The DJ, pictured here in 2007, played in London last Saturday night
Musician Frankie Knuckles, known as the Godfather of House music, has died unexpectedly, it has been announced.A pioneer of house - the sparse, electronic dance music that emerged from Chicago in the 1980s - Knuckles was just 59.He was known for remixing tracks by Michael Jackson and
Whitney Houston, as well as his own songs, such as Your Love and The
Whistle Song.
His death was confirmed by fellow DJ David Morales on Twitter."I am devastated to write that my dear friend Frankie Knuckles has passed away today," he wrote. "Can't write anymore than this at the moment. I'm sorry."Knuckles' longtime business partner, Frederick Dunson, told The Chicago Tribune he had "died unexpectedly this afternoon at home".More details would be forthcoming on Tuesday, he added.No reason has yet been given for his death but several music websites reported Knuckles had died of complications from Type 2 diabetes
Born in the Bronx, Frankie Warren Knuckles Jr learned his craft in New York City, where he was mentored by club DJ Larry Levan."We would spend entire afternoons working up ideas on how to
present a record so that people would hear it in a new way and fall in
love with it," Knuckles later recalled. "To us it was an art form." Knuckles' style still influences club music today.He moved to Chicago in the 1970s, just as disco was dying out,
and pioneered a style of extending soul and R&B records by adding
drum machine loops."I would program different break beats and use them as segues
between songs and additional beats," he said in 2011. "I had my own
little piece of heaven right there."He made his name at The Warehouse, a club in northern
Chicago, predominantly patronised by gay men from the black and
Latin-American communities.
"The people that used to hang out at The Warehouse coined the phrase 'House Music'," Knuckles said."At the time I was the only DJ in the city playing a sound that they heard nowhere else."So, when dance parties and regional DJs began popping up on the South Side of the city, to attract the same kind of audience that I had at The Warehouse.... they would advertise that they played 'House Music'."By 1982, Knuckles had opened the his own venue for house music, called the Power Plant, where he premiered several tracks by
Chicago named a street in the DJ's honour in 2004
Knuckles also produced the house anthem Tears with Robert
Owens, and began his remixing career with a version of First Choice's
Let No Man Put Asunder.He later signed to Virgin Records, where he remixed or
produced such artists as Mary J Blige, Janet Jackson, Pet Shop Boys,
Diana Ross, Luther Vandross and Toni Braxton, and won a Grammy for best
remixer of the year in 1997.
Inducted to the Dance Music Hall of Fame in 2005, Knuckles
also had a Chicago street named after him in 2004, on the former site of
the Warehouse club.BBC Radio 1's Pete Tong was among those paying tribute to the star on Twitter, writing: "RIP gentleman genius, groundbreaker, inspiration. Blessed to have worked with you.""I can't begin to count the ways he influenced me but I will never forget," added house DJ Roger Sanchez."Frankie Knuckles was so under-appreciated," added Questlove, leader of hip-hop group The Roots. "He was the DJ that DJs aspired to be."The star had been as busy as ever in the run-up to his death, playing London's Ministry of Sound on Saturday night.His Facebook page listed several upcoming dates over the next few months.
Source BBC news

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