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Backyard Parties: 1980s | East L.A.'s DJ Culture

1980s Party-goers
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This is part of a series on backyard parties. Read More:

A Brief History of DJ Culture in Southern California
1970s: Temporary Discothèque
1990s: Party out of Bounds
2000s: Post-Backyard

Text by Gerard Meraz

By the 1980s DJ culture was fully entrenched in the Eastside. Record stores, DJ equipment rental and sales shops dotted the streets. Printing companies and downtown clothing emporiums like The Factory, catered to the DJs, promoters and the growing crowds attending DJ based events.

Musically, the DJ had a cornucopia of genres to mix together such as disco, Hi-N-R-G, new wave, rock-a-billy, ska, reggae, funk, freestyle and pop. DJ names sometimes overlapped and had to be distinguished from the one from L.A., from the one from S.G.V. The number of DJs made so that most DJ sets were between 45 minutes and 15 minutes, depending on the popularity of the DJ.

The promoters, who grew in numbers and size, gained greater power as their ability to promote more than a DJ gave them the numbers to claim larger venues and hire the best or hottest DJs. Backyard parties of 100-500 attendees filled weekend nights throughout the various neighborhoods in the greater Eastside from South Gate to Highland Park, from Boyle Heights to La Puente.

When the parties would be broken up by the local police, the crowds would go to another party or to local cruising spots like The Heavens, Flat Tops, The Winery, Elysian Park or anywhere they could continue to meet members of the opposite sex, get flyers for next week's parties and bump their sound systems playing DJ mixes.

By 1989 some DJs and promoters began to engage in negative activities such as causing fights at, or calling the police on competing parties. Also at this time, crack cocaine came into the barrios and ghettos and changed youth's options for fun and spending money to dealing drugs and violence over drug sales territory. Many DJs moved on to clubs and to other parts of the city and began experimenting with a new sound called house music.

'80s Mix: Gerard Meraz of the Wild Boyz and The Brat Pack stepped into a thriving DJ scene as a teenager. He had heard of the DJs that came before him and how some had moved into club residencies, large halls and massive events at the Pico Rivera Sports Arena. When he started he was just one of about 20 DJs at his high school. He knew he had to prove himself so he too could be club DJ with his own residency. This was the paradigm of the Eastside DJ scene.

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'80s Flyers

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'80s Scene Gallery

Building social networks was the defining role of the promoter and DJ from the '80s. Both male and female party crews helped to promote backyard parties.

Groups like Divine Dolls and Wild Boyz shared a common goal: to host the most memorable backyard parties from that decade.

Karen Salgado shares photos of fashion and friends from her days as a Divine Doll.

Divine Doll Karen
Divine Doll Karen in a Faux fashion shoot. | Karen Salgado
'Hair? - check!'
'Hair? - check!' | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Karen getting ready
Divine Doll Karen getting ready for the night on the town. | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Judy
Divine Doll Judy in a Faux fashion shoot. | Karen Salgado
The Divine Doll sisters
The Divine Doll sisters Judy and Karen together for faux fashion shoot. | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Judy
Divine Doll Judy | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Jennifer
Divine Doll Jennifer was a runaway that Karen and Judy took in for a bit. | Karen Salgado
A collage of flyers and pictures
A collage of flyers and pictures in Karen and Judy's 80's bedroom. | Karen Salgado
"Divine Dolls Irma, Gigi, Judy, Karen and Maryann in a Suzuki
"Divine Dolls Irma, Gigi, Judy, Karen and Maryann leaving Franklin to go party! | Karen Salgado
Karen's Friends
Karen - 'Seriously, I can't remember BUT... Left to right: Ziggy and Frankie from Reflex or Eqqus, Divine Doll Brandi (short dress), DD Karen with the paper-bag bottle (LOL), DD Judy (behind me), Isabel (with Sunglasses on her chest).  I really don't remember the rest.' | Karen Salgado
The Mystical Boys
The Mystical Boys from left to right: Rick (asian), Ronnie (tall and in the back), Manuel (white pants). | Karen Salgado
Mysical Boys and Boys from Brazil
Mysical Boys and Boys from Brazil | Karen Salgado
Boys from Brazil
Boys from Brazil (from left to right), Boy from Brazil - Remy, Boy from brazil - Johnny, GUILTY - Willie, DANGER - Mark (Karen - 'Awesome Foursome') | Karen Salgado
"Guilty Ones"
"Guilty Ones" | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Karen
Divine Doll Karen. | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Judy
Divine Doll Judy | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Lynette.
Divine Doll Lynette. | Karen Salgado
Divine Doll Maryann and Divine Doll Lynette
Divine Doll Maryann and Divine Doll Lynette | Karen Salgado

Gerard Meraz is the author of An Oral History of DJ Culture From East Los Angeles.

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