StrafeSet It Off

Label:

Jus Born Records – JB 001

Format:

Vinyl , 12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Single

Country:

US

Released:

Genre:

Electronic

Style:

Electro

Tracklist

A Set It Off 9:51
B Set It Off (Instrumental) 12:24

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright ℗Jus Born Productions
  • Copyright ©Jus Born Productions
  • Mastered AtSterling Sound
  • Pressed ByEuropadisk
  • Manufactured ByJus Born Productions Inc.
  • Distributed ByJus Born Productions Inc.

Credits

  • Executive-ProducerW.C. Daniels*
  • Mixed ByWalter Gibbons
  • ProducerGeorge Logios
  • Written-By, Arranged By, Co-producerSteve Standard

Notes

Original US pressing with multi-color Jus Born logo and only one telephone number on centerlabel.
Generic white color outer jacket.

Mixed with LOVE by WALTER GIBBONS for JUS BORN Productions
℗ © 1984 Jus Born Productions/ASCAP

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Rights Society: ASCAP
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A etched): JB-001-A I MPT-1 ↔
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A stamped): EDP STERLING
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B etched): JB-001-B
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B stamped): EDP STERLING

Other Versions (5 of 28)

View All
Title (Format) Label Cat# Country Year
Recently Edited
Set It Off (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Repress, Stereo) Jus Born Records JB 001 US 1984
Set It Off (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Repress) Jus Born Records JB 001 US 1984
Set It Off (12", 33 ⅓ RPM) Jus Born Records JB 001 US 1984
New Submission
Set It Off (12", 33 ⅓ RPM, Single, Wide Ring Label (First Pressing)) Jus Born Records JB 001 US 1984
New Submission
Set It Off (12", 33 ⅓ RPM) Jus Born Records (2) JB 001 US 1984

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Reviews

  • anthonymd303's avatar
    anthonymd303
    i'm here because of the film "The Principal". anyone else?
    • Boilerhoecords's avatar
      Boilerhoecords
      Back in the day, we called it electro funk , which branched into acid jazz but the backbone of this track is from jazz funk true fusion,a real masterpiece and was so underground it's a classic !
      • funk_wid_it's avatar
        funk_wid_it
        Is it Electro? Is it Boogie? Is it Funk? Is it House? Don't you just hate genre categories sometimes? Fu*k genres, it's a mixture of all four. A very groundbreaking release if ever there was one.
        • Kali0x's avatar
          Kali0x
          No one ever talks about how Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock - It Takes Two basically stole the beat from this classic, timeless Electro Funk record. Sampled by many, but the OG is still king.
          • 8892sales's avatar
            8892sales
            Edited 6 years ago
            ittedly not that easily categorisable as a style as it featured two or three elements.

            Regardless. Strafe's and Harlequin Four's versions are proper club classics and like both for slightly different occasions. Played throughout the eighties by DJs from all dance and electronic genres from hip hop to disco to house music warehouse pioneers.
            • tapedecks's avatar
              tapedecks
              I have a red label version with the EDP and Sterling stamp...same font as yellow labels but has small inner hole. Does not look anything like the bootleg. What's up with that?
              • beezneez's avatar
                beezneez
                Sounds like the knight rider tv program theme music l
                • dylaf's avatar
                  dylaf
                  Edited 8 years ago
                  ... The Harlequin Four's version was the one getting played in the UK, which was good enough to be an instant hit in it's own right, despite being released on Champion records as an edited version & without the full dub treatment/instrumental from the late Walter Gibbons. I was surprised a few years later to hear the Strafe version (to be correct, the original version) in a friends set, a friend who had been to and from the USA & knew the scene over there well. That was pretty much the last time I played the UK release of the Harlequin Four's version, in spite of taking a further few years to find a copy of Strafe. Listening now, both US OG versions are equally brilliant, offering a different take & the most notable difference being the 4/4 pattern & snarling robo- disco hats of the H4's, something Gibbons no doubt couldn't resist. Harlequin Four's version here: https://discogs.pelisguay.com/Harleqiun-Fours-Set-It-Off/master/78895
                  • AndyPandy2000's avatar
                    AndyPandy2000
                    Mesmirisingly great record. In England strangely it was the one that came out as by the Harlequin 4s in early 1986 that was the big version that you heard everywhere and was also remixed around the Acid House time in 1988.
                    • Alain_Patrick's avatar
                      Alain_Patrick
                      Edited 17 years ago
                      You can call it Breakbeat, Electro or just 'influential' - the fact is that "Set It Off" was a trend-setter dance music; believe it or not, its funky-sophisticated Breakbeat line was made with the same Roland TR-808 that Ben 'Cozmo D' Cenac from Newcleus used to produce the all-time Electro classics "Jam On It", "Jam On Revenge", "Computer Age" and "Automan".
                      Cozmo D and Strafe and were big friends back then, and not long after "Jam On It" became a hit, Strafe decided to borrow Cozmo D's Roland TR-808 to make his own electronic production - "Set It Off" itself).
                      "Set It Off" was included later on several compilations such as "The Perfect Beats Volume 2" and "Disco Box Vol. 6 - Work It Out", standing the test of time; its lyrics were later copied by other artists on their club hits - specially the beginning which has the well-known quote "Yo want this party started right? Yo want this party startin' quickly... right?" whose first part was adapted years later on the House hit 'Kraze - The Party'.
                      The mixing part belongs to the multi-skilled DJ Walter Gibbons, an early Disco DJ who was resident at the Galaxy 21 Club on the seventies) and it is considered one of his best works ever.

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