Karen Mixon Cook

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Yearsactive1974-present
KnownforFirst female disco DJ
Karen Mixon Cook
Born1955[citation needed]
Years active1974-present
Known forFirst female disco DJ

Karen Mixon Cook (born 1955) became the first professional female nightclub disco disc jockey (“Disco DJ”) in the United States in 1974. While there had been female professional radio disc jockeys in the U.S. since at least 1966,[1] none had been focused on the disco club music scene.

Born Karen Mixon in 1955 in Birmingham, Alabama, Karen moved with her family to Houston, Texas, in July, 1970. Growing up, she was fascinated by dance and studied ballet, jazz, tap, and modern dance. She grew up listening to her parents 1940's dance music and often watched them jitterbug in the living room. Karen's father, Edward Mixon, jitterbugged with her when she was eight years old at a Lion's Club in Akron, Ohio, and it made the local paper.[citation needed] These experiences influenced her art and the importance of dance beats when she became a DJ.

Education

Graduating high school in December 1973, Karen entered North Texas State University in early 1974 (now called University of North Texas) in Denton, Texas, where she studied basic courses and marketing/sales. In December 1975, she returned to Houston, Texas.

DJ career

Cook's first professional engagement as a disco DJ was in early 1974 during her first year at North Texas State at “Jim and Lonnie’s” college bar. She worked five nights per week interspersing songs like the Jackson 5 hit, Dancin’ Machine, George McCrae's Rock Your Baby, and Bachman Turner Overdrive's Taking Care of Business with the bar's standard country music theme.

In 1976, just after Cook's return to Houston, she earned full-time employment as a DJ at Sheraton Oaks Town and Country, which was a rooftop bar in a Sheraton hotel, where she mixed disco music featuring KC and the Sunshine Band, Tavares, Wild Cherry, Commodores, Bee Gees and of course the greatest love songs from that era by Barry White and Lou Rawls to generate excitement, romance, and a stronger dance vibe. Sheraton Oaks included information about the new female DJ in their radio commercials.[citation needed]

In 1976 Karen was recruited by McFaddin Ventures,[2] a national nightclub operator. She was hired as DJ at their highest rated and most lucrative nightclub in Houston: Todd's. It was located in a strip center on Richmond and 610 loop in the Galleria area. A few months later, she was promoted to DJ and Programmer (selecting the best songs and recommending segways) for all of their nightclubs, including the new members'-only club, ‘Elan.[3]

In 2009, Cook was interviewed by the BBC[4] which was edited for the BBC Music Special, “The Death of Disco” in 2009, considered the 30th anniversary of the Death of Disco. Disco Demolition Night, an anti-disco protest held in Chicago, IL, on July 12, 1979, is commonly considered a factor in disco's fast and drastic decline. Cook was quoted as saying, “Every July 12th we still hold a moment of silence for the death of disco.”

Musical style

Musical background

References

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