Chapter Two: The Music Institute [Detroit, Michigan—November 24, 1989]
22. “We Called It Acid”: report from BBC-TV’s World in Action, 1988 (YouTube; retrieved April 12, 2013)
23. “We stole ‘Let No Man Put Asunder’ a million times”: Kirn, p. 49
23. The Chart Show: Bob Stanley, Yeah Yeah Yeah: The Story of Modern Pop (Faber and Faber, 2013)
23. Pete Tong: Bidder, p. 52
24. KRS-One: David Lubich, ed., Catch the Beat: The Best of Soul Underground 1987-91 (DJ History, 2010), p. 158
24-25. Ibiza: drawn heavily from Bidder, p. 86-100
25. “Sensation seekers” and “a runaway train”: Alexis Petridis, “The Most Influential Nightclub in Pop Culture History Is?” (Esquire [U.K.], January 2013)
26. Aciiied! Aciiied!: Mireille Silcott [Silcoff], Rave America: New School Dancescapes (ECW, 1999), p. 33-34
26-27. “If I give an artist three thousand” et al.: Lubich, p. 142
29. “like George Clinton”: Stuart Cosgrove, “Seventh City Techno” (The Face, May 1988)
30. thirty-six-channel mixing board: Sicko, p. 55
31. Apocalypse Wow: Silcoff, p. 35
31. The Sun: KRS-Dan, “Acid House—BAN THIS SICK FILTH” (Flickr archive; retrieved April 12, 2013)
32. On May 27, 1989: Bidder, p. 124-127
34. five times in a night: DJ Dick, 313 post (June 12, 1998)
34. an old Nicky Siano trick: Bill Brewster and Frank Broughton, The Record Players—DJ Revolutionaries (Black Cat, 2010), p. 189
39. “Franky” on the flyer: Phatmedia Flyer Archive: flyer for Energy Part 2 (retrieved August 6, 2013)
40. “I didn’t know what Ecstasy was”: Andy B., “New York Hardcore Innovator Frankie Bones” (Massive #10, July-August 1995, p. 9-12)
41. “With the nigh closing”: Flyer scan courtesy of Matthew Hawtin
43. founded Prescription Records: Sean Bidder, House: The Rough Guide (Rough Guides, 1999), p. 284
43. “All the lowdown ghetto”: DJ T-1000, “Re: (313) working class djs” (313 post, May 6, 1998)
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