The Jams 1987 Vinyl -

The track uses a looped piano stab (sampled from an old soul record) and a monologue about the definition of house music. It is minimalist, repetitive, and utterly hypnotic. In 1987, this sounded like a radio transmission from another planet. Today, it sounds like a blueprint for every deep house record made since 2015.

Whether you value it for the music, the history, or the sheer audacity of its existence, owning a piece of the JAMS 1987 legacy is owning a piece of counter-culture history. It serves as a permanent reminder of the time two men tried to take on the giants of pop music with nothing but a sampler and a sense of mischief. the jams 1987 vinyl

Before we look at the vinyl specifics, we must understand the man behind the name. In 1987, London was a musical wasteland for many—dominated by Stock Aitken Waterman pop and indie janglers. But in the underground, a seismic shift was occurring thanks to the import of Chicago house and Detroit techno. The track uses a looped piano stab (sampled