if you were talkin about now i would say behind the sceen would be jackg and dj johnny budz singers would be judy torres and still tka because they keep going and going strong
Id have to say Sal Abatiello of Fever Records....he started the careers of many freestyle artists including Nayobe, who had 1 of the first big freestyle hits with "Please Dont Go" Sal also worked with Cynthia, Lisette Melendez, Lil Suzy, and the Cover Girls.
i missed alot from back in the day i spent most of it in the hospital so i dont know behind the sceens then i wish i was not in the hospital then i would know more
The correct answer to Jacks question would have to be MIckey GArcia and Alvin Molina who started MIC MAC Records. Not only did they start the careers of Cynthia, Johnny O and others on their label, they also did Judy torres's first songs and many other artist on other labels. This duo had the greatest impact on freestyle.
I'll add Latin Rascals, MicMac (Mickey and Alvin), Aldo Marin, Lewis Martinee, Sal Albatello, DJ Scott Blackwell, Glen Friscia, and the old PD at the old Hot 103 in NYC ..damn i can't remember his name right now
How bout the clubs from back in the day that introduced so much freestyle also? Devils Nest, La'mour East, 1018, The Underground, etc
And the fans who have supported it since it all started ! 😀
Damn, i'm sure i'll be posting again once i remember more
Definately Sally Man.....Sal Abatatello definately busted his ass and went to alot of parties and underground places To Expose Freestyle. He Searched Everywhere For People. And Suceeded.
And Little Louie Vega,Todd Terry And The DJ's Who Did The * BITS & PIECES * Records. The Bits And Pieces Records Definately Made A Huge Impact...
Johnny, The PD of Hot 103 was Joel Salkowicz. And if you were from Brooklyn, you know that B91 the Rhythm of the City was it.
During the summers there wasn't a radio on the beach tuned anywhere else.
We had dj's like Geronimo (WKTU), Mickey Garcia (Mic Mac), Tracy Cloherty (PD at Hot 97), Ralphie Marino (WKTU), Speedy (WKTU) and many others including yours truly! This was around 85-88. Not bad for a bunch a college kids with 10 watts of power. 😀
John Parker
Robbins Entertainment
P.S. I'm currently compiling a list of songs from that station. I already have a listing of hundreds of songs that we played and I am trying to complete my music library with a copy of each one.
j parker...i lived in jamaica queens during those years and i would do the ghetto-est tricks on my radio's antenna so i could get clear reception of B91 but it was always staticky...but dam ya'll played some great underground jams 🙂.