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Danceteria

Coordinates: 40°44′27″N 73°59′32″W / 40.740883°N 73.992350°W / 40.740883; -73.992350
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Danceteria was a nightclub that operated in New York City from May 1980 until 1986 and in the Hamptons until 1995. The club operated in various locations over the years, a total of three in New York City and four in the Hamptons. The most famous location was the second, a four-floor venue at 30 West 21st Street in Manhattan that served as the location for the disco scene in the film Desperately Seeking Susan.

History

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The first Danceteria was opened at 252 West 37th Street by German expatriate Rudolf Piper and talent booker Jim Fouratt.[1] It catered to a diverse after-hours crowd coming from the downtown rock clubs Mudd Club, Trax, Tier 3, Chinese Chance, CBGB, and gay discos.[1] The club's DJs were Mark Kamins and Sean Cassette.[1] The Video Lounge was designed by video artists John Sanborn and Kit Fitzgerald, who programmed an eclectic mix of found footage, video art, early music videos, and musical performances.[2][3] DJ Mark Kamins said Danceteria was the first club to play videos and have two separate DJs play for 12 straight hours.

Post-punk band Certain General backstage at Danceteria in 1983

In October 1980, the New York liquor licensing authorities raided Danceteria, and 35 employees were arrested for selling liquor without a license.[4] Less than a month later the club was shut down again for liquor code violations.[5]

In 1982, John Argento hired Fouratt and Piper to promote and book the talent for what became the 21st Street Danceteria. The club operated out of the first three floors in an old industrial 12-story building. (Later the 4th floor was used as Congo Bill, and the abandoned 5th floor was once used as a performance space by Karen Finley.) The roof was also open in the warmer months with frequent barbeques.[citation needed]

The club opened to massive crowds and critical acclaim.[6] The regular DJs on the main dance second floor were Mark Kamins on Saturday nights and Bill Bahlman on Thursdays and Fridays. Bill Bahlman was the in-house DJ at the uptown club Hurrah. Bill brought his huge following with him to Danceteria. The second floor DJ booth was custom-built for Bill's 6'2" height. Other DJ's on the second floor included Louis Martinez (Louis Orlando), who had cameos at places like Studio 54 and Lolo, Richard Sweret, and Jody Kurilla. Bill Bahlman, Richard Sweret and Randa Relich Milliron ran the Experimental First Floor serving as both DJs and VJs during the club's first months of operation until Fouratt's ousting; former Mudd Club DJ Anita Sarko spun on the first floor, where the bands performed, as well as in the VIP room, Congo Bill, for special events. The Video Lounge was located on the third floor of the new space and Ben Salzman & Jessica Jason, continued the artistic quality of the Video Lounge. Danny Cornyetz made videos of some of the acts with the fixed ceiling camera that piped what was happening on the first-floor stage throughout the club.

Three months after opening, Argento and Piper dismissed Fouratt and hired Ruth Polsky as the club's talent booker. Under Polsky's direction, the club became renowned as one of the centers of new wave music in New York and was frequented by many musicians and artists who became famous during the decade, such as Madonna, New Order, Duran Duran, Billy Idol, Sade, Wham!, R.E.M., the Smiths, Squeeze, Cyndi Lauper, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring, Run-DMC, Depeche Mode, Butthole Surfers, The Fall, the B-52's, Samhain, Bauhaus, RuPaul, Berlin, Units, Romeo Void, Sonic Youth, Swans, Stephen Merritt, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, the Cult, Karen Finley, Violent Femmes, Soft Cell, the Jesus and Mary Chain, Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, and Rob Zombie.[7][8]

Famed New York City doorman Haoui Montaug worked as a doorman at Danceteria.[9]

In 1984, Argento and Piper opened a successful Hamptons outpost of Danceteria in Water Mill, New York. This was the first trendy NYC-style nightclub to open in the Hamptons. Bill Bahlman DJ'ed the opening night of The Hamptons Danceteria.

The third Danceteria operated from 1990 to 1993 in a run-down midtown space, the Martha Washington Hotel at 30 East 30th Street. Kamins, Johnny Dynell, Walter V and Danceteria veteran Freddy Bastone were the DJs at this facility; NJ rock band Spare Change performed regularly on the main stage, usually inciting riots with their raw brand of rock music. Club Kid Goldy Loxxx DJed on the opening night in the lounge room, and for the first few Friday nights (along with Kamins) in the main room, one of the first times a club personality was chosen to spin.

In 2008, the 21st Street location was sold, to be converted to luxury condominiums.[7] The plan was abandoned by the end of the year.[10]

In 2021, acclaimed DJ Rafe Gomez launched Danceteria REWIND, a weekly two-hour livestream mix show on Twitch. Danceteria REWIND re-creates the unique multi-genre soundtrack that defined the Danceteria experience.[11]

Using original DJ playlists as well as extensive research, Gomez's seamless blend replicates Danceteria's distinctive sonic presentation by merging the myriad genres that were featured on the club's five floors between 1979 and 1986 - including reggae/dub, old-school hip hop, early techno/electronica/industrial, mutant disco and post-disco, 70s funk, dancefloor punk, B-side new wave, salsa/Latin boogaloo, and independent releases by popular downtown bands.[12]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Pavone, Elizabeth. Liner notes of Just Can't Get Enough: New Wave Dance Hits of the '80s (1997) Rhino R2 72586.
  2. ^ Lewis, Steve (28 November 2013). "Legendary DJ & Producer Mark Kamins Has Passed Away". Blackbook Magazine. New York. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  3. ^ Post, Henry (3 May 1982). "Heart Of Darkness". New York Magazine. New York: New York Magazine LLC. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  4. ^ "Here and there ..." Daily News. 1980-10-07. p. 9. Retrieved 2024-08-27.
  5. ^ Trakin, Roy (November 9, 1980). "Loo for the Virgin label". Daily News.
  6. ^ Bradshaw, Daniel (2016). Discotecture: An Investigation Into the Symbiosis of Habitat and Habitas. Lulu Press, Inc. ISBN 9781326516277.
  7. ^ a b Abelson, Max (20 May 2008). "This Used to Be Madonna's Playground: Danceteria to Become Luxury Condos". Observer. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  8. ^ O'Brien, Lucy (2 September 2007). "Madonna: For the First Time, Her Friends and Lovers Speak Out". The Independent. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  9. ^ "Haoui Montaug; Disco Doorman, 39". The New York Times. 12 June 1991. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
  10. ^ "CurbedWire: Rumored Arrested Development at Alma, 360 Smith Gets Another Hearing". Curbed NY. October 27, 2008. Retrieved September 18, 2022.
  11. ^ "Twitch".
  12. ^ "The Sound of Danceteria, the Legendary Club Where Madonna Got Her Start, is Being Recreated Weekly on Twitch". Billboard.
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40°44′27″N 73°59′32″W / 40.740883°N 73.992350°W / 40.740883; -73.992350