Fabric 42
Armando Gallop (sometimes written as Armando Gallup) (February 12, 1970, Chicago–December 17, 1996), who released material under his first name only, was an American house-music producer and DJ who was an early contributor to the development of acid house. Armando was born in Chicago to parents of Afro-Cuban descent. He was a star baseball player as a youngster before spinal meningitis put an end to his athletic aspirations. He became interested in dance music, organizing parties by age 16 and mixing on radio by age 17. He and Mike Dunn founded Warehouse Records in 1988, where he released the singles 151 and Land of Confusion, the latter of which became a club hit in Chicago as well as in Britain, where it influenced their early acid-house scene. He also produced Warehouse releases from Ron Trent, DJ Rush, and Robert Armani. Instead of working on production, Armando spent most of the early 1990s with a residency at Chicago's Warehouse from 1992 to 1994. He served as an A&R rep for Felix da Housecat's Radikal Fear label and, soon, after recorded for that label himself. His first full-length album, One World, One Future, was released in 1996 on Play it Again, Sam, but he died of leukemia later that year. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Armando Gallop (sometimes written as Armando Gallup) (February 12, 1970, Chicago–December 17, 1996), who released material under his first name only, was an American house-music producer and DJ who was an early contributor to the development of acid house. Armando was born in Chicago to parents of Afro-Cuban descent. He was a star baseball player as a youngster before spinal meningitis put an end to his athletic aspirations. He became interested in dance music, organizing parties by age 16 and mixing on radio by age 17. He and Mike Dunn founded Warehouse Records in 1988, where he released the singles 151 and Land of Confusion, the latter of which became a club hit in Chicago as well as in Britain, where it influenced their early acid-house scene. He also produced Warehouse releases from Ron Trent, DJ Rush, and Robert Armani. Instead of working on production, Armando spent most of the early 1990s with a residency at Chicago's Warehouse from 1992 to 1994. He served as an A&R rep for Felix da Housecat's Radikal Fear label and, soon, after recorded for that label himself. His first full-length album, One World, One Future, was released in 1996 on Play it Again, Sam, but he died of leukemia later that year. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Adonis
Annette
Phuture
S'Express
Land Of Confusion
100% of Disin' You
151 - Original Mix
Downfall
Don't Take It (Thomos Edit)
Box Energy
Pleasure Dome - mixed
151
Don't Take It - Thomos Edit
Don't Take It
The Future
Pleasure Dome
100% Of Disin' U
So In Love With You
Land Of Confusion - Confusion Mix
151 (Terrace Mixx)
Turn My Shit Up
151 - Terrace Mixx
Morse Code
Robotics
Simple Minded
100% Of Dissin' You
100% of Disin' You - Warehouse Mix
Don't Stop
Venture Oui
Sweet Love
Trance Dance
Get Crazy
Here We Go
One Hundred Precent of Dissin' You
Radikal Bitch
Don`t Take It (Thomos Edit)
Warp Factor
Land of Confusion (confusion mix)
World Beat
Welcome To The Warehouse
confusion's revenge
100% Dissin It
Lesbian Luv
Which Way Is Up
Land Of Confusion Remix
Ecstasy (Original Mix)
151 (terrace mix)
Land's End
Let There Be House
100% of Dissin You - Armando's Dis Mix
pleasuredome
Transaxual
Boys Don't Cry
Wave Form
label_stop_radio
