
Larry Levan & the Paradise Garage
Clip: Episode 3 | 2m 39sVideo has Closed Captions
Discover more about Larry Levan and the Paradise Garage.
Discover more about the Paradise Garage and the influence of DJ Larry Levan.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback

Larry Levan & the Paradise Garage
Clip: Episode 3 | 2m 39sVideo has Closed Captions
Discover more about the Paradise Garage and the influence of DJ Larry Levan.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Top 5 Disco Artists: A Pride Celebration
The disco genre, in all its groovy glory, was revolutionary for many marginalized groups at the time — but it was especially crucial for the LGTBQ+ community.Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipMan: Grace Jones, Mick Jagger, Boy George, Michael Jackson, they will all come and hang out at the Paradise Garage.
Saunders: Gay, straight, any color.
It was mostly gay.
Man: Back in the day, the best crowd was the gay crowd.
Never any violence, never any arguments, never any drama.
It was quite a place.
[Upbeat music playing] Then I started to hear about Larry Levan, who was the DJ of Paradise Garage.
♪ Larry was always up front and grand entrance.
And "I'm here.
I'm queer.
Get used to it."
♪ Larry and I were friends.
And one afternoon Larry said to me, "Nicky, would you teach me how to play records?"
From that moment on, I would work with him on mixing techniques, on how to beat match, how to pick the next record.
Immediately, I saw in Larry that eye for making stuff become fabulous.
♪ Bernstein: No other clubs had a DJ like Larry who played the kind of music Larry played, who made the decisions that he made, who was as much in charge of the night as Larry.
♪ Man: He would be messing with the sound system as people were coming into the club.
That's how obsessed he was with making sure that the sound wrenched your guts out.
Man: ♪ Let's get on up... ♪ White: He could do anything.
Man: ♪ Get on down ♪ Larry could stop a room cold, and people would just stomp "Larry, Larry," just waiting for the next thing that he was going to do, and he might just not do anything.
Depino: He'd stop the music, get out a ladder and clean the mirror ball at 2:00 in the morning with 1,000 people sitting on the floor.
And then he'd take the ladder down, shut the lights, put a record on, and the place would go crazy!
[Singing indistinctly] Morales: Larry was way ahead of his time.
The first DJ remixer, the first DJ producer, the first DJ artist.
Siano: He is the modern template of what a DJ is now.
Larry would often go into the recording studio, see through all the excess tracks, and pull out the gold that would make a hit.
Video has Closed Captions
Dive into how disco fell victim to a violent backlash and emerged to come back stronger. (30s)
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