the Revolution, the record featured the most pop-oriented music he has ever made. Instead of continuing in this accessible direction, he veered off into the bizarre psycho-psychedelia of Around the World in a Day, which nevertheless sold over two million copies. In 1986, he released the even stranger Parade, which was in its own way as ambitious and intricate as any art rock of the ’60s; however, no art rock was ever grounded with a hit as brilliant as the spare funk of “Kiss.” Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 100% [?]

May The Funk Be With You, Always !

About Mojo, Featured, MFA Artists, The City |

Parliament Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 27 - 2008

A favorite way to start the MFA was with one of many Parliament tunes.

Parliament Inspired by Motown’s assembly line of sound, George Clinton gradually put together a collective of over 50 musicians and recorded the ensemble during the ’70s both as Parliament and Funkadelic. While Funkadelic pursued band-format psychedelic rock, Parliament engaged in a funk free-for-all, blending influences from the godfathers (James Brown and Sly Stone) with freaky costumes and themes inspired by ’60s acid culture and science fiction. From its 1970 inception until Clinton’s dissolving of Parliament in 1980, the band hit the R&B Top Ten several times but truly excelled in two other areas: large-selling, effective album statements and the most dazzling, extravagant live show in the business. In an era when Philly soul continued the slick sounds of establishment-approved R&B, Parliament scared off more white listeners than it courted.

By the time his on-the-move family settled in New Jersey during the early ’50s, George Clinton (b. July 22, 1941, Kannapolis, NC) became interested in doo wop, which was just beginning to explode in the New York-metro area. Basing his group on Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers, Clinton formed the Parliaments in 1955 with a lineup that gradually shifted to include Clarence “Fuzzy” Haskins, Grady Thomas, Raymond Davis, and Calvin Simon. Based out of a barbershop backroom where Clinton straightened hair, the Parliaments released only two singles during the next ten years, but frequent trips to Detroit during the mid-’60s — where Clinton began working as a songwriter and producer — eventually paid off their investment. Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 86% [?]

Featured, MFA Artists |

Rick James Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 27 - 2008

Rick James Born James Ambrose Johnson, Jr. on February 1, 1948, in Buffalo, NY; died of a heart attack on August 6, 2004, in Los Angeles, CA. Singer. Rick James burst on the scene with his smash hit, “Super Freak,” in the early 1980s. He later had a string of hits and some believe his record sales are responsible for keeping Motown Records solvent. He is credited with bridging the gap between funk and punk music. His sound was reminiscent of Sly Stone, Parliament, The Ramones, and Prince (whom he toured with before either was famous). According to CNN.com, James had stated, “I’m trying to change the root of funk, trying to make it more progressive, more melodic, and more lyrically structured.” His rowdy image and drug habit led to his arrest for assault and eventual time in prison. After his release, he began to regain all that he lost.

James’ upbringing was rough. He was one of eight children born to James and Mabel Johnson. According to James, his father was abusive and abandoned the family when James was eight. James’ mother was a former dancer who worked as a housekeeper, but also was a numbers runner. Though James went to Catholic school and was an altar boy, he also committed petty theft crimes, and spent some time in juvenile detention centers. He also began doing drugs. While James was always musically inclined, it was not until he performed in a talent show in high school that he seriously considered a career in music. He formed a group called the Duprees. At the same time, he joined the Naval Reserve to avoid the draft. As he and his group gained popularity—and more importantly, gigs—he began to skip out on his naval duties. James was soon drafted, but he fled to Canada. Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 88% [?]

Featured, MFA Artists |

MFA iMix on iTunes

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 27 - 2008

There was always anticipation at the beginning of the Midnight Funk Association.  During the call to order, Mojo would frequently play the themes from “Superman” , “Star Wars”, and Close Encounters” as background while he called the MFA to order and swore in new members.  The first song of the MFA generally set the pace for the rest of the hour, and many times the rest of the show.

Known for playing “B” sides and breaking new music, The Electrifying Mojo has over his years on the air, kept a diverse style of music for his loyal following.  The MFA iMix, available for download on iTunes, is 15 tracks of some of the most popular and memorable hits played at 12 a.m. during the Midnight Funk Association’s glorious rein over Detroit Airwaves.


Popularity: 84% [?]

Featured, Music |

Cameo Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 26 - 2008

Cameo An outlandish, in-your-face stage presence, a strange sense of humor, and a hard-driving funk sound that criss-crossed a few musical boundaries earned Cameo countless comparisons to Parliament/Funkadelic in their early days. However, Cameo eventually wore off accusations of being derivative by transcending their influences and outlasting almost every single one of them.

Throughout the ’70s and ’80s, the group remained up with the times and occasionally crept ahead of them, such that they became influences themselves upon younger generations of R&B and hip-hop acts. By the time the group’s popularity started to fizzle in the late ’80s, a series of R&B chart hits — ranging from greasy funk workouts to synthesized funk swingers to dripping ballads — was left in their wake. Further separating Cameo from their forebears, they didn’t have a diaper-clad guitarist. Instead, they had a codpiece-wearing lead vocalist.

That vocalist was Larry Blackmon. In 1974, the ex-Juilliard student and New York City club-goer instigated a funk band with a membership of 13 called the New York City Players. Blackmon, Tomi Jenkins, and Nathan Leftenant formed the group’s nucleus. The Casablanca label signed the group to their Chocolate City offshoot, and shortly after that, the group changed its name to Cameo. Their excellent debut album, 1977′s Cardiac Arrest, was highlighted by four singles. Three of those hit the Billboard R&B chart: “Rigor Mortis” (number 33), “Funk Funk” (number 20), and “Post Mortem” (number 70). Although the group was clearly inspired by elder funk groups like Parliament, Funkadelic, and the Ohio Players, Cardiac Arrest made Cameo’s case for belonging in the same division an open-and-shut one.

In an attempt to keep the ball rolling, 1978 saw the release of Cameo’s second and third albums. Neither We All Know Who We Are nor Ugly Ego were as solid as the debut, but the group’s singular characteristics were becoming increasingly evident. The winding, horn-punctuated “It’s Serious” (from We All Know Who We Are) narrowly missed the Top 20 of the R&B chart, while “Insane” (from Ugly Ego) dipped just inside it, peaking at number 17. The best halves of these two albums would’ve made a fine sophomore LP.

1979′s Secret Omen, featuring a disco-fied re-visiting of Cardiac Arrest’s “Find My Way” and the magnificently funky and slightly loony “I Just Want to Be” (a number-three R&B chart hit), was stacked with fine album cuts and brought Cameo back as a group that excelled in the LP format. “Sparkle” was one of their best ballads, a sinewy number that hit the Top Ten. Five albums released between 1980 and 1983 (Cameosis, Feel Me, Knights of the Sound Table, Alligator Woman, Style) brought about a slight dip in quality on the album front. Despite an abundance of filler on each record, none of those albums were strict disappointments, delivering hot Top 20 R&B singles like “Shake Your Pants,” “We’re Goin’ Out Tonight,” “Keep It Hot,” “Freaky Dancin’” “Just Be Yourself,” “Flirt,” and “Style.”

One of the most significant ripples in Cameo’s time line came during that period, in 1982, when they packed up and set up shop in Atlanta. Pared down to a quintet and located in a less hectic city, the group became bigger fish in a smaller pond. Blackmon even started his own label, Atlanta Artist. The label’s first LP, Style, also marked a significant shift in sound, with synthesizers taking on a pronounced role. Paydirt was struck with 1984′s She’s Strange; the title cut, a late-night slithery smolder, topped the R&B chart and eclipsed the Top 50 of the pop chart, kicking off a remarkable three-album run that made Cameo one of the most popular groups of the ’80s. Single Life and Word Up!, released respectively in 1985 and 1986, continued the hot streak. The singles from those two albums — “Attack Me With Your Love,” “Single Life,” “Word Up,” “Candy,” and “Back and Forth” — held down the Top Five plateau of the R&B chart. “Word Up” even went to number six on the pop chart, giving them their biggest bite of the mainstream. The song was everywhere.

What goes up must come down, and that’s exactly what happened to Cameo. Despite the fact that two more singles — “Skin I’m In” and “I Want It Now” — scaled up to number five on the R&B chart, neither Machismo nor Real Men Wear Black performed well as albums. After 1991′s Emotional Violence, the group’s profile was lowered significantly, but they did tour sporadically to the delight of hardcore fans as well as plenty of misguided people who thought Cameo was all about “Word Up” and nothing more. Notably, Blackmon spent a few years of the ’90s at Warner Bros., as the vice president of A&R.

Cameo’s presence continued to be felt throughout the early 2000s, not only through extensive sample use and less tangible influences upon younger artists and producers. Several retrospectives have kept the group’s music alive: Casablanca’s 1993 compilation The Best of Cameo is an excellent point of entry. Mercury’s 12″ Collection & More, released in 1999, covers the group’s best dancefloor moments. 2002′s spectacular Anthology, a double-disc set also released by Mercury, covers a lot of ground and does the group justice as a total package. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide


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Purchase Cameo CD’s in the MFA Music Store/ Powered by Amazon

Popularity: 85% [?]

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Mike Clark, Norm Talley, Delano Smith Interview

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 26 - 2008

This an older interview about the origins of Detroit House and Techno with Mike Clark, Norm Talley,and Delano Smith. It talks about how things got started back in the day, and discusses how instrumental Mojo was in breaking a lot of Detroit’s Dance Music to the world and how influential he was to the DJ’s that helped start it all.

DETROIT BEATDOWN By Dan Bean, Posted on DJ History

Ask music lovers what Detroit means to them and you’ll probably hear mention of Berry Gordy or Norman Whitfield, perhaps George Clinton or Yusef Lateef. Were you to point out that there’s a direct link between these styles and the pared down machine funk of the city’s latter day sound (known by some as techno), you could safely expect puzzled looks from all but the most dedicated fans.

Yet there is a link, forged in the high school social parties of the 70s and the clubs and radio shows of the 80s by a few key figures. These musical visionaries led their dancers and listeners from disco, via hi-nrg and italo through to the earliest drum machine tracks; all the while introducing a dose of the left field influences that help to give Detroit its unique sound.

This sound, or maybe this ‘feeling’, is known as Beatdown and owes a great deal to the eclectic, boundary defying styles of DJs such as Ken Collier and the radio presenter Electrifyin’ Mojo.

The modern inheritors of this style are the present day Beatdown DJs of Detroit. Three in particular have channelled the vision of the godfathers of Beatdown, both through their DJing and the release of documents such as the Detroit Beatdown Volume 1 compilation.

They are Mike Clark, Norm Talley and Delano Smith.

The day after Detroit’s annual electronic music festival we met to talk about the origins of their music, the advent of drum machines and the story of DJing in an era that pre-dated labels such as house and techno. Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 79% [?]

Featured, The City |

Was Not Was Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 26 - 2008

Was (Not Was) Was (Not Was) play contemporary R&B dance music, with lyrics that range from the satiric to the bizarre. The group is led by Detroit natives David Weiss (David Was), who plays flute and writes those lyrics, and Don Fagenson (Don Was), who plays bass and writes music, but the group is fronted by singers Harry Bowens and Sweet Pea Atkinson.

Was (Not Was) first gained notice for a dance single called “Wheel Me Out” in 1980. Their first album, Was (Not Was) (1981), did not reach the charts, but its follow-up, Born to Laugh at Tornados (1983), did with “Out Come the Freaks” . Then little was heard from the group for five years. They returned in 1988 with What Up, Dog?, which featured the number 16 hit “Spy in the House of Love” and the number seven hit “Walk the Dinosaur.” (During this period, Don Was had become a prominent record producer, handling the board for Bonnie Raitt’s Grammy-winning Nick of Time, among many other mainstream pop records.) The fourth Was (Not Was) album, Are You Okay?, appeared in 1990. Are You Okay? wasn’t as commercially successful as the previous What Up, Dog?

After the album’s release, Don Was continued to pursue his production career, which began to increase tensions between Don and David. In 1993, they parted ways but returned 15 years later with Boo!, an album featuring several Was (Not Was) vets, including Bowens, Atkinson, Wayne Kramer, David McMurray, and Luis Resto. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide

Edited: The Group also released a personal favorite, Mutant Disco and my favorite track on the album, “Tell Me That I’m Dreaming“.

Purchase Was (Not Was) CD’s in the MFA Music Store / Powered by Amazon

Popularity: 72% [?]

Featured, MFA Artists |

Zapp and Roger Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 25 - 2008

Zapp One of the most underrated funk groups of the 1980s, Zapp revolutionized the computer pop of electro with their trademark vocoder talk boxes and bumping grooves, emulating the earthier side of Prince and Cameo, with a leader in Roger Troutman who was more than efficient at polished production.

The family group, with brothers Roger, Lester, Larry, and Tony Troutman, grew up in Hamilton, OH, influenced by hometown heroes the Ohio Players as well as Parliament and other funk groups. Tony was the first to begin recording, with an obscure single for Gram-O-Phon Records, “I Truly Love You,” which scraped the R&B charts in 1976. Joined by his brothers (with Roger on vocals and guitar, Lester on drums, Larry on percussion, and himself contributing bass) and christened Zapp, the group played around the Midwest and gradually picked up backing vocalists (Bobby Glover, Jannetta Boyce), keyboard players (Greg Jackson, Sherman Fleetwood) and a horn section (Eddie Barber, Jerome Derrickson, Mike Warren).

Zapp‘s following quickly gained notices, and Bootsy Collins himself was hired on to work with the group on their debut album. Released in 1980, Zapp hit the Top 20 on the pop charts, thanks to the single “More Bounce to the Ounce.” The following year, Roger worked on Funkadelic‘s The Electric Spanking of War Babies and released his solo debut album, The Many Facets of Roger. His special cover of “I Heard It Through the Grapevine,” complete with vocoderized talk box, pushed the album into gold territory (as Zapp had done). Zapp II appeared in 1982 and proved just as popular as the group’s first, including Zapp‘s only number one R&B single, “Dance Floor.Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 87% [?]

Featured, MFA Artists |

The Gap Band Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 24 - 2008

The Gap Band The first major hit for the Gap Band was a snazzy juke toon called “Shake.” Just prior to the completion of their first album, Charlie Wilson cited the song for his brothers, thinking they might ridicule the lyric. His brothers loved it though, and the song was a smash number four single on the R&B charts, elevating the group to national status.

Born and raised in Tulsa, OK, the Wilson brothers began singing and playing in their father’s Pentecostal church, and it was also mandatory they practice their music lessons at home as well. They learned various instruments which primarily included the piano. As much as they despised the lessons at the time, it proved to be a value tool for all three. Read the rest of this entry »

Popularity: 74% [?]

Featured, MFA Artists |

Detroit Culture

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 24 - 2008

Popularity: 18% [?]

The City |

Music

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 24 - 2008

Popularity: 13% [?]

Music |

Detroit Nightlife

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 24 - 2008

Popularity: 12% [?]

Nightlife |

From The Editor

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 24 - 2008

Growing up in Detroit in the 80′s, music was a big part of my life.  I was a big fan of Detroit and Chicago House and Detroit Techno growing up and frequented may parties throughout high school, just to hear the music.

The Electrifying Mojo is a Detroit icon for so many of us who grew up in that era.  I can remember as far back as junior high, staying awake in my bed with my little round, white Sony radio, with the cassette deck under the covers down real low just so that I wouldn’t miss an episode of Mojo’s radio show on WGPR (106.7 FM) , and especially the Midnight Funk Association.

It was like some sort of Hypnotic ritual that no matter what, I had to be tuned in at midnight to hear the “call to order” eagerly anticipating the first tune played after the MFA opening ritual.  What would it be ? ” Get it up” by The Time, “Flashlight” by Parliament,  the “Mesopotamia” by the B-52′s, (remix), “Time, Space, Transmat” by Model 500, “Numbers by Kraftwerk, “Something In the Water Does Not Compute” by Prince, or any number of bad asses songs that would have me dancing in the bed, bopping my head, and all of my friends talking the next day about what song Mojo led off the MFA with.

Mojo turned me on to music that I never would have heard listening to the tired R&B stations in Detroit at the time, and opened my mind to exploring music just because it was good, and not just because it was labeled R & B.

Radio stations of the time were pretty simple…if you were white you listened to the rock or classic rock stations, and if you were black you listed to the “black” stations.  Nobody ever mixed it up and just played good music no matter what color the artists were, until Mojo.

For years in my life, all of the music that I owned were a direct result of having heard them through Mojo’s radio show.  I saw Parliament /Funkadelic at Cobo Hall, because Mojo turned me on to all of the songs, not just the “radio” stuff.  I saw Prince many times, and knew all the songs on his album, B-sides and all.

But what Mojo really turned me on to was Detroit Techno and House Music before it was known or fashionable to play it.  “Cosmic Cars” by Cybotron was my anthem, and I have been a House, Techno and Trance Music junkie ever since.

Alan Ester, Derrick May, Juan Atkins, and Kevin Saunderson woke up my music senses on The Electrifying Mojo’s show.  One has to wonder if Detroit Techno and House would have ever gotten off the ground if he hadn’t made a home for it on his show, and look what it has spun off into and become today.

Mojo would play the music just because it was good, something that other radio programmers just couldn’t grasp, and never have up until today.

This tribute site is a direct reflection of how listening to Mojo at midnight affected me and my outlook on the world, and my thirst to learn about other people, cultures and gave me an appreciation for music that people who were raised on commercial,  force fed,  top 40 radio, will never understand.  Too bad for them.

Harold E Mansfield IV

Webmaster / Editor

www.midnightfunkassociation.com

www.124bpms.com

Managing Editor and Webmaster

www.4thinternet.com

Popularity: 14% [?]

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Mojo on Wikipedia

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 24 - 2008

From Wikipedia.com

Mojo’s seminal radio show ran from 1977 through the mid-1980s, and while broadcast on stations marketed toward the African-American market, his programming was an inspired blend of the best soul, funk, New Wave, and rock that defied standard radio industry formats and genres. He also wrote music, sometimes under the name “C. J. Surge”.

After serving in the Air Force, Johnson attended the University of Michigan in the mid-1970s where he began broadcasting on the University radio station and then on Ann Arbor station WAAM (at the time a popular Top 40 station). In 1977, he began broadcasting on WGPR (107.5) in Detroit and soon gathered a diverse audience attracted to his “genre bending” format. Moving to WJLB around 1982, Mojo gained additional listeners at the more easily found 97.9 frequency and billboards throughout Detroit touted the “Landing of the Mothership” at 10pm every night.

In what would become a trend with Mojo due to his refusal to adhere to radio station formats, he moved to WHYT (96.3) in 1985 and then WTWR in Toledo, Ohio after a management turnover at WHYT in 1987. His show prospered there until 1990, when he accepted an offer to return to the Detroit airwaves at WMXD. At this time, Mojo began doing remote broadcasts, driving around Detroit, talking to people in the city, while his assistant Wendel kept the music going at the studio.

In October 1990, Mojo gave an exclusive interview to Finney High Today, a one page newspaper produced by the Journalism class at Finney High School. The lengthy interview took up nearly the entire issue, and went deep into subjects ranging from his origins on AM radio in Ann Arbor, Michigan to then current radio jockeys in Detroit. Mojo also addressed some of the reasons why he was bounced from station to station, ranging from his refusal to follow any station’s genre or format, playing “white music” on “black stations” and vice-versa.

The mid-nineties found Mojo back at WGPR, again challenging ideas about the role of a broadcast DJ. His show, a weekend mid-day slot, consisted of a broad range of content, tied to a common thread of social and cultural awareness of the African-American community.

Musically, this included shows focused on single themes, such as symphonic music by black composers, a survey of the jazz and symphonic music of Duke Ellington, and one alternating the music of Billie Holiday with spoken excerpts from her autobiography. He, as before, frequently played recordings in their entirety.

In an unusual arrangement, Mojo was purchasing his air-time from WGPR and then finding his own sponsors for the show. His two primary sponsors at this time were a deli and an insurance agency. The spots for them produced by Mojo were loose and low-production, with plenty of booming reverb with Mojo’s admonishment to “save on auto insurance!”

He also dedicated airtime to reading excerpts from his 500-plus page book, The Mental Machine (ISBN 0-9639811-1-0), a work of poetry and prose about community and societal ills. Both his on-air persona and his writing seemed to place a Christian spirituality closer to center stage than had his previous shows.

Sometimes Mojo would stop the music to talk, sometimes for half an hour or more, about whatever was on his mind, sometimes also taking live phone calls on the air about any given subject. The WGPR station managers, citing the fact that WGPR is a music station, not a talk station, combined with Mojo’s penchant for playing Rock, Rap, Jazz, Classical, Techno and any other music genre, fired Mojo even though he was paying for his airtime.

The late 1990s brought Mojo to WCHB for a stretch in 1998 where he began broadcasting his show over the internet for a short time. He also was making guest appearances on the now defunct WDTR around 2004.

Influence

Mojo’s habit was to play entire recordings without interruption and regular listeners became deeply familiar with each recording. Detroiters from this era still speak of the diversity of Mojo’s shows, and it is a common opinion that if someone is from the Detroit area, it’s Mojo’s fault if they are a Prince fan. Mojo would often play hours of Prince’s music, not only his hits, but deep album cuts and b-sides and even played a mix of “When Doves Cry” that included bird calls (that Mojo may or may not have added himself.) When Prince was about to release a new album, Mojo would often play the album in its entirety, and this practice continued into the 1990s.

The trio of artists widely cited as the founders of Detroit Techno, Juan Atkins, Kevin Saunderson, and Derrick May have all made mention of Mojo’s influence on their musical development, as have second generation Techno artists like Richie Hawtin (Plastikman) and Carl Craig. Mojo was an early supporter of the Detroit Techno sound, playing tracks like Cybotron’s (Juan Atkins) “Cosmic Cars,” Derrick May’s “Strings of Life” and “Good Life” by Kevin Saunderson’s Inner City.

Along with giving extended airtime to the new local sounds in Detroit, Mojo continued to embrace electronic music from techno and electronic music pioneers around the world like Kraftwerk, Philip Glass, New Order and Afrika Bambaataa in his sets.

There were periods later on where Mojo’s popularity and influence on others would prove to be damaging to his own career. Other Detroit radio personalities imitated concepts from his shows during his absence from the Detroit airwaves in the mid-1990s. The “homage” was most obvious with WHYT disk jockey Lisa Lisa, who produced segments on her evening show such as the “Midnight Mix Association” and her version of “Lover’s Lane.” For a brief period the Midnight Mix Association used a “spaceship” introduction which was similar to Mojo’s show which was later replaced by an introduction that had a mixture of The Wizard of Oz, church bells and a Civil defense siren: “Were not in Kansas anymore…it’s among the hour to come amongst you and amaze you with absolute incredible out of this world type sounds, look out here we go.” Mojo also made calls to the Lisa Lisa show encouraging, as well as thanking her for continuing his “format” in a way that he could be proud of.

Segments

His shows during the late seventies to mid eighties had several segments each night. Although they would vary throughout the years, a typical Mojo night was:

  • 10:00pm – The Landing of the Mothership. This was the intro to each show with spaceship sound effects and related dialog. Sometimes the music heard during the first hour was indicative of what you’d hear that night; sometimes it would be completely random.
  • 11:00pm – Awesome ’84, ’85. In the mid eighties, Mojo played an hour of brand new music (hence the year in the title) and a lot of new songs were introduced.
  • 11:30pm – Lover’s Lane. A half an hour of “slow jams” for lovers.
  • 12:00am – The Midnight Funk Association. Consisted regularly of Parliament-Funkadelic, The Gap Band, Zapp and other funk bands of the era.

From 1:00am to 3:00am (2:00 am on Saturday nights), Mojo’s show was different every night. Sometimes, the MFA would stretch well beyond 1:00am, other times Mojo would introduce segments such as:

  • Star Wars – A classic “artist vs. artist” set, where Mojo would alternate selections from two different groups or artists, and the listeners would call in to vote for their favorite.
  • Journey – Sometimes a multi-night segment, where Mojo played songs by a single artist or group, spanning their entire career. This usually included a mix of hits and obscure songs by that artist.
  • Shout-out – Everyone that called into the station during his show was the recipient of a “shout-out”. He would go on for as long as it took rattling off the first names of every single person who had called in to the show.
  • 35-35-35 – Mojo would take suggestions from listeners about their favorite artists and bands. He then would choose the three most popular groups that night and play thirty-five minutes, commercial-free, of each group. This segment often gave airtime to groups that no other radio station in Detroit played.

At other times, Mojo would spend the last 2 hours of his show showcasing live mixes on two turntables, by bringing in local DJs to do the same. One such DJ, Jeff Mills, began his career with Mojo as “The Wizard.” Mojo also would air music by local groups at this time.

Metro Detroit graphic designer, artist and tattooist Kenneth Burney approached Mojo in the early days of the Midnight Funk Association to employ promotions that included designs for A Midnight Association Membership Card and T-Shirts. Ken Burney is also known for designing logos for Detroit radio station WJLB FM 98, WCHB 1250 AM, Detroit’s R&B group Ready For The World first logo and much more.

Popularity: 17% [?]

About Mojo |

The Brothers Johnson Bio

Posted by Harold Mansfield On November - 24 - 2008

The Brothers Johnson Guitarist/vocalist George Johnson and bassist/vocalist Louis Johnson formed the band Johnson Three Plus One with older brother Tommy and their cousin Alex Weir while attending school in Los Angeles. When they became professionals, the band backed such touring R&B acts as Bobby Womack and the Supremes. George and Louis Johnson later joined Billy Preston’s band, and wrote “Music in My Life” and “The Kids and Me” for him before leaving his group in 1973.

Quincy Jones hired them to play on his LP Mellow Madness, and recorded four of their songs, including “Is It Love That We’re Missing?” and “Just a Taste of Me.” Jones took them on a Japanese tour, then produced their debut LP, Look Out for Number 1, after they signed with A&M, which was also his label at the time (1976). They scored a number-one R&B and number-three pop hit with “I’ll Be Good to You,” and enjoyed R&B chart toppers in 1977 and 1980 respectively with “Strawberry Letter 23″ and “Stomp!,” while sustaining a consistent hit presence via such songs as “Get the Funk Out Ma Face” and “Runnin’ for Your Lovin.” Jones remade “I’ll Be Good to You” in 1989 with Ray Charles and Chaka Khan on his Back on the Block release.

The Brothers earned platinum records for Look Out for Number 1 and Right on Time. Jones produced both of these, along with their third and fourth LPs, Blam and Light Up the Night. The group produced its single “The Real Thing” in 1981. It reached number 11 on the R&B charts, and the Brothers had another hit with “Welcome to the Club” in 1982. They started doing separate ventures; Louis Johnson played bass on Michael Jackson’s Thriller LP and recorded a gospel album, while George Johnson worked with Steve Arrington. Leon Sylvers produced their mid-’80s return LP Out of Control; it didn’t equal their past success, but got them another R&B hit with “You Keep Coming Back” in 1984. They recorded Kickin’ in 1988, and co-wrote “Tomorrow” with Siedah Garrett for Jones’ Back on the Block in 1989. ~ Ron Wynn, All Music Guide

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