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It's ThatPodcastGirl C.Dub

It's ThatPodcastGirl C.Dub

著者: ThatPodcastGirl C.Dub
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

This feed has two chapters — and the same host running through both of them.

It started as This Is A Podcast About House Music. A deep dig into house music history by city and decade. ASMR-style storytelling, spoken slowly and in a moderated tone, built for long listening sessions. The kind of show you put on autoplay while you work.

Now it's Earn Every Penny. A podcast about the real work behind a real estate deal — the research, the strategy, the negotiation, and everything agents do before anyone sees a listing. Built for real estate professionals and serious buyers and sellers in New York and beyond.

Two different topics. One framework. Clear thinking, structured ideas, and a host who breaks down whatever she's learning the same way every time.

That's ThatPodcastGirl C Dub.

All episodes and more at https://www.thatpodcastgirl.com

Reach me at ThatPodcastGirlCdub@gmail.com

Reach the sponsor through the Douglas Elliman website, Agent search

Earn Every Penny is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or transaction-specific advice. The host is a licensed real estate professional in New York State.

© 2026 Earn Every Penny
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  • Beatmatching and Sound Checks: Richie Hawtin, Len Faki, and Digital Changes Everything (S3 E7)
    2026/04/22

    Send us a text if you like it and want more of it.

    When the Beat Matches Itself: Richie Hawtin, Len Faki, and Digital Changes Everything

    Hello, my sexy listeners. I'm ThatPodcastGirl C Dub, and This Is A Podcast About House Music.


    The booth is quieter now.


    Not in volume. The system is still loud. The room is still moving. But inside the booth, something has settled. A pair of CDJs. A mixer. Sometimes a laptop. A USB drive no larger than a keychain holding thousands of tracks. The weight that used to sit behind the DJ, the crates stacked against the wall, the physical archive of a person's taste, is gone. We talked about how that happened in our last two episodes. Tonight we talk about what the rooms did in response.


    Because when the constraint leaves the booth, the room has to answer. And different rooms answered very differently.


    Somewhere in the mid-2000s, a DJ named Richie Hawtin started doing something that made club owners genuinely uncomfortable. He would arrive before the club opened and ask for a sound check. Not a line check. A full sound check. He needed time to plug everything in. At the time this was unheard of. DJs showed up, played records, left. Hawtin was showing up with a laptop, a mixer, controllers, and a vision of what a DJ set could be when the system held the tempo steady and the DJ used that stability as a launchpad rather than a destination.


    Hawtin had built his early reputation in the Detroit techno world, coming up through the Windsor, Ontario underground in the late 1980s and crossing the river into Detroit's scene. By the 2000s he was performing what he called Decks, EFX and 909 shows, sets built around looping and layering in real time, treating Traktor as a live instrument rather than a playback device. He and his partner John Acquaviva saw so much promise in digital DJing that they famously invested in Traktor's development and wound down their own record pressing operation to go fully digital. The club owners who argued with him about sound checks in 2001 were watching the future arrive and not recognizing it yet.


    His 2005 album DE9: Transitions took that philosophy into the studio, breaking down hundreds of tracks and rebuilding them into new ones inside Ableton. It was documentation of a shift that was already happening live, in booths, every weekend.


    What Hawtin represented was one answer to the question the digital era had opened up. When the system holds the tempo for you, when drift is eliminated and cue points are stored and loops are quantized, what do you do with all that freed attention?


    His answer was to intervene more. Reshape more aggressively. Move through ideas faster without losing control of the underlying rhythm. The stability of the system became permission to push harder against its edges.


    But there were other answers. And the rooms where those answers lived tell you as much about the music as the technology does.


    Fabric opened in London in October 1999, built inside the renovated Victorian underground space of the Metropolitan Cold Stores on Charterhouse Street in Farringdon. It took three years of structural work to get it ready. The founders, Keith Reilly and Cameron Leslie, had both been part of warehouse party culture and wanted something that went against the grain of the superclub era that was dominating London nightlife at the time. No spectacle. No celebrity DJs as the selling point. Sound first.


    Room One had something almost no club in Europe had at the time. A bodysonic dancefloor. Four hundred and fifty bass transducers embedded und

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    13 分
  • Disco Demolition Night, 1979 and House Music is born in Chicago (S1 E1)
    2026/04/21

    Send us a text if you like it and want more of it.

    Hello sexy listeners, it's ThatPodcastGirl Cdub, and This Is A Podcast About House Music. In this series, we're embarking on a journey through the origins of house music—a genre that's been the heartbeat of dance floors for decades. As someone who's always been into reggaeton and Afrobeats, I'm excited to delve into the rich history of house music, especially after a friend's enthusiasm piqued my curiosity. So, let's explore this together!

    Our story begins in the late 1970s. Picture this: It's July 12, 1979, at Chicago's Comiskey Park. The event? 'Disco Demolition Night.' Organized by radio DJ Steve Dahl, fans were invited to bring disco records to be blown up on the field. What started as a promotional stunt quickly spiraled into chaos, with thousands storming the field, setting fires, and chanting 'Disco sucks!'

    So why did Steve Dahl do this? He organized this event after being fired from his job at WDAI radio station when it switched from rock to disco. Feeling spurned, he channeled his frustration into an anti-disco campaign, culminating in this explosive event. While some saw it as a pushback against disco's mainstream dominance, many felt a deeper sting. Disco was a haven for Black, Latino, and LGBTQ+ communities—a space where they could express themselves freely. Vince Lawrence, a young Black usher at the event, later reflected, 'Basically, if you were Black, gay, or sympathized with either of the above, you were being punished.'

    "From this turmoil, a new sound emerged. Marginalized communities, feeling sidelined, sought refuge in underground venues where they could dance without judgment. One such sanctuary was 'The Warehouse' at 206 South Jefferson Street in Chicago. Established in 1977 by Robert Williams, this club became a beacon for many.

    At the helm was DJ Frankie Knuckles, often dubbed the 'Godfather of House.' He didn't just play tracks; he reinvented them. By blending disco classics with European electronic music and layering in drum machine rhythms, he crafted a sound that was both nostalgic and revolutionary. This fusion laid the foundation for what we now know as house music.

    Knuckles was known for his innovative use of equipment. He utilized reel-to-reel tape machines to extend tracks and create seamless mixes. Additionally, drum machines like the Roland TR-909 allowed him to add unique percussive elements, giving his sets a distinctive and mesmerizing rhythm.

    Another iconic spot was the 'Music Box,' where DJ Ron Hardy ruled the decks. Hardy was renowned for his experimental mixes and electrifying energy. He once said, 'I don't play what's popular; I play what's good.' I like that. His fearless approach pushed the genre's boundaries and inspired countless artists.

    Hardy was a pioneer in manipulating tracks to create a unique experience. He often sped up records, added effects, and wasn't afraid to play unconventional tracks people had never heard. His use of the reel-to-reel tape recorder allowed him to edit and loop tracks live, creating a hypnotic and energetic atmosphere that kept dancers on their toes.

    So that’s the 1970s. Moving into the 1980s, the house music scene continued to evolve. Larry Heard, also known as Mr. Fingers, emerged as a pivotal figure. His track 'Can You Feel It' became an anthem, characterized by its deep basslines and emotive melodies. Heard's background as a drummer influenced his production style, bringing a rhythmic complexity to his music.

    Heard's use of synthesizers and drum machines, like the Roland Juno-60 and TR-909, allowed him to craft lush, atmospheric tracks that stood out in the burgeoning house scene. His music bridged the gap betwee

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    7 分
  • The Rooms May Change, But The Strategy Is The Same (S3 E8)
    2026/04/21

    Send us a text if you like it and want more of it.

    It's ThatPodcastGirl Cdub

    For a while, this show lived inside house music. The history. The architecture of the sound. The culture that built rooms before the rooms had names.

    But something happened while I was building it.

    I found real estate.

    Not just the business of it — the thinking behind it. Space. Systems. What we build, what we invest in, and what we choose to live inside.

    That's where this goes next.

    The conversations you'll hear will move between music, design, money, and environment. Because those things were never really separate — we just talked about them like they were.

    The approach doesn't change. Clear thinking. Honest framing. Ideas that actually connect.

    If that's what kept you here, keep listening.

    I'll make it worth it.

    Let's go Earn Every Penny

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    Copyright 2026. It's ThatPodcastGirl C-Dub

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    1 分
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