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Uncle G's
Top 10 Dance Tracks
As Reported To Zip DJ
Week of April 27, 2012

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Top
10 |
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1. Madonna -
Girls Gone Wild |
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2. Gotye -
Somebody That I Used to Know |
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3. David
Guetta & Nicki Minaj - Turn me on |
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4. Chris
Brown - Turn up the music |
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5. Avicii - Levels |
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6. Jennifer
Lopez ft. Pitbull - Dance Again |
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7. Pitbull &
Chris Brown - International Love |
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8. Kelly
Clarkson - Stronger |
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9. Rihanna &
Calvin Harris - We Found Love |
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10. Jessie J.
- Domino |
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BREAKOUTS |
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Bohannon - Let's
start this dance |
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Katy Perry - Part
of Me |
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The Wanted - Glad
You Came |
Featured Releases
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Rihanna & Calvin Harris
"We Found Love"
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Avicci
"Levels"
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Nicki Minaj & David Guetta
"Turn Me On" |
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Nicki Minaj
" Starships" |
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Kelly Clarkson
" Stronger" |
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Pitbull & Chris Brown
" International Love" |
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Chris Brown
" Turn Up The Music" |
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Madonna
"Girl Gone Wild" |
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Gotye
" Somebody That I
Used to Love" |
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Jessie J.
" Domino" |
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Harry Towers
"Making The World A Better Place One Beat Per Minute At A Time."
Maximum Ink
Music Magazine – April 2011
An interview
with DJ / author Harry Towers

By Tina Hall
April 2011
From 1983 to
1991, Harry Towers was the buyer and Billboard Reporter for Our Music Center on
Staten Island. At the same time, he was a DJ, spinning at clubs such as
Abracadabra on Staten Island, The China Club in Manhattan, Casablanca in New
Jersey, and The Spectrum in Brooklyn (better known as 2001 where Saturday
Night Fever was filmed). Harry was briefly a music reviewer for the
Underground News and later for Dance Music Report Magazine and then
Dance Music Authority Magazine. He is also well known for breaking Euro
Dance Music. Furthermore, Harry also used to have a hot mix show on Saturdays at
The Buzz out of Atlantic City and MIX 102.7 in New York. He can currently be
heard on over 10 stations, the most notable ones being NRR Radio, Strictly Dance
Radio powered by 1 Club FM and
iDanceRadio.com. He formed Deet Promotions 10
years ago with a determination to keep dance music alive. Harry is about to
release his first book entitled Abracadabra. Maximum Ink caught up with
Harry, and the following is what he had to say.
Maximum Ink:
Can you tell us a little about yourself? What were you like as a kid? Have you
always been drawn to dance music?
Harry Towers:
I was a very outgoing kid who loved nothing more than dancing and playing
records. I was always drawn to music and dance. My Aunt Betsy taught me how to
do the Twist and I never looked back.
MI:
What first made you to try your hand at being at DJ?
HT: I started buying records when I was 10 years old, and whenever there
was a party with friends or family, people would ask me to bring my records and
play them at the party. When I was 16, I went to a discotheque for the first
time and saw the DJ spinning records for a living. I had seen DJs spin before,
but I didn’t realize it was a profession. Right then and there I started
dreaming of becoming one. However, not until I was 23 and a nightclub named
Abracadabra was desperate for a jock to cover their grand opening did I get my
first chance to actually do it. Their DJ had the flu, and I ended up getting the
job steady.
MI:
Why do you prefer to promote dance music?
HT: I love almost all forms of music, but dance music is the one and only
form of music that has been here since the beginning of time. The first music
played was performed by natives hitting bones on animal hides that were
stretched over hollowed out logs. They danced around the fire to tell the
history of the tribe or to please the gods. Other styles of music come and go,
but people will always respond to the calling of the drums and that makes dance
music a necessary part of what it means to be human. So, I am proud to represent
dance music. It’s good for your mind, your body, and your soul.
MI:
How do you think the dance music genre has changed since the earlier days?
HT: Since dance music organized in the early 1970s until now, it hasn’t
changed all that much. What has changed is how we play it, how we get it, and,
of course, the singles now are made to be DJ friendly and easier to mix.
MI:
I heard once that in the dance music industry you are one of the highest profile
record promoters around. Is this true? How do you feel about that?
HT: Yes, that is true, and I don’t know how it happened, but it’s easily
measured by the awards and accolades I’ve been fortunate enough to enjoy. At the
Winter Music Conference, I have had more wins and more nominations than anyone
else in dance music history. One thing that I would add is that I took that high
profile and used it for good. Along with Ellyn Harris, we formed the Committee
for the Advancement of Dance Music and we petitioned NARAS for a Grammy award
for dance music, and we got it. NARAS still uses the rules I wrote to define a
dance record. Lately, though, I’ve been more involved with raising money for
charities. In December I went to Chicago and DJ’d an event that Georgie Porgie
put together to benefit a food bank that provides food for a battered women’s
shelter. On April 22, I am throwing a benefit here on Staten Island for
University Hospice with three DJs and 10 acts. We will also be going to Los
Angeles and Phoenix this year to raise money for AIDS and autism charities. The
motto of my company is, “Making the world a better place one beat per minute at
a time,” and that is my driving force these days.
MI:
What do you think it takes to be a good record promoter? Do you have any advice
for others on the subject?
HT: I was a Billboard reporter for a few years, and I paid close
attention to how the top promoters of the day promoted to me, what worked, what
didn’t, and tried to mold myself after the best that would call me, such as
Frank Ceraolo and Bari G. It is most important to treat everyone with the
respect you want for yourself and never try to make it about one record because
there is always another one coming down the line, and if they can’t help you
with this one, perhaps they’ll be there for you on the next. I try very hard to
get to know their needs as Disc Jockeys, what they enjoy playing, and try to
point them towards the mixes and productions that best fit. Once they get to
trust that you know and respect them and what they do, things sort themselves
out quite nicely. It also helps that I still spin and know music inside and out.
MI:
Could you tell us about Abracadabra? What is it like to write a book
about yourself? Did it feel a little odd to be putting it on paper?
HT: Abracadabra is a book about my life, growing up to and really
focusing on, the three years I honed my craft at Abracadabra, and how it set me
up for my career in music. Writing a book about what I know is easier for me
than having to make something up out of thin air. The real issue is how truthful
do you want to be when it comes to exposing yourself and your life. I believe I
came pretty close to telling it all like it is through the filter of how I saw
it. I share with most members of my family a way of looking at some of the most
difficult things that life can throw at you and see the humor in it. So, I hope
the book will be entertaining, as well as bring respect to DJs by bringing the
reader into the booth to see what it is we do and also to immortalize the lives
of so many of my friends who passed away.
MI:
How did you land the job as a Billboard reporter for Our Music Center?
HT: Well that came together that way everything did for me in this
business. I was a big fish in a little ocean (Staten Island,
New York),
and I knew the music. I was a pleasant phone call for a lot of the promoters who
would reach out to me. So, when they were looking for another reporter from New
York, the promoters themselves put my name in the hat, and they offered it to
me. The thing was, I didn’t know what it was. I thought they wanted me to be
like a musical Clark Kent, and they would give me assignments to interview
artists for Billboard Magazine. The woman in charge of Billboard
reporters at the time, Sharon Russell, laughed her ass off when I asked her what
would be my first assignment. She said who do you think you are? Jimmy Olson?
She then explained that all they needed from me was to report my top singles.
MI:
You grew up in a haunted house as a child. What was that like? You have said you
saw things that weren’t usual for a kid your age. What kind of things? Do you
think that experience left a lasting impression on you?
HT: There were always weird occurrences going on, and we never knew why.
I could go on with ghost stories for days, but we moved out of the house after
the ceiling collapsed over my bed, and there was a body buried in it. That was a
real “Aha” moment, and we moved from that house in Brooklyn to Staten Island. I
was 11 years old. Going forward, I have an open mind about anything. Lacking
evidence, most people say prove to me the supernatural exists. For me, when
evidence is lacking, I say prove to me it doesn’t exist. I believe first and ask
questions later because one day it can save your life. I was walking dogs one
night after midnight on Halloween, and all of a sudden I heard really loud
tubular bells. Child, I’ve seen a lot of horror movies and experienced a lot in
my life, but when you hear the music you run. I tore ass down the streets
dragging three Dachshunds and a Shepard mix behind me, only to find out it was a
van coming around the corner with the radio blaring the music out of an open
window.
MI:
As a record promoter, DJ, and author, how would you actually classify yourself?
HT: I always think of myself as a DJ, but more and more I feel like an
author. However, the book has to come out first.
MI:
What is it like to have your work featured on 10 stations and eight stations on
the internet? Would you like to see your work on more stations someday?
HT: It’s weird because you don’t know who is listening until you get an
e-mail or someone reaches out to you on Facebook to comment about your show or
ask you about something you played and how they can get it. When I was on the
radio here in New York, we had a concert for the station in Manhattan, and our
Saturday Night Mix Show was the highest rated show on the station. When they
brought all the DJs out, I was the last to come out. The roar of the crowd was
deafening. It was an awesome moment for me— a real rush.
MI:
What projects are you currently working on over at Deet? How is your quest to
keep dance music alive going? What can your fans look forward to next?
HT: Right now I am really excited about a single we got breaking around
the world called “Nah Neh Nah” by Rico Bernasconi vs. Vaya Con Dios. The single
is doing so well that Sony Music just picked it up, so I am thrilled about that,
as well as singles by DJ Yiannis and Georgie Porgie, PH Electro, Khalid Rivera,
Amoray, and Groove
State. I’ve already started on the sequel to Abracadabra called Our
Music Center and a supernatural fiction novel tentatively called Joey’s
Gift, but I know I’m going to change the title once it’s finished. On my own
Sirenia Records label, we are putting together the next singles for Dare 2B
Dif’rnt, Nancy Yvonne, and Ben Coen. Also coming up are the benefits on Staten
Island, in Phoenix, and in Los Angeles. I think that is about all I can handle
right now.
♥♥♥♥♥ Votes:
3 + 1
Here's another vote from me,
Gene "Uncle G" Serina
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