Adonis
by John BushDespite his formal training and lack of clubbing experience, Adonis made waves on the dancefloor when he recorded several of the best Chicago house singles of the 1980s, including No Way Back, Do It Properly and Were Rockin Down the House. Born on Chicagos west side, he became interested in contemporary jazz — which he studied at the American Conservatory of Music — but also listened to 70s funk like Parliament, Funkadelic and Earth, Wind & Fire.After hanging out with a neighbors R&B group for awhile, he was called on to play bass and eventually joined as a full-time member. He gigged with several different bands during the early 80s (including one with Larry Heard, the only other major house producer not previously involved with Chicagos clubscene) and gradually became more interested in the keyboard players synthesizers than his own bass guitar. A friend introduced him to house music via Jesse Saunders On and On; after feeling a drive to make better-produced music than what he had heard, Adonis began recording.Despite his musical education, early singles like No Way Back and Were Rockin Down the House werent any more melodic than most house records around. In fact, they were less so, with pounding basslines and minimalistic rhythms that made waves in the clubs and became classics of the Chicago house explosion. Record-label trouble forced Adonis to semi-retire from recording before he could gain any kind of major contract, but he continued to produce and remix on an independent basis into the 90s. In 1993, he and two other house legends (Farley Jackmaster Funk and Chip E) entered the studio and recorded material as Black Balls.