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Disco is a genre of music that originated in discothèques.
Generally the term refers to a specific style of music that has
influences from funk, soul music, and salsa and the Latin or
Hispanic music which influenced salsa.
Contents
1 Origins
2 Popularity
3 Popular disco artists
4 Popular non-disco acts who made disco songs
5 DJs and producers
6 Instrumentation
7 Format
8 Backlash in U.S. and UK
8.1 Hard Rock versus Disco
9 Regional styles of disco
10 Transition from the disco sound of the 1970s to the dance sound
of the 1980s
11 Time of transition
12 Disco "spinoffs": rap and "house" music
13 "Death" and a "Retro" revival
14 Radio
15 See also
16 External links
17 Sources
18 Further reading
Origins
Elements of disco music appear on records from the early 1970s such
as the 1971 theme from the film Shaft by Isaac Hayes. In general it
can be said that the first disco songs were released in 1973,
however many consider Manu Dibango's 1972 "Soul Makossa" the first
Disco record. A September 13, 1973 article in Rolling Stone magazine
called "Discotheque Rock '72: Paaaaarty!" by Vince Aletti [1] about
the New York nightclub scene where "Soul Makossa" was being played
is considered to be the first to use the terminology "disco".
Initially, most disco songs catered to a nightclub/dancing audience
only, rather than general audiences such as radio listeners, but
there are many aspects proving opposite tendencies as well; popular
radio-hits were being played in discothèques, as long as they had an
easy to follow rhythmic bass-pattern close to 120 BPM (beats per
minute). Most 70's Disco genre songs had a distinctive four/four
bass drum beat.
Soul and funk records that influenced disco include:
Sly and the Family Stone - "Dance to the Music" (1968), "Everyday
People" (1968), "Thank You (Falletin Me Be Mice Elf Agin)" (1970)
and "Family Affair" (1971)
Hugh Masekela - "Grazing in the Grass" (1968)
The Honey Cone - "Want Ads" (1971), "Stick Up" (1971)
Isaac Hayes - "Shaft" (1971) and "Hung Up On My Baby" (1974)
Incredible Bongo Band - "Bongo Rock" (1973)
Eumir Deodato - "Also Sprach Zarathustra" (1973)
Average White Band - "Pick Up the Pieces" (1974), "Cut the Cake"
(1975)
James Brown - "Get Up (I Feel Like Being A) Sex Machine" (1970),
"Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved" (1971), "Get On The Good Foot"
(1972)
The Motown Sound also featured many elements that would be
associated with the disco sound:
Martha & The Vandellas - "Dancing In The Street" (1964)
The Temptations - "Since I Lost My Baby" (1964), "I Can't Get Next
to You" (1969), and "Cloud Nine" (1969)
The Four Tops - "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)" (1965)
The Supremes - "You Keep Me Hangin' On" (1966) and "Reflections"
(1967)
Jackson 5 - "I Want You Back" (1969), "ABC" (1970), "The Love You
Save" (1970), and "Mama's Pearl" (1971)
Stevie Wonder - "Signed, Sealed, Delivered, I'm Yours" (1970),
"Superstition" (1972) and "Higher Ground" (1973)
Diana Ross - "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" (1970)
Philadelphia International Records defined Philly soul and helped
define disco (ibid) with records such as:
The Three Degrees - "When Will I See You Again" (1973)
First Choice - "Armed and Extremely Dangerous" (1973)
The Intruders - "I'll Always Love My Mama" (1973)
The O'Jays - "Love Train" (1972), "For the Love of Money" (1974) and
"I Love Music" (1975)
MFSB - "TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)" and "Love is the Message"
(1973)
Pre-/Early-disco TK Records tracks:
Betty Wright - "Clean Up Woman" (1971)
George McCrae- "Rock Your Baby" (1974)
KC and the Sunshine Band - "Queen of Clubs" (1974), "Get Down
Tonight" (1975) and "That's the Way (I Like It)" (1975)
Early-disco hits include:
Nelson James - "I Have An Afro" (1972)
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes - "The Love I Lost" (1973) and "Bad
Luck" (1974)
Love Unlimited Orchestra - "Love's Theme" (1973)
The Jackson 5- "Dancing Machine" (1973)
Barry White - "I'm Gonna Love You Just a Little More, Baby" (1973),
"Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe" (1974), "You're the First, the
Last, My Everything" (1974)
Shirley & Company - "Shame, Shame, Shame" (1974)
The Hues Corporation - "Rock the Boat" (1974)
The Commodores - "Machine Gun" (1974)
ABBA - Dancing Queen (1976)
Frankie Valli - "Swearin' To God (1975)
Dalida- "J'Attendrai" (the first French disco song and first hit in
Europe) (1975)
LaBelle - "Lady Marmalade" (1975)
The Four Seasons - "Who Loves You" (1975) and "December '63 (Oh What
A Night)" (1976)
Silver Convention - "Fly Robin Fly" (1975), "Get Up and Boogie"
(1976)
The Bee Gees - "Jive Talkin' " (1975) and "You Should Be Dancing"
(1976)
Andrea True Connection - "More More More" (1976)
[edit]
Popularity
1975 was the year when disco really took off, with hit songs like
Van McCoy's "The Hustle" and Donna Summer's "Love To Love You Baby"
reaching the mainstream. 1975 also marked the release of the first
disco mix on album, the A side of Gloria Gaynor's remake of The
Jackson 5's "Never Can Say Goodbye". Disco's popularity peaked
between 1976 - 1979, driven in part by films such as 1977's classic
Saturday Night Fever and 1978's Thank God It's Friday. Disco also
gave rise to an increased popularity of line dancing and other
partly pre-choreographed dances; many line dances can be seen in
films such as Saturday Night Fever, which also features the Hustle.
Disco was also popular among the gay subculture.
Internationally, the pop star Dalida was the first to make disco
music in France with 1975's "J'attendrai" which was a big hit there
as well as in Canada and Japan in 1976. She also released many other
disco hits between 1975 and 1981, including "Monday, Tuesday...
Laissez-moi danser" in 1979, translated the same year as "Let Me
Dance Tonight" for the USA, where she was their "French diva" since
her late-1978 performance at the Carnegie Hall. Soon after Dalida's
pioneering French disco work, other French artists recorded disco:
Claude François, in 1976 with his song "Cette année-là" (a cover of
The Four Seasons' disco hit "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)"),
then the famous "yé-yé" French pop singer Sheila, with her group B.
Devotion, who even had a hit in the USA (a rarity for French
artists) with the song "Spacer" in 1979.
Many other European artists also recorded disco music; in Germany,
Frank Farian formed a disco band by the name Boney M around 1975.
They had a string of number one hits in a few European countries
which continued into the early 1980s, with songs such as "Daddy
Cool", "Brown Girl in the Ring" and "By the Rivers of Babylon".
Still today, the trademark sound of Boney M is seen as emblematic
for late 70's German disco music.
Disco fever reached a peak in South Asia after the release of the
Bollywood film Disco Dancer in 1982. It stars Mithun Chakraborty as
an Indian disco champion who is out to get revenge on P. N. Oberoi
(Om Shivpuri), a rich industrialist who once slapped and insulted
his mother.
Japan also boasted a number of homegrown disco artists. The nation's
top-selling female duo of the late 1970s, Pink Lady, incorporated
disco music into their sound with hits like "Monday Mona Lisa Club"
and "Kiss In The Dark" (the latter of which was their only U.S. hit,
breaking into Billboard's top 40 in 1979).
Popular disco artists
Main article: List of disco artists
The most popular disco artists of the 1970s included:
The Bee Gees
A Taste of Honey
ABBA
Arabesque
CHIC
Sister Sledge
The Jacksons
Claudja Barry
Linda Clifford
Donna Summer
Grace Jones
Sylvester
Gloria Gaynor
Boney M
Village People
K.C. and the Sunshine Band
Vicki Sue Robinson
MFSB
Loleatta Holloway
France Joli
Evelyn 'Champagne' King
Yvonne Elliman
Tavares
Salsoul Orchestra
Thelma Houston
Cheryl Lynn
The Trammps
Silver Convention.
Popular non-disco acts who made disco songs
Many non-disco artists recorded disco songs at the height of its
popularity, most often due to demand from the record companies who
needed a surefire hit. These acts included (note that many of these
songs were not "pure" disco, but rock or pop songs with disco
overtones):
Graham Bonnet - "Warm Ride"
Eagles - "One of These Nights"
KISS - "I Was Made For Lovin' You", "Sure Know Something", and
"Dirty Livin'"
Grateful Dead - "Shakedown Street", "Dancing in the Street"
Foreigner - "Double Vision"
Dolly Parton - "Two Doors Down", "Baby I'm Burnin'", "I Wanna Fall
in Love", "Potential New Boyfriend", and "Save the Last Dance for
Me"
Cher - "Take Me Home" and "Hell on Wheels"
Marvin Gaye - "Got To Give It Up"
Ringo Starr - "Drowning in a Sea of Love"
Barry Manilow - "Copacabana (At The Copa)", and "You're Looking Hot
Tonight"
Aretha Franklin - "Jump to It"
Alice Cooper - "(No More) Love At Your Convenience"
Isaac Hayes - "Don't Let Go"
Cold Chisel - "Showtime"
Uriah Heep - "What D'ya Say"
Shalamar - "Take That To The Bank", "Right In The Socket", "Second
Time Around"
Leif Garrett - "I Was Made For Dancing"
Toto - "Georgy Porgy", "Love Is A Man's World"
Bryan Adams - "Let Me Take You Dancing"
Chaka Khan - "I'm Every Woman", "Papillon" and "Clouds"
Santana - "One Chain" and "Stand Up"
Michael Jackson - "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough", "Rock With You",
and "Off the Wall"
The Beach Boys - "Here Comes the Night"
Billy Preston - "Disco Dancin'", "Go for It (with Syreeta), "Give It
Up Hot" and "Just for You"
Bay City Rollers - "Don't Stop the Music"
Chicago - "Street Player"
Electric Light Orchestra - "Last Train to London", and "Shine a
Little Love"
The Pointer Sisters - "Happiness", "I'm So Excited", "Jump (For My
Love)", and "Neutron Dance"
Teddy Pendergrass - "Only You"
Phyllis Hyman - "You Know How To Love Me"
The Emotions - "Best Of My Love"
Elton John - "Victim Of Love" (whole album), "Are You Ready for
Love", "Don't Go Breaking My Heart" (with Kiki Dee), "Mama Can't Buy
You Love"
Carole King - "Disco-Tech"
James Brown - "It's Too Funky In Here"
Barry White - "Your Sweetness is My Weakness"
Bette Midler - "Big Noise from Winnetka", "My Knight in Black
Leather", and "Only in Miami"
Prince - "I Wanna Be Your Lover" and "Sexy Dancer"
Helen Reddy - "I Can't Hear You No More", "Make Love to Me", "Take
What You Find", and "Imagination"
Stephanie Mills - "What Cha Gonna Do With My Lovin'", "Put Your Body
In It", "You Can Get Over", "Sweet Sensation", "Never Knew Love Like
This Before", and "The Medicine Song"
Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons - "Who Loves You" and "December
1963 (Oh What a Night)"
Diana Ross - "Love Hangover", "The Boss", "I'm Coming Out", and
"Upside Down"
Earth, Wind and Fire - "September", "Let's Groove" and "Boogie
Wonderland"
Rod Stewart - "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"
David Byron - "African Breeze"
Olivia Newton-John - "Totally Hot", and "Xanadu"
Bill Withers - "You've Got the Stuff"
Dionne Warwick - "Once You Hit the Road", "Track of the Cat", and
"Got a Date"
Queen - "Another One Bites the Dust"
Blondie - "Heart of Glass"
The Tubes - "Prime Time"
Paul McCartney and Wings - "Goodnight Tonight" and "Silly Love
Songs"
Dead Kennedys - A "Disco Version" of their song "Kill the Poor" can
be found on the album "Live at the Deaf Club".
Hank Marvin and The Shadows - "Ghost Riders In The Sky"
Surf Punks - "Surf Instructor"; the band makes an explicit reference
to this marketing-driven "cross-over" phenomenon in the intro to
this song, where a gruff male voice (perhaps that of a
record-company executive) says "We need a goddam disco hit!", to
which the lead singer replies "O-kayyy" in time with the opening
beat of the song
Even adult contemporary vocalists were sucked into the disco
machine. Those artists included:
Johnny Mathis - "Gone, Gone, Gone"
Paul Anka - "Make It Up to Me Love"
Ann-Margret - "Love Rush", "Midnight Message" and "Everybody Needs
Somebody Sometime"
Charo - "Dance a Little Bit Closer"
Frankie Avalon - "Venus", "You're the Miracle", and "Innocent"
Engelbert Humperdinck
Ethel Merman - "There's No Business Like Show Business" - In 1979,
Merman released an entire album of disco covers of some of her
signature Broadway show tunes. This album is now a collector's item,
though it has received mixed reviews from Merman fans.
Wayne Newton - "You Stepped Into My Life"
Barbra Streisand - "The Main Event/Fight" and "No More Tears (Enough
Is Enough)" (with Donna Summer)
Eartha Kitt - "Where Is My Man"
Andy Williams - "Love Story (Where Do I Begin)"
and
Frank Sinatra - "All of You".
Many disco novelty songs sold well and were popular. Rick Dees, at
the time a radio DJ in Memphis, Tennessee, recorded what is
considered to be one of the most popular parodies of all time,
"Disco Duck".
DJs and producers
Disco music diverged from the rock of the 1960s, elevating music
from the raw sound of 4-piece garage bands to refined music composed
by producers who contracted local symphony and philharmonic
orchestras and session musicians. For the first time in three
decades, orchestral music became the preeminent sound in the
popular-music scene. Top disco music producers included Giorgio
Moroder, Patrick Adams, Biddu, Cerrone, Alec R. Costandinos, John
Davis, Gregg Diamond, Kenneth Gamble & Leon Huff, Norman Harris,
Sylvester Levay, Ian Levine, Mike Lewis, Van McCoy, Meco Monardo,
Tom Moulton, Boris Midney, Vincent Montana Jr, Randy Muller, Freddie
Perren, Laurin Rinder, Richie Rome, Warren Schatz, Harold Wheeler,
and Michael Zager, whose roles involved every aspect of production,
from composing the arrangements to conducting the 50- to 100-member
orchestras from Los Angeles, New York, Chicago and Philadelphia to
Detroit, and Miami as well as internationally in London, Berlin,
Vancouver, Montreal, Paris, Milan and New Zealand.
With as many as 64 tracks of vocals and instruments to be compiled
into a fluid composition of verses, bridges, and refrains, complete
with orchestral builds and breaks, the mixing engineers became an
important fixture in the production process, and, as a result, were
most influential in developing the "sound" of the recording through
the disco mix. Record sales were often dependent on, though not
guaranteed by, floor play in clubs. Notable DJs include Jim Burgess,
Walter Gibbons, John "Jellybean" Benitez, Rick Gianatos, Francis
Grasso (Sanctuary), Larry Levan, Ian Levine, Neil "Raz"
Rasmussen,Tee Scott,John Luongo, and David Mancuso.
Instrumentation
Instruments commonly used by disco musicians included the rhythm
guitar (most often played in "chicken-scratch" style, usually
through a wah-wah or phaser), bass, piano and electroacoustic
keyboards (most important: the Fender Rhodes piano and Wurlitzer
electric pianos and the Hohner Clavinet), harp, string synth,
violin, viola, cello, trumpet, saxophone, trombone, clarinet,
flugelhorn, French horn, tuba, English horn, oboe, flute, piccolo,
and drums, African/Latin percussion, timpani, as well a drum kit.
Electronic drums were making a debut during this era, with Simmons
and Roland drum modules appearing as pioneers in electronic
percussion. Most disco songs have a steady four-on-the-floor beat, a
quaver (or occasionally semi-quaver) hi-hat pattern with an open
hi-hat on the "off" beat, and a heavy, syncopated bassline.
This quaver pattern is often supported by other instruments such as
the rhythm guitar (lead guitar parts are rare), and may be implied
rather than explicitly present, often involving syncopation and
rarely simply on the beat unless a synthesizer is used to replace
the bass guitar.
The orchestral sound usually known as "disco sound" relies heavily
on strings and horns playing linear phrases, in unison with the
soaring, often reverberated vocals or playing instrumental fills,
while electric pianos and chicken-scratch guitars create the
background "pad" sound defining the harmony progression. Typically,
a "wall of sound" results. There are however more minimalistic
flavors of disco with reduced, transparent instrumentation,
pioneered by Chic. Dramatic minor and major seventh chords and
harmonies predominate in much disco.
Format
At first, singles were released on 7-inch 45-rpm records, 45s, which
were shorter in length and of poorer sound quality than 12-inch
singles. Motown Records was the first to market these through their
"Eye-Cue" label, but these and other 12-inch singles were the length
of the original 45s until Scepter/Wand released the first 12-inch
extended-version single in 1976: Jesse Green's "Nice and Slow" b/w
Sweet Music's "I Get Lifted" (engineered by Tom Moulton). The single
was packaged in collectible picture sleeves, a relatively new
concept at the time. 12-inch singles became commercially available
after the first crossover, Tavares' "Heaven Must Be Missing an
Angel." 12-inch singles allowed longer dance time and formal
possibilities.
Backlash in U.S. and UK
The popularity of the film Saturday Night Fever prompted the major
record labels to mass-produce hits, however, as some perceived,
turning the genre from something vital and edgy into a safe
"product" homogenized for the mass audience. Though disco music had
several years of popularity, an American anti-disco sentiment was
festering, marked by an impatient return to rock (loudly encouraged
by worried rock radio stations). Disco music and dancing fads were
depicted as not only silly (witness Frank Zappa's satirical song "Dancin'
Fool"), but effeminate. Others objected to the perceived wanton sex
and drugs that became associated with music while others were put
off by the exclusivity of the disco scene symbolized by doormen who
kept people out of discos that did not look or dress correctly while
still others objected to the then new idea of centering music around
a computerized beat instead of people.
In Britain, however, during the same year as the first American
anti-disco demonstration (see below), The Young Nationalist
publication of the far-right British National Party reported that
"disco and its melting pot pseudo-philosophy must be fought or
Britain's streets will be full of black-worshipping soul boys,"
though this had been true for twenty years with many white male
English teens considering themselves "soul freaks". The emergence of
the punk and goth scenes contributed to disco's decline.
Hard Rock versus Disco
Strong disapproval of disco among many hard rock fans existed
throughout the disco era, growing as disco's influence grew, such
that the expression "Disco Sucks" was common by the late-1970s among
these fans.
In 1979, DJs Steve Dahl and Garry Meier along with Michael Veeck
(son of the Chicago White Sox owner at the time Bill Veeck) staged a
promotional event with an anti-disco theme, Disco Demolition Night,
between games at a White Sox doubleheader. The event involved
exploding disco records, and ended in a near-riot. The second game
of the doubleheader had to be forfeited.
White male hard rock fans who spoke out against the music were
sometimes accused of prejudice for objecting to a musical idiom that
was strongly associated with minority audiences. To further
complicate matters, several prominent, popular hard rock artists
recorded songs with audible debts to disco, sometimes to strong
critical and commercial response. David Bowie's "Golden Years," and
The Rolling Stones' "Miss You," "Emotional Rescue" & Dance pt.1 are
distinguished examples of these disco-rock fusions, and artists such
as The Who Eminence Front, Rod Stewart Do ya think I'm sexy? and to
a lesser extent Queen (whose "Another One Bites The Dust" was
flavored with a bass line reminiscent of Chic's "Good Times") and
The Clash also recorded disco-informed songs Magnificent Dance &
Radio Clash. However, many of these artists were viewed as sell-outs
by there once fiercely loyal fanbase and were mocked by there rivals
within the hard rock genre. Since the advent of disco and dance
music in general, many have argued that more and more rock music has
absorbed the rhythmic sensibilities of dance, but have still
remained distictly different both in lifestyle and in musical
complexity.
The disco backlash also helped change the landscape of Top 40 radio.
Negative responses from the predominantly white listenership of many
Top 40 stations encouraged these stations to drop all disco songs
from rotation, filling the holes in their playlists with new wave,
punk rock, and AOR cuts. WLS in Chicago, KFJZ-FM in Dallas/Fort
Worth (changing into KEGL), and CHUM-AM in Toronto were among the
stations that took this approach. Interestingly, WLS continued to
list some disco songs on its record surveys in the early 1980s while
refusing to play them (for example, "Funkytown" by Lipps Inc.).
Other stations (for example, New York City's WABC) became softer
instead of harder, taking an adult contemporary approach that was
equally hostile to dance music, though less hostile to black artists
who recorded ballads such as Smokey Robinson and James Ingram. It
would be several years - until MTV's championing of Michael Jackson
and Prince - before many of these stations would allow
urban-flavored music on their playlists again.
On the other side of the coin, many all-disco radio stations on the
FM dial continued to serve the black community by evolving into
urban contemporary formats. KKDA in Dallas/Fort Worth began as a
disco station in the late 1970s, then found even greater success
after tweaking to urban contemporary in the early 1980s.
Regional styles of disco
Main article: disco orchestration
As with many forms of art, music contains many types, of which there
are distinct genres, and within which there are various styles. The
sound of a disco song, as with the sound of a song of any genre of
music, depended on the particular tastes of the artists, and the
arrangers, producers, and even the orchestra conductors and
concertmasters dictating the type of stylized playing method of each
section of the orchestra, down to the engineers and mixers who
assembled all the elements to make a fluid, cohesive sculpture of
sound through melodic continuity. Even without a very knowledgeable
ear for music, one can distinguish the stylings of Van McCoy's "The
Hustle" (1975) from those of Silver Convention's "Get Up and Boogie"
(1976), and from those of Chic's "Good Times" (1979), and Sister
Sledge's "We Are Family" (1979).
As such, many regional sounds of disco developed during the
mid-1970s, as a result of collaborative efforts of many individuals
with a legacy of formal education and training in music theory and
orchestration, whose educational backgrounds laid the foundation for
the musical genre that was to burst forth onto the dance-music scene
into what would come to be regarded as designer music. It can be
noted that many of the conductors and players of the large city
symphony and philharmonic orchestras responsible for the grand
productions of disco were seasoned veterans of orchestras throughout
the country, some even going back to the big-band era.
Some of the different regional sounds include:
The Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra as heard by groups such as MFSB,
The O'Jays, The Three Degrees, and The Ritchie Family.
The New York Philharmonic Orchestra was the foundation of the New
York Sound, which included
Van McCoy - "The Hustle" (1975)
Odyssey - "Native New Yorker" (1977)
Gerri Granger - "Can't Take My Eyes off of You" (1976)
Vicki Sue Robinson - "Turn the Beat Around" (1976)
Roberta Flack - "Back Together Again" (1979)
LaBelle - "Lady Marmalade" (1975)
The Los Angeles Symphony Orchestra was the foundation of the Los
Angeles Sound, which included:
Carrie Lucas - "Dance with Me" (1979)
Love Unlimited Orchestra - "My Sweet Summer Suite" (1976)
Tavares - "Heaven Must Be Missing an Angel" (1976)
Phyllis Hyman - "You Know How to Love Me" (1979)
High Inergy - "Shoulda Gone Dancing" (1979)
Transition from the disco sound of the 1970s to the dance sound of
the 1980s
The transition from the late-1970s disco styles to the early-1980s
dance styles can be illustrated best by analysis of the work of
specific artists, arrangers, and producers within each region,
respective to the timeperiods. Complex musical structures basically
gave way to a "one-man-band" sound produced on synthesizer
keyboards. Also, the increased addition of a slightly different
harmonic structure, with elements borrowed from blues and jazz,
(such as more prominent chords created with acoustic or electric
pianos) created a different style of "dance music" in the 1981-83
period. But by this time, the word "disco" became associated with
anything danceable, that played in discothèques, so the music
continued for a time to be called "disco" by many. Examples include
D. Train, Kashif, and Patrice Rushen. Both changes was influenced by
some of the great R&B and jazz musicians of the 70's, such as Stevie
Wonder and Herbie Hancock, who had pioneered and perfected
"one-man-band" type keyboard techniques.
Time of transition
The gradual change that occurred in the late-1970s pop-disco sound
included:
Foxy - "Get Off" and "Sex Symbol" (1978)
Donna Summer - "Bad Girls" and "Hot Stuff" (1979)
Rod Stewart- "Do You Think I'm Sexy?"(1979)
Amii Stewart - "Knock On Wood" (1979)
The Bee Gees - "Tragedy" (1979)
The aforementioned songs foreboded the events of the next decade, as
the year 1980 was a transitional time for music, especially dance
music. As the "disco sound" was phased out, faster tempos and
synthesized affects during the early-1980s dance sound, accompanied
by simplified backgrounds and guitars, directed dance music toward a
more funky and pop genre. Songs included:
Brothers Johnson - "Stomp" (1980)
Earth, Wind & Fire - "Let's Groove" (1981)
Olivia Newton-John & ELO's "Xanadu" (1980)
George Benson - "Give Me The Night" and "Love X Love" (1980)
Boz Scaggs - "Miss Sun" (1980)
Teena Marie - "Behind The Groove", "I Need Your Lovin'" (1980) and
"Square Biz" (1981)
Patrice Rushen - "Haven't You Heard" (1980) and "Forget Me Nots"
(1982)
Yarbrough & Peoples - "Don't Stop the Music" (1981)
Kool & the Gang - "Celebration" (1980), "Let's Go Dancin' (Oooh La
La La)", and "Get Down On It" (1982)
The Commodores - "Lady (You Bring Me Up)" (1981)
Rick James - "Dance Wit Me" (1980), "Give It To Me Baby", "Super
Freak" (1981) and "Cold Blooded" (1983)
Grace Jones - "Pull Up to the Bumper" (1981)
Boystown Gang - "Can't Take My Eyes Off You" (1981)
Roni Griffith - "(The Best Part of) Breaking Up" (1981)
Sylvester - "Do Ya Wanna Funk" (1982)
Michael Jackson - "Billie Jean", "Baby Be Mine", "P.Y.T." and
"Thriller" and "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'" (1982)
The Jacksons - "Lovely One" (1980) and "Can You Feel It" (1980)
The Weather Girls - "It's Raining Men" (1982)
Prince - "Uptown" (1980), "Dirty Mind" (1980), "Controversy" (1981)
and "1999" (1983)
Miquel Brown - "So Many Men, So Little Time" (1983)
The Pointer Sisters - "He's So Shy" (1980), "I'm So Excited" (1982),
"Automatic", "Jump (For My Love)" and "Neutron Dance" (1983)
Madonna - "Everybody" (1982), "Holiday", "Borderline", "Burning Up",
and "Lucky Star" (1983)
Those aforementioned exemplified the emerging dance-music form that
dropped the complicated melodic structures of the disco style, as
woodwinds, horns, and strings were replaced by synthesizers, which
mimicked their sound. Here, one can readily experience the drastic
changes, from the musical arrangements - missing all signs of
symphony-orchestration, including orchestral builds and breaks - to
the melody - missing all signs of the complicated structures of the
typical disco sound, including multiple bridges and fanciful
refrains.
Disco "spinoffs": rap and "house" music
Disco was largely succeeded for younger listeners by rap, which had
started, by rapping over disco tracks. The first commercially
popular rap hits were "Rapper's Delight" (which borrowed the bass
line from Chic's "Good Times") Jimmy Spicer's Super Rhymes & Kurtis
Blow's "The Breaks". The two styles existed side by side for a few
years, with rap sometimes being used in disco songs such as
Blondie's "Rapture", Teena Marie's "Square Biz", and Indeep's "Last
Night A DJ Saved My Life". Another style of music influenced by
disco was "House Music" with such legendary innovators such as Larry
Levan in New York, and Frankie Knuckles in Chicago in the early
1980's. Legendary clubs associated with the birth of house included
New York's 'Paradise Garage' and Chicago's "Warehouse" and "The
Music Box". Mixes incorporated here included various disco loops
overlapped with a strong bassbeat, usually computer driven, and with
longer segments intended for mixing. Afrika Bambataa released the
1982 single "Planet Rock", which drew several elements from
Kraftwerk's "Trans-Europe Express" and the previous year's
"Numbers". Electronic sounds in rap were eventually discarded in
favor of a more "raw" hip-hop sound in songs such as "The Message"
by Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five. However, the "Planet Rock"
sound also spawned a non-"hip-hop" electronic dance trend, with such
follow-ups as Planet Patrol's "Play At Your Own Risk", the same
year, followed by "One More Shot" by C-Bank; and the following year,
its popularity skyrocketed with Shannon's "Let The Music Play"
Freeze's "I.O.U.", Gwen Guthrie's "Ain't Nothin' Goin' On But The
Rent", Chaka Khan's "I Feel For You", and Midnight Star's "Freakazoid".
Electronic Dance music or House Music (later called "techno") had
now emerged as its own genre, and this became the new "disco", even
though it was not addressed as such.
"Death" and a "Retro" revival
By the year 1983, disco was said to be pretty much "dead". It did
not really have a distinctive "death", but simply blended back into
other popular styles, while spawning some new styles. It was the
synthesizer, and resulting change in the sounds, that basically
ended disco as it was known in the pre-electronic 70's, more so than
the reaction from the competing rock genre. The danceable rhythms
would live on in pop/rock, rap, techno/house music and R&B.
However in the 1990s, a revival of the original disco style began
and is exemplified by such songs as "Lemon" (1993) by U2, "Spend
Some Time" (1994) by Brand New Heavies, the album "Tales Of Acid Ice
Cream" by Awaken (1996), "Cosmic Girl" (1996) by Jamiroquai, "Who Do
You Think You Are" and "Never Give up on the Good Times" (1997) by
Spice Girls (1997), "Strong Enough" (1998) by Cher, and "Canned
Heat" by Jamiroquai (1999).
During the first half of the 2000s, there were releases by a number
of artists including "Spinning Around" and "Love at First Sight" by
Kylie Minogue (2001), "I Don't Understand It" by Ultra Nate (2001),
"Crying at the Discoteque" by Alcazar (2001), "Love Foolosophy" by
Jamiroquai (2001), "Voyager" by Daft Punk (2001), "Party In Lyceum's
Toilets" by Awaken (2001), "Murder on the Dancefloor" by Sophie
Ellis-Bextor (2001), and "Love Invincible" by Michael Franti and
Spearhead (2003) that channeled classic disco music.
In 2004 former Three Degrees lead singer Sheila Ferguson hired
Burning Vision Entertainment to create the ultimate disco music
video to accompany the release of 'A New Kind Of Medicine'with
mesmerising effect.
Most recently, Madonna has used disco themes in her latest album,
Confessions on a Dance Floor (2005). Her single "Hung Up", notably
samples ABBA's "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)".
Radio
Currently, most radio stations that play dance music or '70s-era
music will play this music and related forms such as funk and
Philadelphia soul at some point in their playlists; both major
satellite radio companies also have disco music stations in their
lineup. However, dance music stations in general are not known for
having high ratings.
See also
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
DiscoList of disco artists (A-K), List of disco artists (L-Z)
Saturday Night Fever
Disco orchestration
Repetitive music
External links
Internet radio stations playing disco music from live365.com
Who invented Disco?
Sources
Michaels, Mark (1990). The Billboard Book of Rock Arranging. ISBN
0-8230-7537-0.
Jones, Alan and Kantonen, Jussi (1999). Saturday Night Forever: The
Story of Disco. Chicago, Illinois: A Cappella Books. ISBN
1-55652-411-0.
Further reading
Brewster, Bill and Broughton, Frank (1999) Last Night a DJ Saved my
Life: the History of the Disc Jockey Headline Book Publishing Ltd.
ISBN 0-7472-6230-6
Lawrence, Tim (2004). Love Saves the Day: A History of American
Dance Music Culture, 1970-1979 . Duke University Press. ISBN
0-8223-3198-5.
Disco
Bright disco - Dance-punk - Disco polo - Euro disco - Hi-NRG - House
- Italo disco - Spacesynth
Artists - Discothèque - Nightclub - Orchestration - Other electronic
music genres
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