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Wikipedia

Disco

Disco is a genre of dance music and a subculture that emerged in the 1970s from the United States' urban nightlife scene. Its sound is typified by four-on-the-floor beats, syncopated basslines, string sections, brass and horns, electric piano, synthesizers, and electric rhythm guitars.

Disco
The ceiling of an Arlington, Texas, discothèque
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsLate 1960s – early 1970s, Philadelphia and New York City[1]
Derivative forms
Subgenres
Fusion genres
Regional scenes
Local scenes
  • New York City
  • Philadelphia
  • Miami
  • Washington, D.C.
  • San Francisco
  • Los Angeles
  • Montreal
Other topics

Disco started as a mixture of music from venues popular with Italian Americans, Hispanic and Latino Americans and Black Americans[5] in Philadelphia and New York City during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Disco can be seen as a reaction by the 1960s counterculture to both the dominance of rock music and the stigmatization of dance music at the time. Several dance styles were developed during the period of disco's popularity in the United States, including "the Bump" and "the Hustle".

In the course of the 1970s, disco music was developed further mainly by artists from the United States and Europe. Well-known artists include: ABBA, the Bee Gees, Donna Summer, Gloria Gaynor, Giorgio Moroder, Baccara, Boney M., Earth Wind & Fire, Chaka Khan, Chic, KC and the Sunshine Band, Thelma Houston, Sister Sledge, Sylvester, The Trammps and the Village People.[6][7] While performers garnered public attention, record producers working behind the scenes played an important role in developing the genre. By the late 1970s, most major U.S. cities had thriving disco club scenes, and DJs would mix dance records at clubs such as Studio 54 in Manhattan, a venue popular among celebrities. Nightclub-goers often wore expensive, extravagant outfits, consisting predominantly of loose, flowing pants or dresses for ease of movement while dancing. There was also a thriving drug subculture in the disco scene, particularly for drugs that would enhance the experience of dancing to the loud music and the flashing lights, such as cocaine and quaaludes, the latter being so common in disco subculture that they were nicknamed "disco biscuits". Disco clubs were also associated with promiscuity as a reflection of the sexual revolution of this era in popular history. Films such as Saturday Night Fever (1977) and Thank God It's Friday (1978) contributed to disco's mainstream popularity.

Disco declined as a major trend in popular music in the United States following the infamous Disco Demolition Night, and it continued to sharply decline in popularity in the U.S. during the early 1980s; however, it remained popular in Italy and some European countries throughout the 1980s, and during this time also started becoming trendy in places elsewhere including India[8] and the Middle East,[9] where they were blended with regional folk styles such as ghazals and belly dancing. Disco would eventually become a key influence in the development of electronic dance music, house music, hip hop, new wave, dance-punk, and post-disco. The style has had several newer scenes since the 1990s, and the influence of disco remains strong across American and European pop music. A revival has been underway since the early 2010s, coming to great popularity in the early 2020s. Albums that have contributed to this revival include Confessions On A Dance Floor, Random Access Memories, The Slow Rush, Cuz I Love You, Future Nostalgia, Hey U X, Melodrama, What's Your Pleasure?, About Last Night..., Róisín Machine, and Kylie Minogue's album itself titled Disco.[10][11][12][13]

Etymology

The term "disco" is shorthand for the word discothèque, a French word for "library of phonograph records" derived from "bibliothèque". The word "discothèque" had the same meaning in English in the 1950s.

"Discothèque" became used in French for a type of nightclub in Paris, France, after these had resorted to playing records during the Nazi occupation in the early 1940s. Some clubs used it as their proper name. In 1960, it was also used to describe a Parisian nightclub in an English magazine.

In the summer of 1964, a short sleeveless dress called "discotheque dress" was briefly very popular in the United States. The earliest known use for the abbreviated form "disco" described this dress and has been found in The Salt Lake Tribune on July 12, 1964, Playboy magazine used it in September of the same year to describe Los Angeles nightclubs.[14]

Vince Aletti was one of the first to describe disco as a sound or a music genre. He wrote the feature article "Discotheque Rock Paaaaarty" that appeared in Rolling Stone magazine in September 1973.[15][16][17]

Musical characteristics

 
Disco bass pattern.  Play 
 
Rock & disco drum patterns: disco features greater subdivision of the beat, which is four-to-the-floor  Play 

The music typically layered soaring, often-reverberated vocals, often doubled by horns,[citation needed] over a background "pad" of electric pianos and "chicken-scratch" rhythm guitars played on an electric guitar. Lead guitar features less frequently in disco than in rock. "The "rooster scratch" sound is achieved by lightly pressing the guitar strings against the fretboard and then quickly releasing them just enough to get a slightly muted poker [sound] while constantly strumming very close to the bridge."[18] Other backing keyboard instruments include the piano, electric organ (during early years), string synthesizers, and electromechanical keyboards such as the Fender Rhodes electric piano, Wurlitzer electric piano, and Hohner Clavinet. Donna Summer's 1977 song "I Feel Love", produced by Giorgio Moroder with a prominent Moog synthesizer on the beat, was one of the first disco tracks to use the synthesizer.[19]

The rhythm is laid down by prominent, syncopated basslines (with heavy use of broken octaves, that is, octaves with the notes sounded one after the other) played on the bass guitar and by drummers using a drum kit, African/Latin percussion, and electronic drums such as Simmons and Roland drum modules. The sound was enriched with solo lines and harmony parts played by a variety of orchestral instruments, such as harp, violin, viola, cello, trumpet, saxophone, trombone, clarinet, flugelhorn, French horn, tuba, English horn, oboe, flute (sometimes especially the alto flute and occasionally bass flute), piccolo, timpani and synth strings, string section or a full string orchestra.[citation needed]

Most disco songs have a steady four-on-the-floor beat set by a bass drum, a quaver or semi-quaver hi-hat pattern with an open hissing hi-hat on the off-beat, and a heavy, syncopated bass line.[20][21] A recording error in the 1975 song "Bad Luck" by Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes where Earl Young's hi-hat was too loud in the recording is said to have established loud hi-hats in disco.[20] Other Latin rhythms such as the rhumba, the samba, and the cha-cha-cha are also found in disco recordings, and Latin polyrhythms, such as a rhumba beat layered over a merengue, are commonplace. The quaver pattern is often supported by other instruments such as the rhythm guitar and may be implied rather than explicitly present.

Songs often use syncopation, which is the accenting of unexpected beats. In general, the difference between disco, or any dance song, and a rock or popular song is that in dance music the bass drum hits four to the floor, at least once a beat (which in 4/4 time is 4 beats per measure).[citation needed] Disco is further characterized by a 16th note division of the quarter notes as shown in the second drum pattern below, after a typical rock drum pattern.

The orchestral sound is usually known as "disco sound" relies heavily on string sections 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, all of the doubling of parts and use of additional instruments creates a rich "wall of sound". There are, however, more minimalist flavors of disco with reduced, transparent instrumentation.

Harmonically, disco music typically contains major and minor seven chords,[citation needed] which are found more often in jazz than pop music.

Production

The "disco sound" was much more costly to produce than many of the other popular music genres from the 1970s. Unlike the simpler, four-piece-band sound of funk, soul music of the late 1960s, or the small jazz organ trios, disco music often included a large band, with several chordal instruments (guitar, keyboards, synthesizer), several drum or percussion instruments (drumkit, Latin percussion, electronic drums), a horn section, a string orchestra, and a variety of "classical" solo instruments (for example, flute, piccolo, and so on).

Disco songs were arranged and composed by experienced arrangers and orchestrators, and record producers added their creative touches to the overall sound using multitrack recording techniques and effects units. Recording complex arrangements with such a large number of instruments and sections required a team that included a conductor, copyists, record producers, and mixing engineers. Mixing engineers had an important role in the disco production process, because disco songs used as many as 64 tracks of vocals and instruments. Mixing engineers and record producers, under the direction of arrangers, compiled these tracks into a fluid composition of verses, bridges, and refrains, complete with builds and breaks. Mixing engineers and record producers helped to develop the "disco sound" by creating a distinctive-sounding, sophisticated disco mix.

Early records were the "standard" three-minute version until Tom Moulton came up with a way to make songs longer so that he could take a crowd of dancers at a club to another level and keep them dancing longer. He found that it was impossible to make the 45-RPM vinyl singles of the time longer, as they could usually hold no more than five minutes of good-quality music. With the help of José Rodriguez, his remaster/mastering engineer, he pressed a single on a 10" disc instead of 7". They cut the next single on a 12" disc, the same format as a standard album. Moulton and Rodriguez discovered that these larger records could have much longer songs and remixes. 12" single records, also known as "Maxi singles", quickly became the standard format for all DJs of the disco genre.[22]

Club culture

Nightclubs

 
Blue disco quad roller skates.

By the late 1970s most major US cities had thriving disco club scenes. The largest scenes were most notably in New York City but also in Philadelphia, San Francisco, Miami, and Washington, D.C. The scene was centered on discotheques, nightclubs, and private loft parties.

In the 1970s, notable discos included "Crisco Disco", "The Sanctuary", "Leviticus", "Studio 54" and "Paradise Garage" in New York, "Artemis" in Philadelphia, "Studio One" in Los Angeles, "Dugan's Bistro" in Chicago, and "The Library" in Atlanta.[23][24]

In the late '70s, Studio 54 in Midtown Manhattan was arguably the best known nightclub in the world. This club played a major formative role in the growth of disco music and nightclub culture in general. It was operated by Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager and was notorious for the hedonism that went on within; the balconies were known for sexual encounters, and drug use was rampant. Its dance floor was decorated with an image of the "Man in the Moon" that included an animated cocaine spoon.

The "Copacabana", another New York nightclub dating to the 1940s, had a revival in the late 1970s when it embraced disco; it would become the setting of a Barry Manilow song of the same name.

In Washington, D.C., large disco clubs such as "The Pier" ("Pier 9") and "The Other Side," originally regarded exclusively as "gay bars", became particularly popular among the capital area's gay and straight college students in the late '70s.

By 1979 there were 15,000-20,000 disco nightclubs in the US, many of them opening in suburban shopping centers, hotels and restaurants. The 2001 Club franchises were the most prolific chain of disco clubs in the country.[25] Although many other attempts were made to franchise disco clubs, 2001 was the only one to successfully do so in this time frame.[26]

Sound and light equipment

 
Major disco clubs had lighted dance floors, with the lights flashing to complement the beat.
 
The reflective light disco ball was a fixture on the ceilings of many discothèques.

Powerful, bass-heavy, hi-fi sound systems were viewed as a key part of the disco club experience. "[Loft-party host David] Mancuso introduced the technologies of tweeter arrays (clusters of small loudspeakers, which emit high-end frequencies, positioned above the floor) and bass reinforcements (additional sets of subwoofers positioned at ground level) at the start of the 1970s to boost the treble and bass at opportune moments, and by the end of the decade sound engineers such as Richard Long had multiplied the effects of these innovations in venues such as the Garage."[27]

Typical lighting designs for disco dance floors could include multi-coloured lights that swirl around or flash to the beat, strobe light, an illuminated dance floor and a mirror ball.

DJs

Disco-era disc jockeys (DJs) would often remix existing songs using reel-to-reel tape machines, and add in percussion breaks, new sections, and new sounds. DJs would select songs and grooves according to what the dancers wanted, transitioning from one song to another with a DJ mixer and using a microphone to introduce songs and speak to the audiences. Other equipment was added to the basic DJ setup, providing unique sound manipulations, such as reverb, equalization, and echo effects unit. Using this equipment, a DJ could do effects such as cutting out all but the bassline of a song and then slowly mixing in the beginning of another song using the DJ mixer's crossfader. Notable U.S. disco DJs include Francis Grasso of The Sanctuary, David Mancuso of The Loft, Frankie Knuckles of the Chicago Warehouse, Larry Levan of the Paradise Garage, Nicky Siano, Walter Gibbons, Karen Mixon Cook, Jim Burgess, John "Jellybean" Benitez, Richie Kulala of Studio 54 and Rick Salsalini.

Some DJs were also record producers who created and produced disco songs in the recording studio. Larry Levan, for example, was a prolific record producer as well as a DJ. Because record sales were often dependent on dance floor play by DJs in leading nightclubs, DJs were also influential for the development and popularization of certain types of disco music being produced for record labels.

Dance

 
Disco dancers typically wore loose slacks for men and flowing dresses for women, which enabled ease of movement on the dance floor.

In the early years, dancers in discos danced in a "hang loose" or "freestyle" approach. At first, many dancers improvised their own dance styles and dance steps. Later in the disco era, popular dance styles were developed, including the "Bump", "Penguin", "Boogaloo", "Watergate" and "Robot". By October 1975 the Hustle reigned. It was highly stylized, sophisticated and overtly sexual. Variations included the Brooklyn Hustle, New York Hustle and Latin Hustle.[24]

During the disco era, many nightclubs would commonly host disco dance competitions or offer free dance lessons. Some cities had disco dance instructors or dance schools, which taught people how to do popular disco dances such as "touch dancing", "the hustle", and "the cha cha". The pioneer of disco dance instruction was Karen Lustgarten in San Francisco in 1973. Her book The Complete Guide to Disco Dancing (Warner Books 1978) was the first to name, break down and codify popular disco dances as dance forms and distinguish between disco freestyle, partner and line dances. The book topped the New York Times bestseller list for 13 weeks and was translated into Chinese, German and French.

In Chicago, the Step By Step disco dance TV show was launched with the sponsorship support of the Coca-Cola company. Produced in the same studio that Don Cornelius used for the nationally syndicated dance/music television show, Soul Train, Step by Step's audience grew and the show became a success. The dynamic dance duo of Robin and Reggie led the show. The pair spent the week teaching disco dancing to dancers in the disco clubs. The instructional show aired on Saturday mornings and had a strong following. The viewers of this would stay up all night on Fridays so they could be on the set the next morning, ready to return to the disco on Saturday night knowing with the latest personalized dance steps. The producers of the show, John Reid and Greg Roselli, routinely made appearances at disco functions with Robin and Reggie to scout out new dancing talent and promote upcoming events such as "Disco Night at White Sox Park".

In Sacramento, California, Disco King Paul Dale Roberts danced for the Guinness Book of World Records. Roberts danced for 205 hours which is the equivalent of 8 ½ days. Other dance marathons took place after Roberts held the world's record for disco dancing for a short period of time.[28]

Some notable professional dance troupes of the 1970s included Pan's People and Hot Gossip. For many dancers, a key source of inspiration for 1970s disco dancing was the film Saturday Night Fever (1977). This developed into the music and dance style of such films as Fame (1980), Disco Dancer (1982), Flashdance (1983), and The Last Days of Disco (1998). Interest in disco dancing also helped spawn dance competition TV shows such as Dance Fever (1979).

Fashion

 
Dancers at an East German discothèque in 1977

Disco fashions were very trendy in the late 1970s. Discothèque-goers often wore glamorous, expensive, and extravagant fashions for nights out at their local disco club. Some women would wear sheer, flowing dresses, such as Halston dresses or loose, flared pants. Other women wore tight, revealing, sexy clothes, such as backless halter tops, disco pants, "hot pants", or body-hugging spandex bodywear or "catsuits".[29] Men would wear shiny polyester Qiana shirts with colorful patterns and pointy, extra wide collars, preferably open at the chest. Men often wore Pierre Cardin suits, three piece suits with a vest and double-knit polyester shirt jackets with matching trousers known as the leisure suit. Men's leisure suits were typically form-fitted in some parts of the body, such as the waist and bottom, but the lower part of the pants were flared in a bell bottom style, to permit freedom of movement.[29]

During the disco era, men engaged in elaborate grooming rituals and spent time choosing fashion clothing, both activities that would have been considered "feminine" according to the gender stereotypes of the era.[29] Women dancers wore glitter makeup, sequins, or gold lamé clothing that would shimmer under the lights.[29] Bold colors were popular for both genders. Platform shoes and boots for both genders and high heels for women were popular footwear.[29] Necklaces and medallions were a common fashion accessory. Less commonly, some disco dancers wore outlandish costumes, dressed in drag, covered their bodies with gold or silver paint, or wore very skimpy outfits leaving them nearly nude; these uncommon get-ups were more likely to be seen at invitation-only New York City loft parties and disco clubs.[29]

Drug subculture

In addition to the dance and fashion aspects of the disco club scene, there was also a thriving club drug subculture, particularly for drugs that would enhance the experience of dancing to the loud, bass-heavy music and the flashing colored lights, such as cocaine[30] (nicknamed "blow"), amyl nitrite ("poppers"),[31] and the "... other quintessential 1970s club drug Quaalude, which suspended motor coordination and gave the sensation that one's arms and legs had turned to 'Jell-O.'"[32] Quaaludes were so popular at disco clubs that the drug was nicknamed "disco biscuits".[33]

Paul Gootenberg states that "[t]he relationship of cocaine to 1970s disco culture cannot be stressed enough..."[30] During the 1970s, the use of cocaine by well-to-do celebrities led to its "glamorization" and to the widely held view that it was a "soft drug".[34] LSD, marijuana, and "speed" (amphetamines) were also popular in disco clubs, and the use of these drugs "...contributed to the hedonistic quality of the dance floor experience."[35] Since disco dances were typically held in liquor licensed-nightclubs and dance clubs, alcoholic drinks were also consumed by dancers; some users intentionally combined alcohol with the consumption of other drugs, such as Quaaludes, for a stronger effect.

Eroticism and sexual liberation

According to Peter Braunstein, the "massive quantities of drugs ingested in discothèques produced the next cultural phenomenon of the disco era: rampant promiscuity and public sex. While the dance floor was the central arena of seduction, actual sex usually took place in the nether regions of the disco: bathroom stalls, exit stairwells, and so on. In other cases the disco became a kind of 'main course' in a hedonist's menu for a night out."[32] At The Saint nightclub, a high percentage of the gay male dancers and patrons would have sex in the club; they typically had unprotected sex, because in 1980, HIV-AIDS had not yet been identified.[36] At The Saint, "dancers would elope to an un[monitored] upstairs balcony to engage in sex."[36] The promiscuity and public sex at discos was part of a broader trend towards exploring a freer sexual expression in the 1970s, an era that is also associated with "swingers clubs, hot tubs, [and] key parties."[37]

In his paper, "In Defense of Disco" (1979), Richard Dyer claims eroticism as one of the three main characteristics of disco.[38] As opposed to rock music which has a very phallic centered eroticism focusing on the sexual pleasure of men over other persons, Dyer describes disco as featuring a non-phallic full body eroticism.[38] Through a range of percussion instruments, a willingness to play with rhythm, and the endless repeating of phrases without cutting the listener off, disco achieved this full body eroticism by restoring eroticism to the whole body for both sexes.[38] This allowed for the potential expression of sexualities not defined by the cock/penis, and the erotic pleasure of bodies that are not defined by a relationship to a penis.[38] The sexual liberation expressed through the rhythm of disco is further represented in the club spaces that disco grew within.

In Peter Shapiro's Modulations: A History of Electronic Music: Throbbing Words on Sound, he discusses eroticism through the technology disco utilizes to create its audacious sound.[39] The music, Shapiro states, is adjunct to "the pleasure-is-politics ethos of post-Stonewall culture." He explains how "mechano-eroticism," which links the technology used to create the unique mechanical sound of disco to eroticism, sets the genre in a new dimension of reality living outside of naturalism and heterosexuality.

He uses Donna Summer's singles "Love to Love You Baby" (1975) and "I Feel Love" (1977) as examples of the ever present relationship between the synthesized bass lines and backgrounds to the simulated sounds of orgasms. Summer's voice echoes in the tracks, and likens them to the drug-fervent, sexually liberated fans of disco who sought to free themselves through disco's "aesthetic of machine sex."[40] Shapiro sees this as an influence that creates sub-genres like hi-NRG and dub-disco, which allowed for eroticism and technology to be further explored through intense synth bass lines and alternative rhythmic techniques that tap into the entire body rather than the obvious erotic parts of the body.

The New York nightclub The Sanctuary under resident DJ Francis Grasso is a prime example of this sexual liberty. In their history of the disc jockey and club culture, Bill Brewster and Frank Broughton describe the Sanctuary as "poured full of newly liberated gay men, then shaken (and stirred) by a weighty concoction of dance music and pharmacoia of pills and potions, the result is a festivaly of carnality."[41] The Sanctuary was the "first totally uninhibited gay discotheque in America" and while sex was not allowed on the dancefloor, the dark corners, the bathrooms and the hallways of the adjacent buildings were all utilized for orgy like sexual engagements.[41]

By describing the music, drugs and liberated mentality as a trifecta coming together to create the festival of carnality, Brewster and Broughton are inciting all three as stimuli for the dancing, sex and other embodied movements that contributed to the corporeal vibrations within the Sanctuary. This supports the argument that the disco music took a role in facilitating this sexual liberation that was experienced in the discotheques. Further, this coupled with the recent legalization of abortions, the introduction of antibiotics and the pill all facilitated a culture shift around sex from one of procreation to pleasure and enjoyment fostering a very sex positive framework around discotheques.[42]

Further, in addition to gay sex being illegal in New York state, until 1973 the American Psychiatric Association classified homosexuality as an illness.[41] This law and classification coupled together can be understood to have heavily dissuaded the expression of queerness in public, as such the liberatory dynamics of discotheques can be seen as having provided space for self-realization for queer persons. David Mancuso's club/house party, The Loft, was described as having a "pansexual attitude [that] was revolutionary in a country where up until recently it had been illegal for two men to dance together unless there was a woman present; where women were legally obliged to wear at least one recognizable item of female clothing in public; and where men visiting gay bars usually carried bail money with them."[43]

History

1940s–1960s: First discotheques

Disco was mostly developed from music that was popular on the dance floor in clubs that started playing records instead of having a live band. The first discotheques mostly played swing music. Later on uptempo rhythm and blues became popular in American clubs and northern soul and glam rock records in the UK. In the early 1940s, nightclubs in Paris resorted to playing jazz records during the Nazi occupation.

Régine Zylberberg claimed to have started the first discotheque and to have been the first club DJ in 1953 in the "Whisky à Go-Go" in Paris. She installed a dance floor with coloured lights and two turntables so she could play records without having a gap in the music.[44] In October 1959, the owner of the Scotch Club in Aachen, West Germany chose to install a record player for the opening night instead of hiring a live band. The patrons were unimpressed until a young reporter, who happened to be covering the opening of the club, impulsively took control of the record player and introduced the records that he chose to play. Klaus Quirini later claimed to thus have been the world's first nightclub DJ.[14]

1960s–1974: Precursors and early disco music

During the 1960s, discotheque dancing became a European trend that was enthusiastically picked up by the American press.[14] At this time, when the discotheque culture from Europe became popular in the United States, several music genres with danceable rhythms rose to popularity and evolved into different sub-genres: rhythm and blues (originated in the 1940s), soul (late 1950s and 1960s), funk (mid-1960s) and go-go (mid-1960s and 1970s; more than "disco", the word "go-go" originally indicated a music club). Musical genres, that were primarily performed by African-American musicians would influence much of early disco.

Also during the 1960s, the Motown record label developed its own approach, described as having "1) simply structured songs with sophisticated melodies and chord changes, 2) a relentless four-beat drum pattern, 3) a gospel use of background voices, vaguely derived from the style of the Impressions, 4) a regular and sophisticated use of both horns and strings, 5) lead singers who were half way between pop and gospel music, 6) a group of accompanying musicians who were among the most dextrous, knowledgeable, and brilliant in all of popular music (Motown bassists have long been the envy of white rock bassists) and 7) a trebly style of mixing that relied heavily on electronic limiting and equalizing (boosting the high range frequencies) to give the overall product a distinctive sound, particularly effective for broadcast over AM radio."[45] Motown had many hits with early disco elements by acts like the Supremes (for instance "You Keep Me Hangin' On" in 1966), Stevie Wonder (for instance "Superstition" in 1972), The Jackson 5 and Eddie Kendricks ("Keep on Truckin'" in 1973).

At the end of the 1960s, musicians and audiences from the Black, Italian and Latino communities adopted several traits from the hippie and psychedelia subcultures. They included using music venues with a loud, overwhelming sound, free-form dancing, trippy lighting, colorful costumes, and the use of hallucinogenic drugs.[46][47][48] In addition, the perceived positivity, lack of irony, and earnestness of the hippies informed proto-disco music like MFSB's album Love Is the Message.[46][49] Partly through the success of Jimi Hendrix, psychedelic elements that were popular in rock music of the late 1960s found their way into soul and early funk music and formed the subgenre psychedelic soul. Examples can be found in the music of the Chambers Brothers, George Clinton with his Parliament-Funkadelic collective, Sly and the Family Stone and the productions of Norman Whitfield with The Temptations.

The long instrumental introductions and detailed orchestration found in psychedelic soul tracks by the Temptations are also considered as cinematic soul. In the early 1970s, Curtis Mayfield and Isaac Hayes scored hits with cinematic soul songs that were actually composed for movie soundtracks: "Superfly" (1972) and "Theme from Shaft" (1971). The latter is sometimes regarded as an early disco song.[50] From the mid-1960s to early 1970s, Philadelphia soul and New York soul developed as sub-genres that also had lavish percussion, lush string orchestra arrangements, and expensive record production processes. In the early 1970s, the Philly soul productions by Gamble and Huff evolved from the simpler arrangements of the late-1960s into a style featuring lush strings, thumping basslines, and sliding hi-hat rhythms. These elements would become typical for disco music and are found in several of the hits they produced in the early 1970s:

Other early disco tracks that helped shape disco and became popular on the dance floors of (underground) discotheque clubs and parties include:

Early disco was dominated by record producers and labels such as Salsoul Records (Ken, Stanley, and Joseph Cayre), West End Records (Mel Cheren), Casablanca (Neil Bogart), and Prelude (Marvin Schlachter), to name a few. The genre was also shaped by Tom Moulton, who wanted to extend the enjoyment of dance songs — thus creating the extended mix or "remix", going from a three-minute 45 rpm single to the much longer 12" record. Other influential DJs and remixers who helped to establish what became known as the "disco sound" included David Mancuso, Nicky Siano, Shep Pettibone, Larry Levan, Walter Gibbons, and Chicago-based Frankie Knuckles. Frankie Knuckles was not only an important disco DJ; he also helped to develop house music in the 1980s.

Disco hit the television airwaves as part of the music/dance variety show Soul Train in 1971 hosted by Don Cornelius, then Marty Angelo's Disco Step-by-Step Television Show in 1975, Steve Marcus' Disco Magic/Disco 77, Eddie Rivera's Soap Factory, and Merv Griffin's Dance Fever, hosted by Deney Terrio, who is credited with teaching actor John Travolta to dance for his role in the film Saturday Night Fever, as well as DANCE, based out of Columbia, South Carolina.

In 1974, New York City's WPIX-FM premiered the first disco radio show.[52]

Early disco culture in the United States

In the 1970s, the key counterculture of the 1960s, the hippie movement, was fading away. The economic prosperity of the previous decade had declined, and unemployment, inflation and crime rates had soared. Political issues like the backlash from the Civil Rights Movement culminating in the form of race riots, the Vietnam War, the assassinations of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and John F. Kennedy, and the Watergate scandal, left many feeling disillusioned and hopeless. The start of the '70s was marked by a shift in the consciousness of the American people: the rise of the feminist movement, identity politics, gangs, etc. very much shaped this era. Disco music and disco dancing provided an escape from negative social and economic issues.[53] The non-partnered dance style of disco music allowed people of all races and sexual orientations to enjoy the dancefloor atmosphere.[54]

In Beautiful Things in Popular Culture, Simon Frith highlights the sociability of disco and its roots in 1960s counterculture. "The driving force of the New York underground dance scene in which disco was forged was not simply that city's complex ethnic and sexual culture but also a 1960s notion of community, pleasure and generosity that can only be described as hippie", he says. "The best disco music contained within it a remarkably powerful sense of collective euphoria."[55]

The birth of disco is often claimed to be found in the private dance parties held by New York City DJ David Mancuso's home that became known as The Loft, an invitation-only non-commercial underground club that inspired many others.[17] He organized the first major party in his Manhattan home on Valentine's Day 1970 with the name "Love Saves The Day". After some months the parties became weekly events and Mancuso continued to give regular parties into the 1990s.[56] Mancuso required that the music played had to be soulful, rhythmic, and impart words of hope, redemption, or pride.[43]

When Mancuso threw his first informal house parties, the gay community (which made up much of The Loft's attendee roster) was often harassed in the gay bars and dance clubs, with many gay men carrying bail money with them to gay bars. But at The Loft and many other early, private discotheques, they could dance together without fear of police action thanks to Mancuso's underground, yet legal, policies. Vince Aletti described it "like going to party, completely mixed, racially and sexually, where there wasn't any sense of someone being more important than anyone else," and Alex Rosner reiterated this saying "It was probably about sixty percent black and seventy percent gay...There was a mix of sexual orientation, there was a mix of races, mix of economic groups. A real mix, where the common denominator was music."[43]

Film critic Roger Ebert called the popular embrace of disco's exuberant dance moves an escape from "the general depression and drabness of the political and musical atmosphere of the late seventies."[57] Pauline Kael, writing about the disco-themed film Saturday Night Fever, said the film and disco itself touched on "something deeply romantic, the need to move, to dance, and the need to be who you'd like to be. Nirvana is the dance; when the music stops, you return to being ordinary."[58]

Early disco culture in the United Kingdom

In the late 1960s, uptempo soul with heavy beats and some associated dance styles and fashion were picked up in the British mod scene and formed the northern soul movement. Originating at venues such as the Twisted Wheel in Manchester, it quickly spread to other UK dancehalls and nightclubs like the Chateau Impney (Droitwich), Catacombs (Wolverhampton), the Highland Rooms at Blackpool Mecca, Golden Torch (Stoke-on-Trent) and Wigan Casino. As the favoured beat became more uptempo and frantic in the early 1970s, northern soul dancing became more athletic, somewhat resembling the later dance styles of disco and break dancing. Featuring spins, flips, karate kicks and backdrops, club dancing styles were often inspired by the stage performances of touring American soul acts such as Little Anthony & the Imperials and Jackie Wilson.

In 1974, there were an estimated 25,000 mobile discos and 40,000 professional disc jockeys in the United Kingdom. Mobile discos were hired deejays that brought their own equipment to provide music for special events. Glam rock tracks were popular, with, for example, Gary Glitter's 1972 single "Rock and Roll Part 2" becoming popular on UK dance floors while it did not get much radio airplay.[59]

1974–1977: Rise to mainstream

From 1974 to 1977, disco music increased in popularity as many disco songs topped the charts. The Hues Corporation's "Rock the Boat" (1974), a US number-one single and million-seller, was one of the early disco songs to reach number one. The same year saw the release of "Kung Fu Fighting", performed by Carl Douglas and produced by Biddu, which reached number one in both the UK and US, and became the best-selling single of the year[60] and one of the best-selling singles of all time with 11 million records sold worldwide,[61][62] helping to popularize disco to a great extent.[61] Another notable disco success that year was George McCrae's "Rock Your Baby":[63] it became the United Kingdom's first number one chart disco single.[64][63]

In the northwestern sections of the United Kingdom, the northern soul explosion, which started in the late 1960s and peaked in 1974, made the region receptive to disco, which the region's disc jockeys were bringing back from New York City. The shift by some DJs to the newer sounds coming from the U.S.A. resulted in a split in the scene, whereby some abandoned the 1960s soul and pushed a modern soul sound which tended to be more closely aligned with disco than soul.

 

In 1975, Gloria Gaynor released her first side-long vinyl album, which included a remake of the Jackson 5's "Never Can Say Goodbye" (which, in fact, is also the album title) and two other songs, "Honey Bee" and her disco version of "Reach Out (I'll Be There)", first topped the Billboard disco/dance charts in November 1974. Later in 1978, Gaynor's number-one disco song was "I Will Survive", which was seen as a symbol of female strength and a gay anthem,[65] like her further disco hit, a 1983 remake of "I Am What I Am"; in 1979 she released "Let Me Know (I Have a Right)", a single which gained popularity in the civil rights movements. Also in 1975, Vincent Montana Jr.'s Salsoul Orchestra contributed with their Latin-flavored orchestral dance song "Salsoul Hustle", reaching number four on the Billboard Dance Chart and their 1976 hits "Tangerine" and "Nice 'n' Naasty", the first being a cover of a 1941 song.[citation needed]

Songs such as Van McCoy's 1975 "The Hustle" and the humorous Joe Tex 1977 "Ain't Gonna Bump No More (With No Big Fat Woman)" gave names to the popular disco dances "the Bump" and "the Hustle". Other notable early successful disco songs include Barry White's "You're the First, the Last, My Everything" (1974), Labelle's "Lady Marmalade" (1974), Disco-Tex and the Sex-O-Lettes' "Get Dancin'" (1974), Silver Convention's "Fly, Robin, Fly" (1975) and "Get Up and Boogie" (1976), Johnnie Taylor's "Disco Lady" (1976), and Vicki Sue Robinson's hit single, "Turn the Beat Around" (1976).

Formed by Harry Wayne Casey (a.k.a. "KC") and Richard Finch, Miami's KC and the Sunshine Band had a string of disco-definitive top-five singles between 1975 and 1977, including "Get Down Tonight", "That's the Way (I Like It)", "(Shake, Shake, Shake) Shake Your Booty", "I'm Your Boogie Man" and "Keep It Comin' Love". In this period, rock bands like the English Electric Light Orchestra featured in their songs a violin sound that became a staple of disco music, as in the 1975 hit "Evil Woman", although the genre was correctly described as orchestral rock.

Other disco producers such as Tom Moulton took ideas and techniques from dub music (which came with the increased Jamaican migration to New York City in the 1970s) to provide alternatives to the "four on the floor" style that dominated. DJ Larry Levan utilized styles from dub and jazz and remixing techniques to create early versions of house music that sparked the genre.[66]

Motown turning disco

Norman Whitfield was an influential producer and songwriter at Motown records, renowned for creating innovative "psychedelic soul" songs with many hits for Marvin Gaye, the Velvelettes, the Temptations and Gladys Knight & The Pips. From around the production of the Temptations' album Cloud Nine in 1968, he incorporated some psychedelic influences and started to produce longer, dance-friendly tracks, with more room for elaborate rhythmic instrumental parts. An example of such a long psychedelic soul track is "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone", which appeared as a single edit of almost seven minutes and an approximately 12-minute-long 12" version in 1972. By the early 70s, many of Whitfield's productions evolved more and more towards funk and disco, as heard on albums by the Undisputed Truth and the 1973 album G.I.T.: Get It Together by The Jackson 5. The Undisputed Truth, a Motown recording act assembled by Whitfield to experiment with his psychedelic soul production techniques, found success with their 1971 song "Smiling Faces Sometimes". Their disco single "You + Me = Love" (number 43) was produced by Whitfield and made number 2 on the US Dance Charts in 1976.

In 1975, Whitfield left Motown and founded his own label Whitfield records, on which also "You + Me = Love" was released. Whitfield produced some more disco hits, including "Car Wash" (1976) by Rose Royce from the album soundtrack to the 1976 film Car Wash. In 1977, singer, songwriter and producer Willie Hutch, who had been signed to Motown since 1970, now signed with Whitfield's new label, and scored a successful disco single with his song "In and Out" in 1982.

 
Diana Ross in 1976

Other Motown artists turned to disco as well. Diana Ross embraced the disco sound with her successful 1976 outing "Love Hangover" from her self-titled album. Her 1980 dance classics "Upside Down" and "I'm Coming Out" were written and produced by Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards of the group Chic. The Supremes, the group that made Ross famous, scored a handful of hits in the disco clubs without her, most notably 1976's "I'm Gonna Let My Heart Do the Walking" and, their last charted single before disbanding, 1977's "You're My Driving Wheel".

At the request of Motown that he produce songs in the disco genre, Marvin Gaye released "Got to Give It Up" in 1978, despite his dislike of disco. He vowed not to record any songs in the genre, and actually wrote the song as a parody. However, several of Gaye's songs have disco elements, including "I Want You" (1975). Stevie Wonder released the disco single "Sir Duke" in 1977 as a tribute to Duke Ellington, the influential jazz legend who had died in 1974. Smokey Robinson left the Motown group the Miracles for a solo career in 1972 and released his third solo album A Quiet Storm in 1975, which spawned and lent its name to the "Quiet Storm" musical programming format and subgenre of R&B. It contained the disco single "Baby That's Backatcha". Other Motown artists who scored disco hits include: Robinson's former group, the Miracles, with "Love Machine" (1975), Eddie Kendricks with "Keep On Truckin'" (1973), the Originals with "Down to Love Town" (1976) and Thelma Houston with her cover of the Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes song "Don't Leave Me This Way" (1976). The label continued to release successful songs into the 1980s with Rick James' "Super Freak" (1981), and the Commodores' "Lady (You Bring Me Up)" (1981).

Several of Motown's solo artists who left the label went on to have successful disco songs. Mary Wells, Motown's first female superstar with her signature song "My Guy" (written by Smokey Robinson), abruptly left the label in 1964. She briefly reappeared on the charts with the disco song "Gigolo" in 1980. Jimmy Ruffin, the elder brother of the Temptations lead singer David Ruffin, was also signed to Motown, and released his most successful and well-known song "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted" as a single in 1966. Ruffin eventually left the record label in the mid-1970s, but saw success with the 1980 disco song "Hold On (To My Love)", which was written and produced by Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees, for his album Sunrise. Edwin Starr, known for his Motown protest song "War" (1970), reentered the charts in 1979 with a pair of disco songs, "Contact" and "H.A.P.P.Y. Radio". Kiki Dee became the first white British singer to sign with Motown in the US, and released one album, Great Expectations (1970), and two singles "The Day Will Come Between Sunday and Monday" (1970) and "Love Makes the World Go Round" (1971), the latter giving her first-ever chart entry (number 87 on the US Chart). She soon left the company and signed with Elton John's The Rocket Record Company, and in 1976 had her biggest and best-known single, "Don't Go Breaking My Heart", a disco duet with John. The song was intended as an affectionate disco-style pastiche of the Motown sound, in particular the various duets recorded by Marvin Gaye with Tammi Terrell and Kim Weston.

Many Motown groups who had left the record label charted with disco songs. The Jackson 5, one of Motown's premier acts in the early 1970s, left the record company in 1975 (Jermaine Jackson, however, remained with the label) after successful songs like "I Want You Back" (1969) and "ABC" (1970), and even the disco song "Dancing Machine" (1974). Renamed as 'the Jacksons' (as Motown owned the name 'the Jackson 5'), they went on to find success with disco songs like "Blame It on the Boogie" (1978), "Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)" (1979) and "Can You Feel It?" (1981) on the Epic label.

The Isley Brothers, whose short tenure at the company had produced the song "This Old Heart of Mine (Is Weak for You)" in 1966, went on release successful disco songs like "That Lady" (1973) and "It's a Disco Night (Rock Don't Stop)" (1979). Gladys Knight and the Pips, who recorded the most successful version of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" (1967) before Marvin Gaye, scored commercially successful singles such as "Baby, Don't Change Your Mind" (1977) and "Bourgie, Bourgie" (1980) in the disco era. The Detroit Spinners were also signed to the Motown label and saw success with the Stevie Wonder-produced song "It's a Shame" in 1970. They left soon after, on the advice of fellow Detroit native Aretha Franklin, to Atlantic Records, and there had disco songs like "The Rubberband Man" (1976). In 1979, they released a successful cover of Elton John's "Are You Ready for Love", as well as a medley of the Four Seasons' song "Working My Way Back to You" and Michael Zager's "Forgive Me, Girl". The Four Seasons themselves were briefly signed to Motown's MoWest label, a short-lived subsidiary for R&B and soul artists based on the West Coast, and there the group produced one album, Chameleon (1972) – to little commercial success in the US. However, one single, "The Night", was released in Britain in 1975, and thanks to popularity from the Northern Soul circuit, reached number seven on the UK Singles Chart. The Four Seasons left Motown in 1974 and went on to have a disco hit with their song "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)" (1975) for Warner Curb Records.

Eurodisco

 
ABBA in 1974.

By far the most successful Euro disco act was ABBA (1972–1982). This Swedish quartet, which sang primarily in English, found success with singles such as "Waterloo" (1974), "Fernando" (1976), "Take a Chance on Me" (1978), "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)" (1979), and their signature smash hit "Dancing Queen" (1976)—ranks as the Fourth best-selling act of all time.

 
Italian composer Giorgio Moroder is known as the "Father of Disco".[67]
 
Donna Summer in 1977

In 1970s Munich, West Germany, music producers Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte made a decisive contribution to disco music with a string of hits for Donna Summer, which became known as the "Munich Sound".[68] In 1975, Summer suggested the lyric "Love to Love You Baby" to Moroder and Bellotte, who turned the lyric into a full disco song. The final product, which contained the vocalizations of a series of simulated orgasms, initially was not intended for release, but when Moroder played it in the clubs it caused a sensation and he released it. The song became an international hit, reaching the charts in many European countries and the US (No. 2). It has been described as the arrival of the expression of raw female sexual desire in pop music. A nearly 17-minute 12-inch single was released. The 12" single became and remains a standard in discos today.[69][70] In 1976 Donna Summer's version of "Could It Be Magic" brought disco further into the mainstream. In 1977 Summer, Moroder and Bellotte further released "I Feel Love", as the B-side of "Can't We Just Sit Down (And Talk It Over)", which revolutionized dance music with its mostly electronic production and was a massive worldwide success, spawning the Hi-NRG subgenre.[69] Giorgio Moroder was described by AllMusic as "one of the principal architects of the disco sound".[71] Another successful disco music project by Moroder at that time was Munich Machine (1976–1980).

Boney M. (1974–1986) was a West German Euro disco group of four West Indian singers and dancers masterminded by record producer Frank Farian. Boney M. charted worldwide with such songs as "Daddy Cool" (1976) "Ma Baker" (1977) and "Rivers Of Babylon" (1978). Another successful West German Euro disco recording act was Silver Convention (1974–1979). The German group Kraftwerk also had an influence on Euro disco.

 
Dalida in 1967.

In France, Dalida released "J'attendrai" ("I Will Wait") in 1975, which also became successful in Canada, Europe and Japan. Dalida successfully adjusted herself to disco era and released at least a dozen of songs that charted among top number 10 in whole Europe and wider. Claude François, who re-invented himself as the "king of French disco", released "La plus belle chose du monde", a French version of the Bee Gees song "Massachusetts", which became successful in Canada and Europe and "Alexandrie Alexandra" was posthumously released on the day of his burial and became a worldwide success. Cerrone's early songs, "Love in C Minor" (1976), "Supernature" (1977) and "Give Me Love" (1978) were successful in the US and Europe. Another Euro disco act was the French diva Amanda Lear, where Euro disco sound is most heard in "Enigma (Give a Bit of Mmh to Me)" (1978). French producer Alec Costandinos assembled the Euro disco group Love and Kisses (1977–1982).

In Italy Raffaella Carrà was the most successful Euro disco act, alongside La Bionda, Hermanas Goggi and Oliver Onions. Her greatest international single was "Tanti Auguri" ("Best Wishes"), which has become a popular song with gay audiences. The song is also known under its Spanish title "Para hacer bien el amor hay que venir al sur" (which refers to Southern Europe, since the song was recorded and taped in Spain). The Estonian version of the song "Jätke võtmed väljapoole" was performed by Anne Veski. "A far l'amore comincia tu" ("To make love, your move first") was another success for her internationally, known in Spanish as "En el amor todo es empezar", in German as "Liebelei", in French as "Puisque tu l'aimes dis le lui", and in English as "Do It, Do It Again". It was her only entry to the UK Singles Chart, reaching number 9, where she remains a one-hit wonder.[72] In 1977, she recorded another successful single, "Fiesta" ("The Party" in English) originally in Spanish, but then recorded it in French and Italian after the song hit the charts. "A far l'amore comincia tu" has also been covered in Turkish by a Turkish popstar Ajda Pekkan as "Sakın Ha" in 1977.

Recently, Carrà has gained new attention for her appearance as the female dancing soloist in a 1974 TV performance of the experimental gibberish song "Prisencolinensinainciusol" (1973) by Adriano Celentano.[73] A remixed video featuring her dancing went viral on the internet in 2008.[74][citation needed] In 2008 a video of a performance of her only successful UK single, "Do It, Do It Again", was featured in the Doctor Who episode "Midnight". Rafaella Carrà worked with Bob Sinclar on the new single "Far l'Amore" which was released on YouTube on March 17, 2011. The song charted in different European countries.[75] Another prominent European disco act was the pop group Luv' from the Netherlands.

Euro disco continued evolving within the broad mainstream pop music scene, even when disco's popularity sharply declined in the United States, abandoned by major U.S. record labels and producers.[76] Through the influence of Italo disco, it also played a role in the evolution of early house music in the early 1980s and later forms of electronic dance music, including early 1990s' Eurodance.

1977–1979: Pop preeminence

 
The Bee Gees had several disco hits on the soundtrack to Saturday Night Fever in 1977.

In December 1977, the film Saturday Night Fever was released. It was a huge success and its soundtrack became one of the best-selling albums of all time. The idea for the film was sparked by a 1976 New York magazine[77] article titled "Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night" which supposedly chronicled the disco culture in mid-1970s New York City, but was later revealed to have been fabricated.[78] Some critics said the film "mainstreamed" disco, making it more acceptable to heterosexual white males.[79]

The Bee Gees used Barry Gibb's falsetto to garner hits such as "You Should Be Dancing", "Stayin' Alive", "Night Fever", "More Than A Woman" and "Love You Inside Out". Andy Gibb, a younger brother to the Bee Gees, followed with similarly styled solo singles such as "I Just Want to Be Your Everything", "(Love Is) Thicker Than Water" and "Shadow Dancing".

In 1978, Donna Summer's multi-million selling vinyl single disco version of "MacArthur Park" was number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for three weeks and was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. The recording, which was included as part of the "MacArthur Park Suite" on her double live album Live and More, was eight minutes and 40 seconds long on the album. The shorter seven-inch vinyl single version of MacArthur Park was Summer's first single to reach number one on the Hot 100; it does not include the balladic second movement of the song, however. A 2013 remix of "MacArthur Park" by Summer topped the Billboard Dance Charts marking five consecutive decades with a number-one song on the charts.[80] From mid-1978 to late 1979, Summer continued to release singles such as "Last Dance", "Heaven Knows" (with Brooklyn Dreams), "Hot Stuff", "Bad Girls", "Dim All the Lights" and "On the Radio", all very successful songs, landing in the top five or better, on the Billboard pop charts.

The band Chic was formed mainly by guitarist Nile Rodgers—a self-described "street hippie" from late 1960s New York—and bassist Bernard Edwards. Their popular 1978 single, "Le Freak", is regarded as an iconic song of the genre. Other successful songs by Chic include the often-sampled "Good Times" (1979), "I Want Your Love" (1979), and "Everybody Dance" (1979). The group regarded themselves as the disco movement's rock band that made good on the hippie movement's ideals of peace, love, and freedom. Every song they wrote was written with an eye toward giving it "deep hidden meaning" or D.H.M.[81]

Sylvester, a flamboyant and openly gay singer famous for his soaring falsetto voice, scored his biggest disco hit in late 1978 with "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)". His singing style was said to have influenced the singer Prince. At that time, disco was one of the forms of music most open to gay performers.[82]

The Village People were a singing/dancing group created by Jacques Morali and Henri Belolo to target disco's gay audience. They were known for their onstage costumes of typically male-associated jobs and ethnic minorities and achieved mainstream success with their 1978 hit song "Macho Man". Other songs include "Y.M.C.A." (1979) and "In the Navy" (1979).

Also noteworthy are The Trammps' "Disco Inferno" (1976), (1978, reissue due to the popularity gained from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack), Evelyn "Champagne" King's "Shame" (1977), A Taste of Honey's "Boogie Oogie Oogie" (1978), Cheryl Lynn's "Got to Be Real" (1978), Alicia Bridges' "I Love the Nightlife" (1978), Patrick Hernandez's "Born to Be Alive" (1978), Earth, Wind & Fire's "September" (1978), Peaches & Herb's "Shake Your Groove Thing" (1978), Sister Sledge's "We Are Family" (1979), Anita Ward's "Ring My Bell" (1979), Kool & the Gang's "Ladies' Night" (1979), Stephanie Mills's "What Cha Gonna Do with My Lovin'" (1979), Lipps Inc.'s "Funkytown" (1980), The Brothers Johnson's "Stomp!" (1980), George Benson's "Give Me the Night" (1980), Donna Summer's "Sunset People" (1980), and Walter Murphy's various attempts to bring classical music to the mainstream, most notably his disco song "A Fifth of Beethoven" (1976), which was inspired by Beethoven's fifth symphony.

At the height of its popularity, many non-disco artists recorded songs with disco elements, such as Rod Stewart with his "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" in 1979.[83] Even mainstream rock artists adopted elements of disco. Progressive rock group Pink Floyd used disco-like drums and guitar in their song "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" (1979),[84] which became their only number-one single in both the US and UK. The Eagles referenced disco with "One of These Nights" (1975)[85] and "Disco Strangler" (1979), Paul McCartney & Wings with "Silly Love Songs" (1976) and "Goodnight Tonight" (1979), Queen with "Another One Bites the Dust" (1980), the Rolling Stones with "Miss You" (1978) and "Emotional Rescue" (1980), Stephen Stills with his album Thoroughfare Gap (1978), Electric Light Orchestra with "Shine a Little Love" and "Last Train to London" (both 1979), Chicago with "Street Player" (1979), the Kinks with "(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman" (1979), the Grateful Dead with "Shakedown Street", The Who with "Eminence Front" (1982), and the J. Geils Band with "Come Back" (1980). Even hard rock group KISS jumped in with "I Was Made for Lovin' You" (1979),[86] and Ringo Starr's album Ringo the 4th (1978) features a strong disco influence.

The disco sound was also adopted by artists from other genres, including the 1979 U.S. number one hit "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)" by easy listening singer Barbra Streisand in a duet with Donna Summer. In country music, in an attempt to appeal to the more mainstream market, artists began to add pop/disco influences to their music. Dolly Parton launched a successful crossover onto the pop/dance charts, with her albums Heartbreaker and Great Balls of Fire containing songs with a disco flair. In particular, a disco remix of the track "Baby I'm Burnin'" peaked at number 15 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart; ultimately becoming one of the years biggest club hits.[87] Additionally, Connie Smith covered Andy Gibb's "I Just Want to Be Your Everything" in 1977, Bill Anderson recorded "Double S" in 1978, and Ronnie Milsap released "Get It Up" and covered blues singer Tommy Tucker's song "Hi-Heel Sneakers" in 1979.

Pre-existing non-disco songs, standards, and TV themes were frequently "disco-ized" in the 1970s, such as the I Love Lucy theme (recorded as "Disco Lucy" by the Wilton Place Street Band), "Aquarela do Brasil" (recorded as "Brazil" by The Ritchie Family), and "Baby Face" (recorded by the Wing and a Prayer Fife and Drum Corps). The rich orchestral accompaniment that became identified with the disco era conjured up the memories of the big band era—which brought out several artists that recorded and disco-ized some big band arrangements, including Perry Como, who re-recorded his 1945 song "Temptation", in 1975, as well as Ethel Merman, who released an album of disco songs entitled The Ethel Merman Disco Album in 1979.

Myron Floren, second-in-command on The Lawrence Welk Show, released a recording of the "Clarinet Polka" entitled "Disco Accordion." Similarly, Bobby Vinton adapted "The Pennsylvania Polka" into a song named "Disco Polka". Easy listening icon Percy Faith, in one of his last recordings, released an album entitled Disco Party (1975) and recorded a disco version of his "Theme from A Summer Place" in 1976. Even classical music was adapted for disco, notably Walter Murphy's "A Fifth of Beethoven" (1976, based on the first movement of Beethoven's 5th Symphony) and "Flight 76" (1976, based on Rimsky-Korsakov's "Flight of the Bumblebee"), and Louis Clark's Hooked On Classics series of albums and singles.

 
The a cappella jazz group the Manhattan Transfer had a disco hit with the 1979 "Twilight Zone/Twilight Tone" theme.

Many original television theme songs of the era also showed a strong disco influence, such as S.W.A.T. (1975), Wonder Woman (1975), Charlie's Angels (1976), NBC Saturday Night At The Movies (1976), The Love Boat (1977), The Donahue Show (1977), CHiPs (1977), The Professionals (1977), Dallas (1978), NBC Sports broadcasts (1978), Kojak (1977), and The Hollywood Squares (1979).

Disco jingles also made their way into many TV commercials, including Purina's 1979 "Good Mews" cat food commercial[88] and an "IC Light" commercial by Pittsburgh's Iron City Brewing Company.

Parodies

Several parodies of the disco style were created. Rick Dees, at the time a radio DJ in Memphis, Tennessee, recorded "Disco Duck" (1976) and "Dis-Gorilla" (1977); Frank Zappa parodied the lifestyles of disco dancers in "Disco Boy" on his 1976 Zoot Allures album and in "Dancin' Fool" on his 1979 Sheik Yerbouti album; "Weird Al" Yankovic's eponymous 1983 debut album includes a disco song called "Gotta Boogie", an extended pun on the similarity of the disco move to the American slang word "booger". Comedian Bill Cosby devoted his entire 1977 album Disco Bill to disco parodies. In 1980, Mad Magazine released a flexi-disc titled Mad Disco featuring six full-length parodies of the genre. Rock and roll songs critical of disco included Bob Seger's "Old Time Rock and Roll" and, especially, The Who's "Sister Disco" (both 1978)—although The Who's "Eminence Front" (four years later) had a disco feel.

1979–1981: Controversy and decline in popularity

 
A man wearing a "disco sucks" T-shirt.

By the end of the 1970s, anti-disco sentiment developed among rock music fans and musicians, particularly in the United States.[89][90] Disco was criticized as mindless, consumerist, overproduced and escapist.[91] The slogans "Disco sucks" and "Death to disco"[89] became common. Rock artists such as Rod Stewart and David Bowie who added disco elements to their music were accused of selling out.[92][93]

The punk subculture in the United States and United Kingdom was often hostile to disco,[89] although in the UK, many early Sex Pistols fans such as the Bromley Contingent and Jordan liked disco, often congregating at nightclubs such as Louise's in Soho and the Sombrero in Kensington. The track "Love Hangover" by Diana Ross, the house anthem at the former, was cited as a particular favourite by many early UK punks.[94] The film The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle and its soundtrack album contained a disco medley of Sex Pistols songs, entitled Black Arabs and credited to a group of the same name.

However, Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys, in the song "Saturday Night Holocaust", likened disco to the cabaret culture of Weimar-era Germany for its apathy towards government policies and its escapism. Mark Mothersbaugh of Devo said that disco was "like a beautiful woman with a great body and no brains", and a product of political apathy of that era.[95] New Jersey rock critic Jim Testa wrote "Put a Bullet Through the Jukebox", a vitriolic screed attacking disco that was considered a punk call to arms.[96] Steve Hillage, shortly prior to his transformation from a progressive rock musician into an electronic artist at the end of the 1970s with the inspiration of disco, disappointed his rockist fans by admitting his love for disco, with Hillage recalling "it's like I'd killed their pet cat."[97]

Anti-disco sentiment was expressed in some television shows and films. A recurring theme on the show WKRP in Cincinnati was a hostile attitude towards disco music. In one scene of the 1980 comedy film Airplane!, a wayward airplane slices a radio tower with its wing, knocking out an all-disco radio station.[98] July 12, 1979, became known as "the day disco died" because of the Disco Demolition Night, an anti-disco demonstration in a baseball double-header at Comiskey Park in Chicago.[99] Rock station DJs Steve Dahl and Garry Meier, along with Michael Veeck, son of Chicago White Sox owner Bill Veeck, staged the promotional event for disgruntled rock fans between the games of a White Sox doubleheader which involved exploding disco records in centerfield. As the second game was about to begin, the raucous crowd stormed onto the field and proceeded by setting fires, tearing out seats and pieces of turf, and other damage. The Chicago Police Department made numerous arrests, and the extensive damage to the field forced the White Sox to forfeit the second game to the Detroit Tigers, who had won the first game.

Disco's decline in popularity after Disco Demolition Night was rapid. On July 12, 1979, the top six records on the U.S. music charts were disco songs.[100] By September 22, there were no disco songs in the US Top 10 chart, with the exception of Herb Alpert's instrumental "Rise", a smooth jazz composition with some disco overtones.[100] Some in the media, in celebratory tones, declared disco "dead" and rock revived.[100] Karen Mixon Cook, the first female disco DJ, stated that people still pause every July 12 for a moment of silence in honor of disco. Dahl stated in a 2004 interview that disco was "probably on its way out [at the time]. But I think it [Disco Demolition Night] hastened its demise".[101]

Impact on music industry

The anti-disco movement, combined with other societal and radio industry factors, changed the face of pop radio in the years following Disco Demolition Night. Starting in the 1980s, country music began a slow rise in American main pop charts. Emblematic of country music's rise to mainstream popularity was the commercially successful 1980 movie Urban Cowboy. The continued popularity of power pop and the revival of oldies in the late 1970s was also related to disco's decline; the 1978 film Grease was emblematic of this trend. Coincidentally, the star of both films was John Travolta, who in 1977 had starred in Saturday Night Fever, which remains one of the most iconic disco films of the era.

During this period of decline in disco's popularity, several record companies folded, were reorganized, or were sold. In 1979, MCA Records purchased ABC Records, absorbed some of its artists, and then shut the label down. Midsong International Records ceased operations in 1980. RSO Records founder Robert Stigwood left the label in 1981 and TK Records closed in the same year. Salsoul Records continues to exist in the 2000s, but primarily is used as a reissue brand.[102] Casablanca Records had been releasing fewer records in the 1980s, and was shut down in 1986 by parent company PolyGram.

Many groups that were popular during the disco period subsequently struggled to maintain their success—even those that tried to adapt to evolving musical tastes. The Bee Gees, for instance, had only one top-10 entry (1989's "One") and three more top-40 songs (despite recording and releasing far more than that and completely abandoning disco in their 1980s and 1990s songs) in the United States after the 1970s, even though numerous songs they wrote and had other artists perform were successful. Of the handful of groups not taken down by disco's fall from favor, Kool and the Gang, Donna Summer, the Jacksons and Gloria Gaynor in particular—stand out: In spite of having helped define the disco sound early on,[103] they continued to make popular and danceable, if more refined, songs for yet another generation of music fans in the 1980s and beyond. Earth, Wind & Fire also survived the anti-disco trend and continued to produce successful singles at roughly the same pace for several more years, in addition to an even longer string of R&B chart hits that lasted into the 1990s.

Six months prior to the chaotic event (in December 1978), popular progressive rock radio station WDAI (WLS-FM) had suddenly switched to an all-disco format, disenfranchising thousands of Chicago rock fans and leaving Dahl unemployed. WDAI, who survived the change of public sentiment and still had good ratings at this point, continued to play disco until it flipped to a short-lived hybrid Top 40/rock format in May 1980. Another disco outlet that also competed against WDAI at the time, WGCI-FM, would later incorporate R&B and pop songs into the format, eventually evolving into an urban contemporary outlet that it continues with today. The latter also helped bring the Chicago house genre to the airwaves.

Factors contributing to disco's decline

Factors that have been cited as leading to the decline of disco in the United States include economic and political changes at the end of the 1970s, as well as burnout from the hedonistic lifestyles led by participants.[104] In the years since Disco Demolition Night, some social critics have described the "Disco sucks" movement as implicitly macho and bigoted, and an attack on non-white and non-heterosexual cultures.[89][93][99] It was also interpreted being part of a wider cultural "backlash", the move towards conservatism,[105] that also made its way into US politics with the election of conservative president Ronald Reagan in 1980, which also led to Republican control of the United States Senate for the first time since 1954, plus the subsequent rise of the Religious Right around the same time.

In January 1979, rock critic Robert Christgau argued that homophobia, and most likely racism, were reasons behind the movement,[92] a conclusion seconded by John Rockwell. Craig Werner wrote: "The Anti-disco movement represented an unholy alliance of funkateers and feminists, progressives and puritans, rockers and reactionaries. Nonetheless, the attacks on disco gave respectable voice to the ugliest kinds of unacknowledged racism, sexism and homophobia."[106] Legs McNeil, founder of the fanzine Punk, was quoted in an interview as saying, "the hippies always wanted to be black. We were going, 'fuck the blues, fuck the black experience'." He also said that disco was the result of an "unholy" union between homosexuals and blacks.[107]

Steve Dahl, who had spearheaded Disco Demolition Night, denied any racist or homophobic undertones to the promotion, saying, "It's really easy to look at it historically, from this perspective, and attach all those things to it. But we weren't thinking like that."[93] It has been noted that British punk rock critics of disco were very supportive of the pro-black/anti-racist reggae genre as well as the more pro-gay new romantics movement.[89] Christgau and Jim Testa have said that there were legitimate artistic reasons for being critical of disco.[92][96]

In 1979, the music industry in the United States underwent its worst slump in decades, and disco, despite its mass popularity, was blamed. The producer-oriented sound was having difficulty mixing well with the industry's artist-oriented marketing system.[108] Harold Childs, senior vice president at A&M Records, reportedly told the Los Angeles Times that "radio is really desperate for rock product" and "they're all looking for some white rock-n-roll".[99] Gloria Gaynor argued that the music industry supported the destruction of disco because rock music producers were losing money and rock musicians were losing the spotlight.[109]

1981–1989: Aftermath

Birth of electronic dance music

Disco was instrumental in the development of electronic dance music genres like house, techno and eurodance. The Eurodisco song I Feel Love, produced by Giorgio Moroder for Donna Summer in 1976, has been described as a milestone and blueprint for electronic dance music because it was the first to combine repetitive synthesizer loops with a continuous four-on-the-floor bass drum and an off-beat hi-hat, which would become a main feature of techno and house ten years later.[68][69][110]

During the first years of the 1980s, the traditional disco sound characterized by complex arrangements performed by large ensembles of studio session musicians (including a horn section and an orchestral string section) began to be phased out, and faster tempos and synthesized effects, accompanied by guitar and simplified backgrounds, moved dance music toward electronic and pop genres, starting with hi-NRG. Despite its decline in popularity, so-called club music and European-style disco much remained "relatively" successful in the early 1980s with songs like, Aneka's "Japanese Boy", The Gap Band's "You Dropped a Bomb on Me", The Weather Girls's "It's Raining Men", Donna Summer's "She Works Hard for the Money", Irene Cara's "Flashdance... What a Feeling" (theme to the film Flashdance, Madonna's "Lucky Star", Laura Branigan's "Self Control", The Pointer Sisters's album, "Break Out", Exposé's "Point of No Return", Val Young's "If You Should Ever Be Lonely", and The Whispers's "Rock Steady". However, a revival of the traditional-style disco called nu-disco has been popular since the 1990s.

House music displayed a strong disco influence, which is why house music, regarding its enormous success in shaping electronic dance music and contemporary club culture, is often described being "disco's revenge."[111] Early house music was generally dance-based music characterized by repetitive four on the floor beats, rhythms mainly provided by drum machines,[112] off-beat hi-hat cymbals, and synthesized basslines. While house displayed several characteristics similar to disco music, it was more electronic and minimalist,[112] and the repetitive rhythm of house was more important than the song itself. As well, house did not use the lush string sections that were a key part of the disco sound.

Legacy

DJ culture

 
Classic DJ Station. A DJ mixer is placed between two Technics SL-1200 MK 2 turntables.

The rising popularity of disco came in tandem with developments in the role of the DJ. DJing developed from the use of multiple record turntables and DJ mixers to create a continuous, seamless mix of songs, with one song transitioning to another with no break in the music to interrupt the dancing. The resulting DJ mix differed from previous forms of dance music in the 1960s, which were oriented towards live performances by musicians. This in turn affected the arrangement of dance music, since songs in the disco era typically contained beginnings and endings marked by a simple beat or riff that could be easily used to transition to a new song. The development of DJing was also influenced by new turntablism techniques, such as beatmatching and scratching, a process facilitated by the introduction of new turntable technologies such as the Technics SL-1200 MK 2, first sold in 1978, which had a precise variable pitch control and a direct drive motor. DJs were often avid record collectors, who would hunt through used record stores for obscure soul records and vintage funk recordings. DJs helped to introduce rare records and new artists to club audiences.

 
Disco dance performance at the 30th anniversary of Kontula in Helsinki, Finland, in 1994

In the 1970s, individual DJs became more prominent, and some DJs, such as Larry Levan, the resident at Paradise Garage, Jim Burgess, Tee Scott and Francis Grasso became famous in the disco scene. Levan, for example, developed a cult following among club-goers, who referred to his DJ sets as "Saturday Mass". Some DJs would use reel-to-reel tape recorders to make remixes and tape edits of songs. Some DJs who were making remixes made the transition from the DJ booth to becoming a record producer, notably Burgess. Scott developed several innovations. He was the first disco DJ to use three turntables as sound sources, the first to simultaneously play two beat matched records, the first user of electronic effects units in his mixes and an innovator in mixing dialogue in from well-known movies into his mixes, typically over a percussion break. These mixing techniques were also applied to radio DJs, such as Ted Currier of WKTU and WBLS. Grasso is particularly notable for taking the DJ "profession out of servitude and [making] the DJ the musical head chef".[113] Once he entered the scene, the DJ was no longer responsible for waiting on the crowd hand and foot, meeting their every song request. Instead, with increased agency and visibility, the DJ was now able to use their own technical and creative skills to whip up a nightly special of innovative mixes, refining their personal sound and aesthetic, and building their own reputation.[114]

Post-disco

The post-disco sound and genres associated with it originated in the 1970s and early 1980s with R&B and post-punk musicians focusing on a more electronic and experimental side of disco, spawning boogie, Italo disco, and alternative dance. Drawing from a diverse range of non-disco influences and techniques, such as the "one-man band" style of Kashif and Stevie Wonder and alternative approaches of Parliament-Funkadelic, it was driven by synthesizers, keyboards, and drum machines. Post-disco acts include D. Train, Patrice Rushen, ESG, Bill Laswell, Arthur Russell. Post-disco had an important influence on dance-pop and was bridging classical disco and later forms of electronic dance music.[115]

Early hip hop

The disco sound had a strong influence on early hip hop. Most of the early hip hop songs were created by isolating existing disco bass-guitar lines and dubbing over them with MC rhymes. The Sugarhill Gang used Chic's "Good Times" as the foundation for their 1979 song "Rapper's Delight", generally considered to be the song that first popularized rap music in the United States and around the world.

With synthesizers and Krautrock influences, that replaced the previous disco foundation, a new genre was born when Afrika Bambaataa released the single "Planet Rock," spawning a hip hop electronic dance trend that includes songs such as Planet Patrol's "Play at Your Own Risk" (1982), C-Bank's "One More Shot" (1982), Cerrone's "Club Underworld" (1984), Shannon's "Let the Music Play" (1983), Freeez's "I.O.U." (1983), Midnight Star's "Freak-a-Zoid" (1983), Chaka Khan's "I Feel For You" (1984).

House music and rave culture

 
Like disco, house music was based around DJs creating mixes for dancers in clubs. Pictured is DJ Miguel Migs, mixing using CDJ players.

House music is a genre of electronic dance music that originated in Chicago in the early 1980s (also see: Chicago house). It quickly spread to other American cities such as Detroit, where it developed into the harder and more industrial techno, New York City (also see: garage house) and Newark – all of which developed their own regional scenes.

In the mid- to late 1980s, house music became popular in Europe as well as major cities in South America, and Australia.[116] Early house music commercial success in Europe saw songs such as "Pump Up The Volume" by MARRS (1987), "House Nation" by House Master Boyz and the Rude Boy of House (1987), "Theme from S'Express" by S'Express (1988) and "Doctorin' the House" by Coldcut (1988) in the pop charts. Since the early to mid-1990s, house music has been infused in mainstream pop and dance music worldwide.

House music in the 2010s, while keeping several of these core elements, notably the prominent kick drum on every beat, varies widely in style and influence, ranging from the soulful and atmospheric deep house to the more aggressive acid house or the minimalist microhouse. House music has also fused with several other genres creating fusion subgenres,[112] such as euro house, tech house, electro house and jump house.

 
Strobing lights flash at a rave dance event in Vienna, 2005

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, rave culture began to emerge from the house and acid house scene.[117] Like house, it incorporated disco culture's same love of dance music played by DJs over powerful sound systems, recreational drug and club drug exploration, sexual promiscuity, and hedonism. Although disco culture started out underground, it eventually thrived in the mainstream by the late 1970s, and major labels commodified and packaged the music for mass consumption. In contrast, the rave culture started out underground and stayed (mostly) underground. In part, this was to avoid the animosity that was still surrounding disco and dance music. The rave scene also stayed underground to avoid law enforcement attention that was directed at the rave culture due to its use of secret, unauthorized warehouses for some dance events and its association with illegal club drugs like ecstasy.

Post-punk

The post-punk movement that originated in the late 1970s both supported punk rock's rule breaking while rejecting its move back to raw rock music.[118] Post-punk's mantra of constantly moving forward lent itself to both openness to and experimentation with elements of disco and other styles.[118] Public Image Limited is considered the first post-punk group.[118] The group's second album Metal Box fully embraced the "studio as instrument" methodology of disco.[118] The group's founder John Lydon, the former lead singer for the Sex Pistols, told the press that disco was the only music he cared for at the time.

No wave was a subgenre of post-punk centered in New York City.[118] For shock value, James Chance, a notable member of the no wave scene, penned an article in the East Village Eye urging his readers to move uptown and get "trancin' with some superradioactive disco voodoo funk". His band James White and the Blacks wrote a disco album titled Off White.[118] Their performances resembled those of disco performers (horn section, dancers and so on).[118] In 1981 ZE Records led the transition from no wave into the more subtle mutant disco (post-disco/punk) genre.[118] Mutant disco acts such as Kid Creole and the Coconuts, Was Not Was, ESG and Liquid Liquid influenced several British post-punk acts such as New Order, Orange Juice and A Certain Ratio.[118]

Nu-disco

Nu-disco is a 21st-century dance music genre associated with the renewed interest in 1970s and early 1980s disco,[119] mid-1980s Italo disco, and the synthesizer-heavy Euro disco aesthetics.[120] The moniker appeared in print as early as 2002, and by mid-2008 was used by record shops such as the online retailers Juno and Beatport.[121] These vendors often associate it with re-edits of original-era disco music, as well as with music from European producers who make dance music inspired by original-era American disco, electro and other genres popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It is also used to describe the music on several American labels that were previously associated with the genres electroclash and French house.

Revivals and return to mainstream success

1990s resurgence

In the 1990s, after a decade of backlash, disco and its legacy became more accepted by pop music artists and listeners alike, as more songs, films, and compilations were released that referenced disco. This was part of a wave of 1970s nostalgia that was taking place in popular culture at the time. Examples of songs during this time that were influenced by disco included Deee-Lite's "Groove Is in the Heart" (1990), U2's "Lemon" (1993), Blur's "Girls & Boys" (1994) and "Entertain Me" (1995), Pulp's "Disco 2000" (1995), and Jamiroquai's "Canned Heat" (1999), while films such as Boogie Nights (1997) and The Last Days of Disco (1998) featured primarily disco soundtracks.

2000s resurgence

 
Students from Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, Mexico City dancing to disco during a cultural event on campus

In the early 2000s, an updated genre of disco called "nu-disco" began breaking into the mainstream. A few examples like Daft Punk's "One More Time" and Kylie Minogue's "Love at First Sight" and "Can't Get You Out of My Head" became club favorites and commercial successes. Several nu-disco songs were crossovers with funky house, such as Spiller's "Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)" and Modjo's "Lady (Hear Me Tonight)", both songs sampling older disco songs and both reaching number one on the UK Singles Chart in 2000. Robbie Williams' disco single "Rock DJ" was the UK's fourth best-selling single the same year. Jamiroquai´s song "Little L" and "Murder on the Dancefloor" by Sophie Ellis-Bextor were hits on 2001 too. Rock band Manic Street Preachers released a disco song, "Miss Europa Disco Dancer", in 2001. The song's disco influence, which appears on Know Your Enemy, was described as being "much-discussed".[122] In 2005, Madonna immersed herself in the disco music of the 1970s, and released her album Confessions on a Dance Floor to rave reviews. In addition to that, her song "Hung Up" became a major top-10 song and club staple, and sampled ABBA's 1979 song "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)". In addition to her disco-influenced attire to award shows and interviews, her Confessions Tour also incorporated various elements of the 1970s, such as disco balls, a mirrored stage design, and the roller derby. In 2006, Jessica Simpson released her album A Public Affair inspired on disco and 1980s Music. The first single of the album A Public Affair was reviewed as a disco-dancing competition influenced by Madonna's early works. The video of the song was filmed on a skating rink and features a line dance of hands.[123][124][125]

The success of the "nu-disco" revival of the early 2000s was described by music critic Tom Ewing as more interpersonal than the pop music of the 1990s: "The revival of disco within pop put a spotlight on something that had gone missing over the 90s: a sense of music not just for dancing, but for dancing with someone. Disco was a music of mutual attraction: cruising, flirtation, negotiation. Its dancefloor is a space for immediate pleasure, but also for promises kept and otherwise. It's a place where things start, but their resolution, let alone their meaning, is never clear. All of 2000s great disco number ones explore how to play this hand. Madison Avenue look to impose their will upon it, to set terms and roles. Spiller is less rigid. 'Groovejet' accepts the night's changeability, happily sells out certainty for an amused smile and a few great one-liners."[126]

2010s resurgence

In 2013, several 1970s-style disco and funk songs charted, and the pop charts had more dance songs than at any other point since the late 1970s.[127] The biggest disco song of the year as of June was "Get Lucky" by Daft Punk, featuring Nile Rodgers on guitar. Random Access Memories also ended up winning Album of the Year at the 2014 Grammys.[127][128] Other disco-styled songs that made it into the top 40 were Robin Thicke's "Blurred Lines" (number one), Justin Timberlake's "Take Back the Night" (number 29), Bruno Mars' "Treasure" (number five)[127][128] Arcade Fire's Reflektor featured strong disco elements. In 2014, disco music could be found in Lady Gaga's Artpop[129][130] and Katy Perry's "Birthday".[131] Other disco songs from 2014 include "I Want It All" By Karmin, 'Wrong Club" by the Ting Tings, "Blow" by Beyoncé and the William Orbit mix of "Let Me in Your Heart Again" by Queen.

In 2014 Brazilian Globo TV, the second biggest television network in the world, aired Boogie Oogie, a telenovela about the Disco Era that takes place between 1978 and 1979, from the hit fever to the decadence. The show's success was responsible for a Disco revival across the country, bringing back to stage, and to Brazilian record charts, local disco divas like Lady Zu and As Frenéticas.

Other top-10 entries from 2015 like Mark Ronson's disco groove-infused "Uptown Funk", Maroon 5's "Sugar", the Weeknd's "Can't Feel My Face" and Jason Derulo's "Want To Want Me" also ascended the charts and have a strong disco influence. Disco mogul and producer Giorgio Moroder also re-appeared with his new album Déjà Vu in 2015 which has proved to be a modest success. Other songs from 2015 like "I Don't Like It, I Love It" by Flo Rida, "Adventure of a Lifetime" by Coldplay, "Back Together" by Robin Thicke and "Levels" by Nick Jonas feature disco elements as well. In 2016, disco songs or disco-styled pop songs are showing a strong presence on the music charts as a possible backlash to the 1980s-styled synthpop, electro house, and dubstep that have been dominating the current charts. Justin Timberlake's 2016 song "Can't Stop the Feeling!", which shows strong elements of disco, became the 26th song to debut at number-one on the Billboard Hot 100 in the history of the chart. The Martian, a 2015 film, extensively uses disco music as a soundtrack, although for the main character, astronaut Mark Watney, there's only one thing worse than being stranded on Mars: it's being stranded on Mars with nothing but disco music.[132] "Kill the Lights", featured on an episode of the HBO television series "Vinyl" (2016) and with Nile Rodgers' guitar licks, hit number one on the US Dance chart in July 2016.

2020s resurgence

 
British singer Dua Lipa has been credited by music critics with leading the revival of disco following the widespread international success of her single "Don't Start Now" and her album Future Nostalgia.[133]

In 2020, disco continued its mainstream popularity and has become a recent fad in popular music.[134][135] In early 2020, disco-influenced hits such as Doja Cat's "Say So", Lady Gaga's "Stupid Love", and Dua Lipa's "Don't Start Now" experienced widespread success on global music charts, with the three songs charting at numbers 1, 5 and 2, respectively, on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. At the time, Billboard, declared that Lipa was "leading the charge toward disco-influenced production" a day after her retro and disco-influenced album Future Nostalgia was released on March 27, 2020.[133][136] By mid 2020, multiple disco albums and songs had been released. In early September 2020, South Korean group BTS debuted at number 1 in the US with their English–language disco single "Dynamite" having sold 265,000 downloads in its first week in the US, marking the biggest pure sales week since Taylor Swift's "Look What You Made Me Do" (2017).[137] Other critically acclaimed disco albums from the year include Jessie Ware's What's Your Pleasure? and Róisín Murphy's Róisín Machine.

In July 2020, Australian singer Kylie Minogue announced she would be releasing her fifteenth studio album, Disco, on November 6, 2020. The album was preceded by two singles, the lead single from the album, "Say Something", was released on July 23 of the same year and premiered on BBC Radio 2.[138] The second single, "Magic", was released on September 24.[139] Both singles received critical acclaim, with critics praising Minogue for returning to disco roots, which were prominent in her albums Light Years (2000), Fever (2001) and Aphrodite (2010).

See also

References

Works cited
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  • Shapiro, Peter (2006) [2005]. Turn The Beat Around: The Secret History of Disco (Paperback ed.). New York: Faber And Faber. ISBN 978-0-86547-952-4.
Notes
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  17. ^ a b "ARTS IN AMERICA; Here's to Disco, It Never Could Say Goodbye", The New York Times, USA, December 10, 2002, from the original on November 6, 2015, retrieved August 25, 2015
  18. ^ . Gibson.com. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  19. ^ Sanneh 2021, pp. 375–376.
  20. ^ a b Sanneh 2021, p. 364.
  21. ^ Curry, Oliver (May 18, 2013). . Attack. Archived from the original on September 9, 2013. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
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  31. ^ Amyl, butyl and isobutyl nitrite (collectively known as alkyl nitrites) are clear, yellow liquids inhaled for their intoxicating effects. Nitrites originally came as small glass capsules that were popped open. This led to nitrites being given the name 'poppers' but this form of the drug is rarely found in the UK. The drug became popular in the UK first on the disco/club scene of the 1970s and then at dance and rave venues in the 1980s and 1990s.
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Further reading

  • Andrea Angeli Bufalini & Giovanni Savastano (2014). La Disco. Storia illustrata della discomusic. Arcana, Italy. ISBN 978-8862313223
  • Aletti, Vince (2009). The Disco Files 1973–78: New York's underground week by week. DJhistory.com. ISBN 978-0956189608.
  • Angelo, Marty (2006). Once Life Matters: A New Beginning. Impact Publishing. ISBN 978-0961895440.
  • Beta, Andy (November 2008). "Disco Inferno 2.0: A Slightly Less Hedonistic Comeback Charting the DJs, labels, and edits fueling an old new craze" December 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. The Village Voice.
  • Campion, Chris (2009). "Walking on the Moon:The Untold Story of the Police and the Rise of New Wave Rock". John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0470282403
  • Echols, Alice (2010). Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture. W. W. Norton and Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-393-06675-3.
  • Flynn, Daniel J. (February 18, 2010). . The American Spectator.
  • Gillian, Frank (May 2007). "Discophobia: Antigay Prejudice and the 1979 Backlash against Disco". Journal of the History of Sexuality, Volume 15, Number 2, pp. 276–306. Electronic ISSN 1535-3605, print ISSN 1043-4070.
  • Hanson, Kitty (1978) Disco Fever: The Beat, People, Places, Styles, Deejays, Groups. Signet Books. ISBN 978-0451084521.
  • Jones, Alan and Kantonen, Jussi (1999). Saturday Night Forever: The Story of Disco. Chicago, Illinois: A Cappella Books. ISBN 978-1556524110.
  • Lawrence, Tim (2004). Love Saves the Day: A History of American Dance Music Culture, 1970–1979. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0822331988.
  • Lester, Paul (February 23, 2007). "Can you feel the force?". The Guardian.
  • Michaels, Mark (1990). The Billboard Book of Rock Arranging. ISBN 978-0823075379.
  • Narvaez, Richie (2020), Holly Hernandez and the Death of Disco. Pinata Books. ISBN 978-1558859029
  • Reed, John (September 19, 2007). "DVD Review: Saturday Night Fever (30th Anniversary Special Collector's Edition)". Blogcritics.
  • Rodgers, Nile (2011). Le Freak: An Upside Down Story of Family, Disco, and Destiny. Spiegel & Grau. ISBN 978-0385529655.
  • Sclafani, Tony (July 10, 2009). "When 'Disco Sucks!' echoed around the world" February 15, 2020, at the Wayback Machine. MSNBC.

disco, this, article, about, music, genre, entertainment, venue, nightclub, other, uses, disambiguation, genre, dance, music, subculture, that, emerged, 1970s, from, united, states, urban, nightlife, scene, sound, typified, four, floor, beats, syncopated, bass. This article is about the music genre For the entertainment venue see Nightclub For other uses see Disco disambiguation Disco is a genre of dance music and a subculture that emerged in the 1970s from the United States urban nightlife scene Its sound is typified by four on the floor beats syncopated basslines string sections brass and horns electric piano synthesizers and electric rhythm guitars DiscoThe ceiling of an Arlington Texas discothequeStylistic originsPhiladelphia soul funk psychedelic soul popCultural originsLate 1960s early 1970s Philadelphia and New York City 1 Derivative formsEuropopdance pop 2 3 4 house garage house post discopost punkhip hopnew wavesynth popacid jazzSubgenresPost discoItalo discoCosmic discoEurodiscoSpace discoHi NRGBoogieElectro discoDisco polonu discoFusion genresDance punkDance rockFrench houseDisco popFunky houseFuture funkDisco rapRegional scenesPhilippinesEurope ItalyPoland Local scenesNew York CityPhiladelphiaMiamiWashington D C San FranciscoLos AngelesMontrealOther topicsDiscotheques list of artists old school hip hopDisco started as a mixture of music from venues popular with Italian Americans Hispanic and Latino Americans and Black Americans 5 in Philadelphia and New York City during the late 1960s and early 1970s Disco can be seen as a reaction by the 1960s counterculture to both the dominance of rock music and the stigmatization of dance music at the time Several dance styles were developed during the period of disco s popularity in the United States including the Bump and the Hustle In the course of the 1970s disco music was developed further mainly by artists from the United States and Europe Well known artists include ABBA the Bee Gees Donna Summer Gloria Gaynor Giorgio Moroder Baccara Boney M Earth Wind amp Fire Chaka Khan Chic KC and the Sunshine Band Thelma Houston Sister Sledge Sylvester The Trammps and the Village People 6 7 While performers garnered public attention record producers working behind the scenes played an important role in developing the genre By the late 1970s most major U S cities had thriving disco club scenes and DJs would mix dance records at clubs such as Studio 54 in Manhattan a venue popular among celebrities Nightclub goers often wore expensive extravagant outfits consisting predominantly of loose flowing pants or dresses for ease of movement while dancing There was also a thriving drug subculture in the disco scene particularly for drugs that would enhance the experience of dancing to the loud music and the flashing lights such as cocaine and quaaludes the latter being so common in disco subculture that they were nicknamed disco biscuits Disco clubs were also associated with promiscuity as a reflection of the sexual revolution of this era in popular history Films such as Saturday Night Fever 1977 and Thank God It s Friday 1978 contributed to disco s mainstream popularity Disco declined as a major trend in popular music in the United States following the infamous Disco Demolition Night and it continued to sharply decline in popularity in the U S during the early 1980s however it remained popular in Italy and some European countries throughout the 1980s and during this time also started becoming trendy in places elsewhere including India 8 and the Middle East 9 where they were blended with regional folk styles such as ghazals and belly dancing Disco would eventually become a key influence in the development of electronic dance music house music hip hop new wave dance punk and post disco The style has had several newer scenes since the 1990s and the influence of disco remains strong across American and European pop music A revival has been underway since the early 2010s coming to great popularity in the early 2020s Albums that have contributed to this revival include Confessions On A Dance Floor Random Access Memories The Slow Rush Cuz I Love You Future Nostalgia Hey U X Melodrama What s Your Pleasure About Last Night Roisin Machine and Kylie Minogue s album itself titled Disco 10 11 12 13 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Musical characteristics 3 Production 4 Club culture 4 1 Nightclubs 4 2 Sound and light equipment 4 3 DJs 4 4 Dance 4 5 Fashion 4 6 Drug subculture 4 7 Eroticism and sexual liberation 5 History 5 1 1940s 1960s First discotheques 5 2 1960s 1974 Precursors and early disco music 5 2 1 Early disco culture in the United States 5 2 2 Early disco culture in the United Kingdom 5 3 1974 1977 Rise to mainstream 5 3 1 Motown turning disco 5 3 2 Eurodisco 5 4 1977 1979 Pop preeminence 5 4 1 Parodies 5 5 1979 1981 Controversy and decline in popularity 5 5 1 Impact on music industry 5 5 2 Factors contributing to disco s decline 5 6 1981 1989 Aftermath 5 6 1 Birth of electronic dance music 6 Legacy 6 1 DJ culture 6 2 Post disco 6 3 Early hip hop 6 4 House music and rave culture 6 5 Post punk 6 6 Nu disco 7 Revivals and return to mainstream success 7 1 1990s resurgence 7 2 2000s resurgence 7 3 2010s resurgence 7 4 2020s resurgence 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingEtymology EditThe term disco is shorthand for the word discotheque a French word for library of phonograph records derived from bibliotheque The word discotheque had the same meaning in English in the 1950s Discotheque became used in French for a type of nightclub in Paris France after these had resorted to playing records during the Nazi occupation in the early 1940s Some clubs used it as their proper name In 1960 it was also used to describe a Parisian nightclub in an English magazine In the summer of 1964 a short sleeveless dress called discotheque dress was briefly very popular in the United States The earliest known use for the abbreviated form disco described this dress and has been found in The Salt Lake Tribune on July 12 1964 Playboy magazine used it in September of the same year to describe Los Angeles nightclubs 14 Vince Aletti was one of the first to describe disco as a sound or a music genre He wrote the feature article Discotheque Rock Paaaaarty that appeared in Rolling Stone magazine in September 1973 15 16 17 Musical characteristics Edit Disco bass pattern Play help info Rock amp disco drum patterns disco features greater subdivision of the beat which is four to the floor Play help info The music typically layered soaring often reverberated vocals often doubled by horns citation needed over a background pad of electric pianos and chicken scratch rhythm guitars played on an electric guitar Lead guitar features less frequently in disco than in rock The rooster scratch sound is achieved by lightly pressing the guitar strings against the fretboard and then quickly releasing them just enough to get a slightly muted poker sound while constantly strumming very close to the bridge 18 Other backing keyboard instruments include the piano electric organ during early years string synthesizers and electromechanical keyboards such as the Fender Rhodes electric piano Wurlitzer electric piano and Hohner Clavinet Donna Summer s 1977 song I Feel Love produced by Giorgio Moroder with a prominent Moog synthesizer on the beat was one of the first disco tracks to use the synthesizer 19 The rhythm is laid down by prominent syncopated basslines with heavy use of broken octaves that is octaves with the notes sounded one after the other played on the bass guitar and by drummers using a drum kit African Latin percussion and electronic drums such as Simmons and Roland drum modules The sound was enriched with solo lines and harmony parts played by a variety of orchestral instruments such as harp violin viola cello trumpet saxophone trombone clarinet flugelhorn French horn tuba English horn oboe flute sometimes especially the alto flute and occasionally bass flute piccolo timpani and synth strings string section or a full string orchestra citation needed Most disco songs have a steady four on the floor beat set by a bass drum a quaver or semi quaver hi hat pattern with an open hissing hi hat on the off beat and a heavy syncopated bass line 20 21 A recording error in the 1975 song Bad Luck by Harold Melvin amp the Blue Notes where Earl Young s hi hat was too loud in the recording is said to have established loud hi hats in disco 20 Other Latin rhythms such as the rhumba the samba and the cha cha cha are also found in disco recordings and Latin polyrhythms such as a rhumba beat layered over a merengue are commonplace The quaver pattern is often supported by other instruments such as the rhythm guitar and may be implied rather than explicitly present Songs often use syncopation which is the accenting of unexpected beats In general the difference between disco or any dance song and a rock or popular song is that in dance music the bass drum hits four to the floor at least once a beat which in 4 4 time is 4 beats per measure citation needed Disco is further characterized by a 16th note division of the quarter notes as shown in the second drum pattern below after a typical rock drum pattern The orchestral sound is usually known as disco sound relies heavily on string sections 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 all of the doubling of parts and use of additional instruments creates a rich wall of sound There are however more minimalist flavors of disco with reduced transparent instrumentation Harmonically disco music typically contains major and minor seven chords citation needed which are found more often in jazz than pop music Production EditThe disco sound was much more costly to produce than many of the other popular music genres from the 1970s Unlike the simpler four piece band sound of funk soul music of the late 1960s or the small jazz organ trios disco music often included a large band with several chordal instruments guitar keyboards synthesizer several drum or percussion instruments drumkit Latin percussion electronic drums a horn section a string orchestra and a variety of classical solo instruments for example flute piccolo and so on Disco songs were arranged and composed by experienced arrangers and orchestrators and record producers added their creative touches to the overall sound using multitrack recording techniques and effects units Recording complex arrangements with such a large number of instruments and sections required a team that included a conductor copyists record producers and mixing engineers Mixing engineers had an important role in the disco production process because disco songs used as many as 64 tracks of vocals and instruments Mixing engineers and record producers under the direction of arrangers compiled these tracks into a fluid composition of verses bridges and refrains complete with builds and breaks Mixing engineers and record producers helped to develop the disco sound by creating a distinctive sounding sophisticated disco mix Early records were the standard three minute version until Tom Moulton came up with a way to make songs longer so that he could take a crowd of dancers at a club to another level and keep them dancing longer He found that it was impossible to make the 45 RPM vinyl singles of the time longer as they could usually hold no more than five minutes of good quality music With the help of Jose Rodriguez his remaster mastering engineer he pressed a single on a 10 disc instead of 7 They cut the next single on a 12 disc the same format as a standard album Moulton and Rodriguez discovered that these larger records could have much longer songs and remixes 12 single records also known as Maxi singles quickly became the standard format for all DJs of the disco genre 22 Club culture EditNightclubs Edit See also Circuit parties Blue disco quad roller skates By the late 1970s most major US cities had thriving disco club scenes The largest scenes were most notably in New York City but also in Philadelphia San Francisco Miami and Washington D C The scene was centered on discotheques nightclubs and private loft parties In the 1970s notable discos included Crisco Disco The Sanctuary Leviticus Studio 54 and Paradise Garage in New York Artemis in Philadelphia Studio One in Los Angeles Dugan s Bistro in Chicago and The Library in Atlanta 23 24 In the late 70s Studio 54 in Midtown Manhattan was arguably the best known nightclub in the world This club played a major formative role in the growth of disco music and nightclub culture in general It was operated by Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager and was notorious for the hedonism that went on within the balconies were known for sexual encounters and drug use was rampant Its dance floor was decorated with an image of the Man in the Moon that included an animated cocaine spoon The Copacabana another New York nightclub dating to the 1940s had a revival in the late 1970s when it embraced disco it would become the setting of a Barry Manilow song of the same name In Washington D C large disco clubs such as The Pier Pier 9 and The Other Side originally regarded exclusively as gay bars became particularly popular among the capital area s gay and straight college students in the late 70s By 1979 there were 15 000 20 000 disco nightclubs in the US many of them opening in suburban shopping centers hotels and restaurants The 2001 Club franchises were the most prolific chain of disco clubs in the country 25 Although many other attempts were made to franchise disco clubs 2001 was the only one to successfully do so in this time frame 26 Sound and light equipment Edit Major disco clubs had lighted dance floors with the lights flashing to complement the beat The reflective light disco ball was a fixture on the ceilings of many discotheques Powerful bass heavy hi fi sound systems were viewed as a key part of the disco club experience Loft party host David Mancuso introduced the technologies of tweeter arrays clusters of small loudspeakers which emit high end frequencies positioned above the floor and bass reinforcements additional sets of subwoofers positioned at ground level at the start of the 1970s to boost the treble and bass at opportune moments and by the end of the decade sound engineers such as Richard Long had multiplied the effects of these innovations in venues such as the Garage 27 Typical lighting designs for disco dance floors could include multi coloured lights that swirl around or flash to the beat strobe light an illuminated dance floor and a mirror ball DJs Edit Disco era disc jockeys DJs would often remix existing songs using reel to reel tape machines and add in percussion breaks new sections and new sounds DJs would select songs and grooves according to what the dancers wanted transitioning from one song to another with a DJ mixer and using a microphone to introduce songs and speak to the audiences Other equipment was added to the basic DJ setup providing unique sound manipulations such as reverb equalization and echo effects unit Using this equipment a DJ could do effects such as cutting out all but the bassline of a song and then slowly mixing in the beginning of another song using the DJ mixer s crossfader Notable U S disco DJs include Francis Grasso of The Sanctuary David Mancuso of The Loft Frankie Knuckles of the Chicago Warehouse Larry Levan of the Paradise Garage Nicky Siano Walter Gibbons Karen Mixon Cook Jim Burgess John Jellybean Benitez Richie Kulala of Studio 54 and Rick Salsalini Some DJs were also record producers who created and produced disco songs in the recording studio Larry Levan for example was a prolific record producer as well as a DJ Because record sales were often dependent on dance floor play by DJs in leading nightclubs DJs were also influential for the development and popularization of certain types of disco music being produced for record labels Dance Edit Disco dancers typically wore loose slacks for men and flowing dresses for women which enabled ease of movement on the dance floor In the early years dancers in discos danced in a hang loose or freestyle approach At first many dancers improvised their own dance styles and dance steps Later in the disco era popular dance styles were developed including the Bump Penguin Boogaloo Watergate and Robot By October 1975 the Hustle reigned It was highly stylized sophisticated and overtly sexual Variations included the Brooklyn Hustle New York Hustle and Latin Hustle 24 During the disco era many nightclubs would commonly host disco dance competitions or offer free dance lessons Some cities had disco dance instructors or dance schools which taught people how to do popular disco dances such as touch dancing the hustle and the cha cha The pioneer of disco dance instruction was Karen Lustgarten in San Francisco in 1973 Her book The Complete Guide to Disco Dancing Warner Books 1978 was the first to name break down and codify popular disco dances as dance forms and distinguish between disco freestyle partner and line dances The book topped the New York Times bestseller list for 13 weeks and was translated into Chinese German and French In Chicago the Step By Step disco dance TV show was launched with the sponsorship support of the Coca Cola company Produced in the same studio that Don Cornelius used for the nationally syndicated dance music television show Soul Train Step by Step s audience grew and the show became a success The dynamic dance duo of Robin and Reggie led the show The pair spent the week teaching disco dancing to dancers in the disco clubs The instructional show aired on Saturday mornings and had a strong following The viewers of this would stay up all night on Fridays so they could be on the set the next morning ready to return to the disco on Saturday night knowing with the latest personalized dance steps The producers of the show John Reid and Greg Roselli routinely made appearances at disco functions with Robin and Reggie to scout out new dancing talent and promote upcoming events such as Disco Night at White Sox Park In Sacramento California Disco King Paul Dale Roberts danced for the Guinness Book of World Records Roberts danced for 205 hours which is the equivalent of 8 days Other dance marathons took place after Roberts held the world s record for disco dancing for a short period of time 28 Some notable professional dance troupes of the 1970s included Pan s People and Hot Gossip For many dancers a key source of inspiration for 1970s disco dancing was the film Saturday Night Fever 1977 This developed into the music and dance style of such films as Fame 1980 Disco Dancer 1982 Flashdance 1983 and The Last Days of Disco 1998 Interest in disco dancing also helped spawn dance competition TV shows such as Dance Fever 1979 Fashion Edit Dancers at an East German discotheque in 1977 Disco fashions were very trendy in the late 1970s Discotheque goers often wore glamorous expensive and extravagant fashions for nights out at their local disco club Some women would wear sheer flowing dresses such as Halston dresses or loose flared pants Other women wore tight revealing sexy clothes such as backless halter tops disco pants hot pants or body hugging spandex bodywear or catsuits 29 Men would wear shiny polyester Qiana shirts with colorful patterns and pointy extra wide collars preferably open at the chest Men often wore Pierre Cardin suits three piece suits with a vest and double knit polyester shirt jackets with matching trousers known as the leisure suit Men s leisure suits were typically form fitted in some parts of the body such as the waist and bottom but the lower part of the pants were flared in a bell bottom style to permit freedom of movement 29 During the disco era men engaged in elaborate grooming rituals and spent time choosing fashion clothing both activities that would have been considered feminine according to the gender stereotypes of the era 29 Women dancers wore glitter makeup sequins or gold lame clothing that would shimmer under the lights 29 Bold colors were popular for both genders Platform shoes and boots for both genders and high heels for women were popular footwear 29 Necklaces and medallions were a common fashion accessory Less commonly some disco dancers wore outlandish costumes dressed in drag covered their bodies with gold or silver paint or wore very skimpy outfits leaving them nearly nude these uncommon get ups were more likely to be seen at invitation only New York City loft parties and disco clubs 29 Drug subculture Edit In addition to the dance and fashion aspects of the disco club scene there was also a thriving club drug subculture particularly for drugs that would enhance the experience of dancing to the loud bass heavy music and the flashing colored lights such as cocaine 30 nicknamed blow amyl nitrite poppers 31 and the other quintessential 1970s club drug Quaalude which suspended motor coordination and gave the sensation that one s arms and legs had turned to Jell O 32 Quaaludes were so popular at disco clubs that the drug was nicknamed disco biscuits 33 Paul Gootenberg states that t he relationship of cocaine to 1970s disco culture cannot be stressed enough 30 During the 1970s the use of cocaine by well to do celebrities led to its glamorization and to the widely held view that it was a soft drug 34 LSD marijuana and speed amphetamines were also popular in disco clubs and the use of these drugs contributed to the hedonistic quality of the dance floor experience 35 Since disco dances were typically held in liquor licensed nightclubs and dance clubs alcoholic drinks were also consumed by dancers some users intentionally combined alcohol with the consumption of other drugs such as Quaaludes for a stronger effect Eroticism and sexual liberation Edit According to Peter Braunstein the massive quantities of drugs ingested in discotheques produced the next cultural phenomenon of the disco era rampant promiscuity and public sex While the dance floor was the central arena of seduction actual sex usually took place in the nether regions of the disco bathroom stalls exit stairwells and so on In other cases the disco became a kind of main course in a hedonist s menu for a night out 32 At The Saint nightclub a high percentage of the gay male dancers and patrons would have sex in the club they typically had unprotected sex because in 1980 HIV AIDS had not yet been identified 36 At The Saint dancers would elope to an un monitored upstairs balcony to engage in sex 36 The promiscuity and public sex at discos was part of a broader trend towards exploring a freer sexual expression in the 1970s an era that is also associated with swingers clubs hot tubs and key parties 37 In his paper In Defense of Disco 1979 Richard Dyer claims eroticism as one of the three main characteristics of disco 38 As opposed to rock music which has a very phallic centered eroticism focusing on the sexual pleasure of men over other persons Dyer describes disco as featuring a non phallic full body eroticism 38 Through a range of percussion instruments a willingness to play with rhythm and the endless repeating of phrases without cutting the listener off disco achieved this full body eroticism by restoring eroticism to the whole body for both sexes 38 This allowed for the potential expression of sexualities not defined by the cock penis and the erotic pleasure of bodies that are not defined by a relationship to a penis 38 The sexual liberation expressed through the rhythm of disco is further represented in the club spaces that disco grew within In Peter Shapiro s Modulations A History of Electronic Music Throbbing Words on Sound he discusses eroticism through the technology disco utilizes to create its audacious sound 39 The music Shapiro states is adjunct to the pleasure is politics ethos of post Stonewall culture He explains how mechano eroticism which links the technology used to create the unique mechanical sound of disco to eroticism sets the genre in a new dimension of reality living outside of naturalism and heterosexuality He uses Donna Summer s singles Love to Love You Baby 1975 and I Feel Love 1977 as examples of the ever present relationship between the synthesized bass lines and backgrounds to the simulated sounds of orgasms Summer s voice echoes in the tracks and likens them to the drug fervent sexually liberated fans of disco who sought to free themselves through disco s aesthetic of machine sex 40 Shapiro sees this as an influence that creates sub genres like hi NRG and dub disco which allowed for eroticism and technology to be further explored through intense synth bass lines and alternative rhythmic techniques that tap into the entire body rather than the obvious erotic parts of the body The New York nightclub The Sanctuary under resident DJ Francis Grasso is a prime example of this sexual liberty In their history of the disc jockey and club culture Bill Brewster and Frank Broughton describe the Sanctuary as poured full of newly liberated gay men then shaken and stirred by a weighty concoction of dance music and pharmacoia of pills and potions the result is a festivaly of carnality 41 The Sanctuary was the first totally uninhibited gay discotheque in America and while sex was not allowed on the dancefloor the dark corners the bathrooms and the hallways of the adjacent buildings were all utilized for orgy like sexual engagements 41 By describing the music drugs and liberated mentality as a trifecta coming together to create the festival of carnality Brewster and Broughton are inciting all three as stimuli for the dancing sex and other embodied movements that contributed to the corporeal vibrations within the Sanctuary This supports the argument that the disco music took a role in facilitating this sexual liberation that was experienced in the discotheques Further this coupled with the recent legalization of abortions the introduction of antibiotics and the pill all facilitated a culture shift around sex from one of procreation to pleasure and enjoyment fostering a very sex positive framework around discotheques 42 Further in addition to gay sex being illegal in New York state until 1973 the American Psychiatric Association classified homosexuality as an illness 41 This law and classification coupled together can be understood to have heavily dissuaded the expression of queerness in public as such the liberatory dynamics of discotheques can be seen as having provided space for self realization for queer persons David Mancuso s club house party The Loft was described as having a pansexual attitude that was revolutionary in a country where up until recently it had been illegal for two men to dance together unless there was a woman present where women were legally obliged to wear at least one recognizable item of female clothing in public and where men visiting gay bars usually carried bail money with them 43 History Edit1940s 1960s First discotheques Edit Disco was mostly developed from music that was popular on the dance floor in clubs that started playing records instead of having a live band The first discotheques mostly played swing music Later on uptempo rhythm and blues became popular in American clubs and northern soul and glam rock records in the UK In the early 1940s nightclubs in Paris resorted to playing jazz records during the Nazi occupation Regine Zylberberg claimed to have started the first discotheque and to have been the first club DJ in 1953 in the Whisky a Go Go in Paris She installed a dance floor with coloured lights and two turntables so she could play records without having a gap in the music 44 In October 1959 the owner of the Scotch Club in Aachen West Germany chose to install a record player for the opening night instead of hiring a live band The patrons were unimpressed until a young reporter who happened to be covering the opening of the club impulsively took control of the record player and introduced the records that he chose to play Klaus Quirini later claimed to thus have been the world s first nightclub DJ 14 1960s 1974 Precursors and early disco music Edit During the 1960s discotheque dancing became a European trend that was enthusiastically picked up by the American press 14 At this time when the discotheque culture from Europe became popular in the United States several music genres with danceable rhythms rose to popularity and evolved into different sub genres rhythm and blues originated in the 1940s soul late 1950s and 1960s funk mid 1960s and go go mid 1960s and 1970s more than disco the word go go originally indicated a music club Musical genres that were primarily performed by African American musicians would influence much of early disco Also during the 1960s the Motown record label developed its own approach described as having 1 simply structured songs with sophisticated melodies and chord changes 2 a relentless four beat drum pattern 3 a gospel use of background voices vaguely derived from the style of the Impressions 4 a regular and sophisticated use of both horns and strings 5 lead singers who were half way between pop and gospel music 6 a group of accompanying musicians who were among the most dextrous knowledgeable and brilliant in all of popular music Motown bassists have long been the envy of white rock bassists and 7 a trebly style of mixing that relied heavily on electronic limiting and equalizing boosting the high range frequencies to give the overall product a distinctive sound particularly effective for broadcast over AM radio 45 Motown had many hits with early disco elements by acts like the Supremes for instance You Keep Me Hangin On in 1966 Stevie Wonder for instance Superstition in 1972 The Jackson 5 and Eddie Kendricks Keep on Truckin in 1973 At the end of the 1960s musicians and audiences from the Black Italian and Latino communities adopted several traits from the hippie and psychedelia subcultures They included using music venues with a loud overwhelming sound free form dancing trippy lighting colorful costumes and the use of hallucinogenic drugs 46 47 48 In addition the perceived positivity lack of irony and earnestness of the hippies informed proto disco music like MFSB s album Love Is the Message 46 49 Partly through the success of Jimi Hendrix psychedelic elements that were popular in rock music of the late 1960s found their way into soul and early funk music and formed the subgenre psychedelic soul Examples can be found in the music of the Chambers Brothers George Clinton with his Parliament Funkadelic collective Sly and the Family Stone and the productions of Norman Whitfield with The Temptations The long instrumental introductions and detailed orchestration found in psychedelic soul tracks by the Temptations are also considered as cinematic soul In the early 1970s Curtis Mayfield and Isaac Hayes scored hits with cinematic soul songs that were actually composed for movie soundtracks Superfly 1972 and Theme from Shaft 1971 The latter is sometimes regarded as an early disco song 50 From the mid 1960s to early 1970s Philadelphia soul and New York soul developed as sub genres that also had lavish percussion lush string orchestra arrangements and expensive record production processes In the early 1970s the Philly soul productions by Gamble and Huff evolved from the simpler arrangements of the late 1960s into a style featuring lush strings thumping basslines and sliding hi hat rhythms These elements would become typical for disco music and are found in several of the hits they produced in the early 1970s Love Train by the O Jays with M F S B as the backup band was released in 1972 and topped the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1973 The Love I Lost by Harold Melvin amp the Blue Notes 1973 Now That We Found Love by The O Jays 1973 later a hit for Third World in 1978 TSOP The Sound of Philadelphia by MFSB with vocals by The Three Degrees a wordless song written as the theme for Soul Train and a 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1974 Other early disco tracks that helped shape disco and became popular on the dance floors of underground discotheque clubs and parties include Soul Makossa by Manu Dibango was first released in France in 1972 It was picked up by the underground disco scene in New York and subsequently got a proper release in the U S reaching 35 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1973 The Night by the Four Seasons was released in 1972 but was not immediately popular It appealed to the Northern soul scene and became a hit in the UK in 1975 51 Love s Theme by the Love Unlimited Orchestra conducted by Barry White an instrumental song originally featured on Under the Influence of Love Unlimited in July 1973 from which it was culled as a single in November of that year Subsequently the conductor included it on his own debut album Rhapsody in White 1974 where the track reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 early that year Jungle Fever by The Chakachas was first released in Belgium in 1971 was later released in the U S in 1972 where it reached 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 that same year Girl You Need a Change of Mind by Eddie Kendricks was released in May 1972 on the album People Hold On Early disco was dominated by record producers and labels such as Salsoul Records Ken Stanley and Joseph Cayre West End Records Mel Cheren Casablanca Neil Bogart and Prelude Marvin Schlachter to name a few The genre was also shaped by Tom Moulton who wanted to extend the enjoyment of dance songs thus creating the extended mix or remix going from a three minute 45 rpm single to the much longer 12 record Other influential DJs and remixers who helped to establish what became known as the disco sound included David Mancuso Nicky Siano Shep Pettibone Larry Levan Walter Gibbons and Chicago based Frankie Knuckles Frankie Knuckles was not only an important disco DJ he also helped to develop house music in the 1980s Disco hit the television airwaves as part of the music dance variety show Soul Train in 1971 hosted by Don Cornelius then Marty Angelo s Disco Step by Step Television Show in 1975 Steve Marcus Disco Magic Disco 77 Eddie Rivera s Soap Factory and Merv Griffin s Dance Fever hosted by Deney Terrio who is credited with teaching actor John Travolta to dance for his role in the film Saturday Night Fever as well as DANCE based out of Columbia South Carolina In 1974 New York City s WPIX FM premiered the first disco radio show 52 Early disco culture in the United States Edit In the 1970s the key counterculture of the 1960s the hippie movement was fading away The economic prosperity of the previous decade had declined and unemployment inflation and crime rates had soared Political issues like the backlash from the Civil Rights Movement culminating in the form of race riots the Vietnam War the assassinations of Dr Martin Luther King Jr and John F Kennedy and the Watergate scandal left many feeling disillusioned and hopeless The start of the 70s was marked by a shift in the consciousness of the American people the rise of the feminist movement identity politics gangs etc very much shaped this era Disco music and disco dancing provided an escape from negative social and economic issues 53 The non partnered dance style of disco music allowed people of all races and sexual orientations to enjoy the dancefloor atmosphere 54 In Beautiful Things in Popular Culture Simon Frith highlights the sociability of disco and its roots in 1960s counterculture The driving force of the New York underground dance scene in which disco was forged was not simply that city s complex ethnic and sexual culture but also a 1960s notion of community pleasure and generosity that can only be described as hippie he says The best disco music contained within it a remarkably powerful sense of collective euphoria 55 The birth of disco is often claimed to be found in the private dance parties held by New York City DJ David Mancuso s home that became known as The Loft an invitation only non commercial underground club that inspired many others 17 He organized the first major party in his Manhattan home on Valentine s Day 1970 with the name Love Saves The Day After some months the parties became weekly events and Mancuso continued to give regular parties into the 1990s 56 Mancuso required that the music played had to be soulful rhythmic and impart words of hope redemption or pride 43 When Mancuso threw his first informal house parties the gay community which made up much of The Loft s attendee roster was often harassed in the gay bars and dance clubs with many gay men carrying bail money with them to gay bars But at The Loft and many other early private discotheques they could dance together without fear of police action thanks to Mancuso s underground yet legal policies Vince Aletti described it like going to party completely mixed racially and sexually where there wasn t any sense of someone being more important than anyone else and Alex Rosner reiterated this saying It was probably about sixty percent black and seventy percent gay There was a mix of sexual orientation there was a mix of races mix of economic groups A real mix where the common denominator was music 43 Film critic Roger Ebert called the popular embrace of disco s exuberant dance moves an escape from the general depression and drabness of the political and musical atmosphere of the late seventies 57 Pauline Kael writing about the disco themed film Saturday Night Fever said the film and disco itself touched on something deeply romantic the need to move to dance and the need to be who you d like to be Nirvana is the dance when the music stops you return to being ordinary 58 Early disco culture in the United Kingdom Edit In the late 1960s uptempo soul with heavy beats and some associated dance styles and fashion were picked up in the British mod scene and formed the northern soul movement Originating at venues such as the Twisted Wheel in Manchester it quickly spread to other UK dancehalls and nightclubs like the Chateau Impney Droitwich Catacombs Wolverhampton the Highland Rooms at Blackpool Mecca Golden Torch Stoke on Trent and Wigan Casino As the favoured beat became more uptempo and frantic in the early 1970s northern soul dancing became more athletic somewhat resembling the later dance styles of disco and break dancing Featuring spins flips karate kicks and backdrops club dancing styles were often inspired by the stage performances of touring American soul acts such as Little Anthony amp the Imperials and Jackie Wilson In 1974 there were an estimated 25 000 mobile discos and 40 000 professional disc jockeys in the United Kingdom Mobile discos were hired deejays that brought their own equipment to provide music for special events Glam rock tracks were popular with for example Gary Glitter s 1972 single Rock and Roll Part 2 becoming popular on UK dance floors while it did not get much radio airplay 59 1974 1977 Rise to mainstream Edit From 1974 to 1977 disco music increased in popularity as many disco songs topped the charts The Hues Corporation s Rock the Boat 1974 a US number one single and million seller was one of the early disco songs to reach number one The same year saw the release of Kung Fu Fighting performed by Carl Douglas and produced by Biddu which reached number one in both the UK and US and became the best selling single of the year 60 and one of the best selling singles of all time with 11 million records sold worldwide 61 62 helping to popularize disco to a great extent 61 Another notable disco success that year was George McCrae s Rock Your Baby 63 it became the United Kingdom s first number one chart disco single 64 63 In the northwestern sections of the United Kingdom the northern soul explosion which started in the late 1960s and peaked in 1974 made the region receptive to disco which the region s disc jockeys were bringing back from New York City The shift by some DJs to the newer sounds coming from the U S A resulted in a split in the scene whereby some abandoned the 1960s soul and pushed a modern soul sound which tended to be more closely aligned with disco than soul Gloria Gaynor in 1976 In 1975 Gloria Gaynor released her first side long vinyl album which included a remake of the Jackson 5 s Never Can Say Goodbye which in fact is also the album title and two other songs Honey Bee and her disco version of Reach Out I ll Be There first topped the Billboard disco dance charts in November 1974 Later in 1978 Gaynor s number one disco song was I Will Survive which was seen as a symbol of female strength and a gay anthem 65 like her further disco hit a 1983 remake of I Am What I Am in 1979 she released Let Me Know I Have a Right a single which gained popularity in the civil rights movements Also in 1975 Vincent Montana Jr s Salsoul Orchestra contributed with their Latin flavored orchestral dance song Salsoul Hustle reaching number four on the Billboard Dance Chart and their 1976 hits Tangerine and Nice n Naasty the first being a cover of a 1941 song citation needed Songs such as Van McCoy s 1975 The Hustle and the humorous Joe Tex 1977 Ain t Gonna Bump No More With No Big Fat Woman gave names to the popular disco dances the Bump and the Hustle Other notable early successful disco songs include Barry White s You re the First the Last My Everything 1974 Labelle s Lady Marmalade 1974 Disco Tex and the Sex O Lettes Get Dancin 1974 Silver Convention s Fly Robin Fly 1975 and Get Up and Boogie 1976 Johnnie Taylor s Disco Lady 1976 and Vicki Sue Robinson s hit single Turn the Beat Around 1976 Formed by Harry Wayne Casey a k a KC and Richard Finch Miami s KC and the Sunshine Band had a string of disco definitive top five singles between 1975 and 1977 including Get Down Tonight That s the Way I Like It Shake Shake Shake Shake Your Booty I m Your Boogie Man and Keep It Comin Love In this period rock bands like the English Electric Light Orchestra featured in their songs a violin sound that became a staple of disco music as in the 1975 hit Evil Woman although the genre was correctly described as orchestral rock Other disco producers such as Tom Moulton took ideas and techniques from dub music which came with the increased Jamaican migration to New York City in the 1970s to provide alternatives to the four on the floor style that dominated DJ Larry Levan utilized styles from dub and jazz and remixing techniques to create early versions of house music that sparked the genre 66 Motown turning disco Edit Norman Whitfield was an influential producer and songwriter at Motown records renowned for creating innovative psychedelic soul songs with many hits for Marvin Gaye the Velvelettes the Temptations and Gladys Knight amp The Pips From around the production of the Temptations album Cloud Nine in 1968 he incorporated some psychedelic influences and started to produce longer dance friendly tracks with more room for elaborate rhythmic instrumental parts An example of such a long psychedelic soul track is Papa Was a Rollin Stone which appeared as a single edit of almost seven minutes and an approximately 12 minute long 12 version in 1972 By the early 70s many of Whitfield s productions evolved more and more towards funk and disco as heard on albums by the Undisputed Truth and the 1973 album G I T Get It Together by The Jackson 5 The Undisputed Truth a Motown recording act assembled by Whitfield to experiment with his psychedelic soul production techniques found success with their 1971 song Smiling Faces Sometimes Their disco single You Me Love number 43 was produced by Whitfield and made number 2 on the US Dance Charts in 1976 In 1975 Whitfield left Motown and founded his own label Whitfield records on which also You Me Love was released Whitfield produced some more disco hits including Car Wash 1976 by Rose Royce from the album soundtrack to the 1976 film Car Wash In 1977 singer songwriter and producer Willie Hutch who had been signed to Motown since 1970 now signed with Whitfield s new label and scored a successful disco single with his song In and Out in 1982 Diana Ross in 1976 Other Motown artists turned to disco as well Diana Ross embraced the disco sound with her successful 1976 outing Love Hangover from her self titled album Her 1980 dance classics Upside Down and I m Coming Out were written and produced by Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards of the group Chic The Supremes the group that made Ross famous scored a handful of hits in the disco clubs without her most notably 1976 s I m Gonna Let My Heart Do the Walking and their last charted single before disbanding 1977 s You re My Driving Wheel At the request of Motown that he produce songs in the disco genre Marvin Gaye released Got to Give It Up in 1978 despite his dislike of disco He vowed not to record any songs in the genre and actually wrote the song as a parody However several of Gaye s songs have disco elements including I Want You 1975 Stevie Wonder released the disco single Sir Duke in 1977 as a tribute to Duke Ellington the influential jazz legend who had died in 1974 Smokey Robinson left the Motown group the Miracles for a solo career in 1972 and released his third solo album A Quiet Storm in 1975 which spawned and lent its name to the Quiet Storm musical programming format and subgenre of R amp B It contained the disco single Baby That s Backatcha Other Motown artists who scored disco hits include Robinson s former group the Miracles with Love Machine 1975 Eddie Kendricks with Keep On Truckin 1973 the Originals with Down to Love Town 1976 and Thelma Houston with her cover of the Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes song Don t Leave Me This Way 1976 The label continued to release successful songs into the 1980s with Rick James Super Freak 1981 and the Commodores Lady You Bring Me Up 1981 Several of Motown s solo artists who left the label went on to have successful disco songs Mary Wells Motown s first female superstar with her signature song My Guy written by Smokey Robinson abruptly left the label in 1964 She briefly reappeared on the charts with the disco song Gigolo in 1980 Jimmy Ruffin the elder brother of the Temptations lead singer David Ruffin was also signed to Motown and released his most successful and well known song What Becomes of the Brokenhearted as a single in 1966 Ruffin eventually left the record label in the mid 1970s but saw success with the 1980 disco song Hold On To My Love which was written and produced by Robin Gibb of the Bee Gees for his album Sunrise Edwin Starr known for his Motown protest song War 1970 reentered the charts in 1979 with a pair of disco songs Contact and H A P P Y Radio Kiki Dee became the first white British singer to sign with Motown in the US and released one album Great Expectations 1970 and two singles The Day Will Come Between Sunday and Monday 1970 and Love Makes the World Go Round 1971 the latter giving her first ever chart entry number 87 on the US Chart She soon left the company and signed with Elton John s The Rocket Record Company and in 1976 had her biggest and best known single Don t Go Breaking My Heart a disco duet with John The song was intended as an affectionate disco style pastiche of the Motown sound in particular the various duets recorded by Marvin Gaye with Tammi Terrell and Kim Weston Many Motown groups who had left the record label charted with disco songs The Jackson 5 one of Motown s premier acts in the early 1970s left the record company in 1975 Jermaine Jackson however remained with the label after successful songs like I Want You Back 1969 and ABC 1970 and even the disco song Dancing Machine 1974 Renamed as the Jacksons as Motown owned the name the Jackson 5 they went on to find success with disco songs like Blame It on the Boogie 1978 Shake Your Body Down to the Ground 1979 and Can You Feel It 1981 on the Epic label The Isley Brothers whose short tenure at the company had produced the song This Old Heart of Mine Is Weak for You in 1966 went on release successful disco songs like That Lady 1973 and It s a Disco Night Rock Don t Stop 1979 Gladys Knight and the Pips who recorded the most successful version of I Heard It Through the Grapevine 1967 before Marvin Gaye scored commercially successful singles such as Baby Don t Change Your Mind 1977 and Bourgie Bourgie 1980 in the disco era The Detroit Spinners were also signed to the Motown label and saw success with the Stevie Wonder produced song It s a Shame in 1970 They left soon after on the advice of fellow Detroit native Aretha Franklin to Atlantic Records and there had disco songs like The Rubberband Man 1976 In 1979 they released a successful cover of Elton John s Are You Ready for Love as well as a medley of the Four Seasons song Working My Way Back to You and Michael Zager s Forgive Me Girl The Four Seasons themselves were briefly signed to Motown s MoWest label a short lived subsidiary for R amp B and soul artists based on the West Coast and there the group produced one album Chameleon 1972 to little commercial success in the US However one single The Night was released in Britain in 1975 and thanks to popularity from the Northern Soul circuit reached number seven on the UK Singles Chart The Four Seasons left Motown in 1974 and went on to have a disco hit with their song December 1963 Oh What a Night 1975 for Warner Curb Records Eurodisco Edit Main article Euro disco ABBA in 1974 By far the most successful Euro disco act was ABBA 1972 1982 This Swedish quartet which sang primarily in English found success with singles such as Waterloo 1974 Fernando 1976 Take a Chance on Me 1978 Gimme Gimme Gimme A Man After Midnight 1979 and their signature smash hit Dancing Queen 1976 ranks as the Fourth best selling act of all time Italian composer Giorgio Moroder is known as the Father of Disco 67 Donna Summer in 1977 In 1970s Munich West Germany music producers Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte made a decisive contribution to disco music with a string of hits for Donna Summer which became known as the Munich Sound 68 In 1975 Summer suggested the lyric Love to Love You Baby to Moroder and Bellotte who turned the lyric into a full disco song The final product which contained the vocalizations of a series of simulated orgasms initially was not intended for release but when Moroder played it in the clubs it caused a sensation and he released it The song became an international hit reaching the charts in many European countries and the US No 2 It has been described as the arrival of the expression of raw female sexual desire in pop music A nearly 17 minute 12 inch single was released The 12 single became and remains a standard in discos today 69 70 In 1976 Donna Summer s version of Could It Be Magic brought disco further into the mainstream In 1977 Summer Moroder and Bellotte further released I Feel Love as the B side of Can t We Just Sit Down And Talk It Over which revolutionized dance music with its mostly electronic production and was a massive worldwide success spawning the Hi NRG subgenre 69 Giorgio Moroder was described by AllMusic as one of the principal architects of the disco sound 71 Another successful disco music project by Moroder at that time was Munich Machine 1976 1980 Boney M 1974 1986 was a West German Euro disco group of four West Indian singers and dancers masterminded by record producer Frank Farian Boney M charted worldwide with such songs as Daddy Cool 1976 Ma Baker 1977 and Rivers Of Babylon 1978 Another successful West German Euro disco recording act was Silver Convention 1974 1979 The German group Kraftwerk also had an influence on Euro disco Dalida in 1967 In France Dalida released J attendrai I Will Wait in 1975 which also became successful in Canada Europe and Japan Dalida successfully adjusted herself to disco era and released at least a dozen of songs that charted among top number 10 in whole Europe and wider Claude Francois who re invented himself as the king of French disco released La plus belle chose du monde a French version of the Bee Gees song Massachusetts which became successful in Canada and Europe and Alexandrie Alexandra was posthumously released on the day of his burial and became a worldwide success Cerrone s early songs Love in C Minor 1976 Supernature 1977 and Give Me Love 1978 were successful in the US and Europe Another Euro disco act was the French diva Amanda Lear where Euro disco sound is most heard in Enigma Give a Bit of Mmh to Me 1978 French producer Alec Costandinos assembled the Euro disco group Love and Kisses 1977 1982 In Italy Raffaella Carra was the most successful Euro disco act alongside La Bionda Hermanas Goggi and Oliver Onions Her greatest international single was Tanti Auguri Best Wishes which has become a popular song with gay audiences The song is also known under its Spanish title Para hacer bien el amor hay que venir al sur which refers to Southern Europe since the song was recorded and taped in Spain The Estonian version of the song Jatke votmed valjapoole was performed by Anne Veski A far l amore comincia tu To make love your move first was another success for her internationally known in Spanish as En el amor todo es empezar in German as Liebelei in French as Puisque tu l aimes dis le lui and in English as Do It Do It Again It was her only entry to the UK Singles Chart reaching number 9 where she remains a one hit wonder 72 In 1977 she recorded another successful single Fiesta The Party in English originally in Spanish but then recorded it in French and Italian after the song hit the charts A far l amore comincia tu has also been covered in Turkish by a Turkish popstar Ajda Pekkan as Sakin Ha in 1977 Recently Carra has gained new attention for her appearance as the female dancing soloist in a 1974 TV performance of the experimental gibberish song Prisencolinensinainciusol 1973 by Adriano Celentano 73 A remixed video featuring her dancing went viral on the internet in 2008 74 citation needed In 2008 a video of a performance of her only successful UK single Do It Do It Again was featured in the Doctor Who episode Midnight Rafaella Carra worked with Bob Sinclar on the new single Far l Amore which was released on YouTube on March 17 2011 The song charted in different European countries 75 Another prominent European disco act was the pop group Luv from the Netherlands Euro disco continued evolving within the broad mainstream pop music scene even when disco s popularity sharply declined in the United States abandoned by major U S record labels and producers 76 Through the influence of Italo disco it also played a role in the evolution of early house music in the early 1980s and later forms of electronic dance music including early 1990s Eurodance 1977 1979 Pop preeminence Edit The Bee Gees had several disco hits on the soundtrack to Saturday Night Fever in 1977 In December 1977 the film Saturday Night Fever was released It was a huge success and its soundtrack became one of the best selling albums of all time The idea for the film was sparked by a 1976 New York magazine 77 article titled Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night which supposedly chronicled the disco culture in mid 1970s New York City but was later revealed to have been fabricated 78 Some critics said the film mainstreamed disco making it more acceptable to heterosexual white males 79 The Bee Gees used Barry Gibb s falsetto to garner hits such as You Should Be Dancing Stayin Alive Night Fever More Than A Woman and Love You Inside Out Andy Gibb a younger brother to the Bee Gees followed with similarly styled solo singles such as I Just Want to Be Your Everything Love Is Thicker Than Water and Shadow Dancing In 1978 Donna Summer s multi million selling vinyl single disco version of MacArthur Park was number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for three weeks and was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance The recording which was included as part of the MacArthur Park Suite on her double live album Live and More was eight minutes and 40 seconds long on the album The shorter seven inch vinyl single version of MacArthur Park was Summer s first single to reach number one on the Hot 100 it does not include the balladic second movement of the song however A 2013 remix of MacArthur Park by Summer topped the Billboard Dance Charts marking five consecutive decades with a number one song on the charts 80 From mid 1978 to late 1979 Summer continued to release singles such as Last Dance Heaven Knows with Brooklyn Dreams Hot Stuff Bad Girls Dim All the Lights and On the Radio all very successful songs landing in the top five or better on the Billboard pop charts The band Chic was formed mainly by guitarist Nile Rodgers a self described street hippie from late 1960s New York and bassist Bernard Edwards Their popular 1978 single Le Freak is regarded as an iconic song of the genre Other successful songs by Chic include the often sampled Good Times 1979 I Want Your Love 1979 and Everybody Dance 1979 The group regarded themselves as the disco movement s rock band that made good on the hippie movement s ideals of peace love and freedom Every song they wrote was written with an eye toward giving it deep hidden meaning or D H M 81 Sylvester a flamboyant and openly gay singer famous for his soaring falsetto voice scored his biggest disco hit in late 1978 with You Make Me Feel Mighty Real His singing style was said to have influenced the singer Prince At that time disco was one of the forms of music most open to gay performers 82 The Village People were a singing dancing group created by Jacques Morali and Henri Belolo to target disco s gay audience They were known for their onstage costumes of typically male associated jobs and ethnic minorities and achieved mainstream success with their 1978 hit song Macho Man Other songs include Y M C A 1979 and In the Navy 1979 Also noteworthy are The Trammps Disco Inferno 1976 1978 reissue due to the popularity gained from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack Evelyn Champagne King s Shame 1977 A Taste of Honey s Boogie Oogie Oogie 1978 Cheryl Lynn s Got to Be Real 1978 Alicia Bridges I Love the Nightlife 1978 Patrick Hernandez s Born to Be Alive 1978 Earth Wind amp Fire s September 1978 Peaches amp Herb s Shake Your Groove Thing 1978 Sister Sledge s We Are Family 1979 Anita Ward s Ring My Bell 1979 Kool amp the Gang s Ladies Night 1979 Stephanie Mills s What Cha Gonna Do with My Lovin 1979 Lipps Inc s Funkytown 1980 The Brothers Johnson s Stomp 1980 George Benson s Give Me the Night 1980 Donna Summer s Sunset People 1980 and Walter Murphy s various attempts to bring classical music to the mainstream most notably his disco song A Fifth of Beethoven 1976 which was inspired by Beethoven s fifth symphony At the height of its popularity many non disco artists recorded songs with disco elements such as Rod Stewart with his Da Ya Think I m Sexy in 1979 83 Even mainstream rock artists adopted elements of disco Progressive rock group Pink Floyd used disco like drums and guitar in their song Another Brick in the Wall Part 2 1979 84 which became their only number one single in both the US and UK The Eagles referenced disco with One of These Nights 1975 85 and Disco Strangler 1979 Paul McCartney amp Wings with Silly Love Songs 1976 and Goodnight Tonight 1979 Queen with Another One Bites the Dust 1980 the Rolling Stones with Miss You 1978 and Emotional Rescue 1980 Stephen Stills with his album Thoroughfare Gap 1978 Electric Light Orchestra with Shine a Little Love and Last Train to London both 1979 Chicago with Street Player 1979 the Kinks with Wish I Could Fly Like Superman 1979 the Grateful Dead with Shakedown Street The Who with Eminence Front 1982 and the J Geils Band with Come Back 1980 Even hard rock group KISS jumped in with I Was Made for Lovin You 1979 86 and Ringo Starr s album Ringo the 4th 1978 features a strong disco influence The disco sound was also adopted by artists from other genres including the 1979 U S number one hit No More Tears Enough Is Enough by easy listening singer Barbra Streisand in a duet with Donna Summer In country music in an attempt to appeal to the more mainstream market artists began to add pop disco influences to their music Dolly Parton launched a successful crossover onto the pop dance charts with her albums Heartbreaker and Great Balls of Fire containing songs with a disco flair In particular a disco remix of the track Baby I m Burnin peaked at number 15 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart ultimately becoming one of the years biggest club hits 87 Additionally Connie Smith covered Andy Gibb s I Just Want to Be Your Everything in 1977 Bill Anderson recorded Double S in 1978 and Ronnie Milsap released Get It Up and covered blues singer Tommy Tucker s song Hi Heel Sneakers in 1979 Pre existing non disco songs standards and TV themes were frequently disco ized in the 1970s such as the I Love Lucy theme recorded as Disco Lucy by the Wilton Place Street Band Aquarela do Brasil recorded as Brazil by The Ritchie Family and Baby Face recorded by the Wing and a Prayer Fife and Drum Corps The rich orchestral accompaniment that became identified with the disco era conjured up the memories of the big band era which brought out several artists that recorded and disco ized some big band arrangements including Perry Como who re recorded his 1945 song Temptation in 1975 as well as Ethel Merman who released an album of disco songs entitled The Ethel Merman Disco Album in 1979 Myron Floren second in command on The Lawrence Welk Show released a recording of the Clarinet Polka entitled Disco Accordion Similarly Bobby Vinton adapted The Pennsylvania Polka into a song named Disco Polka Easy listening icon Percy Faith in one of his last recordings released an album entitled Disco Party 1975 and recorded a disco version of his Theme from A Summer Place in 1976 Even classical music was adapted for disco notably Walter Murphy s A Fifth of Beethoven 1976 based on the first movement of Beethoven s 5th Symphony and Flight 76 1976 based on Rimsky Korsakov s Flight of the Bumblebee and Louis Clark s Hooked On Classics series of albums and singles The a cappella jazz group the Manhattan Transfer had a disco hit with the 1979 Twilight Zone Twilight Tone theme Many original television theme songs of the era also showed a strong disco influence such as S W A T 1975 Wonder Woman 1975 Charlie s Angels 1976 NBC Saturday Night At The Movies 1976 The Love Boat 1977 The Donahue Show 1977 CHiPs 1977 The Professionals 1977 Dallas 1978 NBC Sports broadcasts 1978 Kojak 1977 and The Hollywood Squares 1979 Disco jingles also made their way into many TV commercials including Purina s 1979 Good Mews cat food commercial 88 and an IC Light commercial by Pittsburgh s Iron City Brewing Company Parodies Edit Several parodies of the disco style were created Rick Dees at the time a radio DJ in Memphis Tennessee recorded Disco Duck 1976 and Dis Gorilla 1977 Frank Zappa parodied the lifestyles of disco dancers in Disco Boy on his 1976 Zoot Allures album and in Dancin Fool on his 1979 Sheik Yerbouti album Weird Al Yankovic s eponymous 1983 debut album includes a disco song called Gotta Boogie an extended pun on the similarity of the disco move to the American slang word booger Comedian Bill Cosby devoted his entire 1977 album Disco Bill to disco parodies In 1980 Mad Magazine released a flexi disc titled Mad Disco featuring six full length parodies of the genre Rock and roll songs critical of disco included Bob Seger s Old Time Rock and Roll and especially The Who s Sister Disco both 1978 although The Who s Eminence Front four years later had a disco feel 1979 1981 Controversy and decline in popularity Edit A man wearing a disco sucks T shirt By the end of the 1970s anti disco sentiment developed among rock music fans and musicians particularly in the United States 89 90 Disco was criticized as mindless consumerist overproduced and escapist 91 The slogans Disco sucks and Death to disco 89 became common Rock artists such as Rod Stewart and David Bowie who added disco elements to their music were accused of selling out 92 93 The punk subculture in the United States and United Kingdom was often hostile to disco 89 although in the UK many early Sex Pistols fans such as the Bromley Contingent and Jordan liked disco often congregating at nightclubs such as Louise s in Soho and the Sombrero in Kensington The track Love Hangover by Diana Ross the house anthem at the former was cited as a particular favourite by many early UK punks 94 The film The Great Rock n Roll Swindle and its soundtrack album contained a disco medley of Sex Pistols songs entitled Black Arabs and credited to a group of the same name However Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys in the song Saturday Night Holocaust likened disco to the cabaret culture of Weimar era Germany for its apathy towards government policies and its escapism Mark Mothersbaugh of Devo said that disco was like a beautiful woman with a great body and no brains and a product of political apathy of that era 95 New Jersey rock critic Jim Testa wrote Put a Bullet Through the Jukebox a vitriolic screed attacking disco that was considered a punk call to arms 96 Steve Hillage shortly prior to his transformation from a progressive rock musician into an electronic artist at the end of the 1970s with the inspiration of disco disappointed his rockist fans by admitting his love for disco with Hillage recalling it s like I d killed their pet cat 97 Anti disco sentiment was expressed in some television shows and films A recurring theme on the show WKRP in Cincinnati was a hostile attitude towards disco music In one scene of the 1980 comedy film Airplane a wayward airplane slices a radio tower with its wing knocking out an all disco radio station 98 July 12 1979 became known as the day disco died because of the Disco Demolition Night an anti disco demonstration in a baseball double header at Comiskey Park in Chicago 99 Rock station DJs Steve Dahl and Garry Meier along with Michael Veeck son of Chicago White Sox owner Bill Veeck staged the promotional event for disgruntled rock fans between the games of a White Sox doubleheader which involved exploding disco records in centerfield As the second game was about to begin the raucous crowd stormed onto the field and proceeded by setting fires tearing out seats and pieces of turf and other damage The Chicago Police Department made numerous arrests and the extensive damage to the field forced the White Sox to forfeit the second game to the Detroit Tigers who had won the first game Disco s decline in popularity after Disco Demolition Night was rapid On July 12 1979 the top six records on the U S music charts were disco songs 100 By September 22 there were no disco songs in the US Top 10 chart with the exception of Herb Alpert s instrumental Rise a smooth jazz composition with some disco overtones 100 Some in the media in celebratory tones declared disco dead and rock revived 100 Karen Mixon Cook the first female disco DJ stated that people still pause every July 12 for a moment of silence in honor of disco Dahl stated in a 2004 interview that disco was probably on its way out at the time But I think it Disco Demolition Night hastened its demise 101 Impact on music industry Edit The anti disco movement combined with other societal and radio industry factors changed the face of pop radio in the years following Disco Demolition Night Starting in the 1980s country music began a slow rise in American main pop charts Emblematic of country music s rise to mainstream popularity was the commercially successful 1980 movie Urban Cowboy The continued popularity of power pop and the revival of oldies in the late 1970s was also related to disco s decline the 1978 film Grease was emblematic of this trend Coincidentally the star of both films was John Travolta who in 1977 had starred in Saturday Night Fever which remains one of the most iconic disco films of the era During this period of decline in disco s popularity several record companies folded were reorganized or were sold In 1979 MCA Records purchased ABC Records absorbed some of its artists and then shut the label down Midsong International Records ceased operations in 1980 RSO Records founder Robert Stigwood left the label in 1981 and TK Records closed in the same year Salsoul Records continues to exist in the 2000s but primarily is used as a reissue brand 102 Casablanca Records had been releasing fewer records in the 1980s and was shut down in 1986 by parent company PolyGram Many groups that were popular during the disco period subsequently struggled to maintain their success even those that tried to adapt to evolving musical tastes The Bee Gees for instance had only one top 10 entry 1989 s One and three more top 40 songs despite recording and releasing far more than that and completely abandoning disco in their 1980s and 1990s songs in the United States after the 1970s even though numerous songs they wrote and had other artists perform were successful Of the handful of groups not taken down by disco s fall from favor Kool and the Gang Donna Summer the Jacksons and Gloria Gaynor in particular stand out In spite of having helped define the disco sound early on 103 they continued to make popular and danceable if more refined songs for yet another generation of music fans in the 1980s and beyond Earth Wind amp Fire also survived the anti disco trend and continued to produce successful singles at roughly the same pace for several more years in addition to an even longer string of R amp B chart hits that lasted into the 1990s Six months prior to the chaotic event in December 1978 popular progressive rock radio station WDAI WLS FM had suddenly switched to an all disco format disenfranchising thousands of Chicago rock fans and leaving Dahl unemployed WDAI who survived the change of public sentiment and still had good ratings at this point continued to play disco until it flipped to a short lived hybrid Top 40 rock format in May 1980 Another disco outlet that also competed against WDAI at the time WGCI FM would later incorporate R amp B and pop songs into the format eventually evolving into an urban contemporary outlet that it continues with today The latter also helped bring the Chicago house genre to the airwaves Factors contributing to disco s decline Edit Factors that have been cited as leading to the decline of disco in the United States include economic and political changes at the end of the 1970s as well as burnout from the hedonistic lifestyles led by participants 104 In the years since Disco Demolition Night some social critics have described the Disco sucks movement as implicitly macho and bigoted and an attack on non white and non heterosexual cultures 89 93 99 It was also interpreted being part of a wider cultural backlash the move towards conservatism 105 that also made its way into US politics with the election of conservative president Ronald Reagan in 1980 which also led to Republican control of the United States Senate for the first time since 1954 plus the subsequent rise of the Religious Right around the same time In January 1979 rock critic Robert Christgau argued that homophobia and most likely racism were reasons behind the movement 92 a conclusion seconded by John Rockwell Craig Werner wrote The Anti disco movement represented an unholy alliance of funkateers and feminists progressives and puritans rockers and reactionaries Nonetheless the attacks on disco gave respectable voice to the ugliest kinds of unacknowledged racism sexism and homophobia 106 Legs McNeil founder of the fanzine Punk was quoted in an interview as saying the hippies always wanted to be black We were going fuck the blues fuck the black experience He also said that disco was the result of an unholy union between homosexuals and blacks 107 Steve Dahl who had spearheaded Disco Demolition Night denied any racist or homophobic undertones to the promotion saying It s really easy to look at it historically from this perspective and attach all those things to it But we weren t thinking like that 93 It has been noted that British punk rock critics of disco were very supportive of the pro black anti racist reggae genre as well as the more pro gay new romantics movement 89 Christgau and Jim Testa have said that there were legitimate artistic reasons for being critical of disco 92 96 In 1979 the music industry in the United States underwent its worst slump in decades and disco despite its mass popularity was blamed The producer oriented sound was having difficulty mixing well with the industry s artist oriented marketing system 108 Harold Childs senior vice president at A amp M Records reportedly told the Los Angeles Times that radio is really desperate for rock product and they re all looking for some white rock n roll 99 Gloria Gaynor argued that the music industry supported the destruction of disco because rock music producers were losing money and rock musicians were losing the spotlight 109 1981 1989 Aftermath Edit Birth of electronic dance music Edit Disco was instrumental in the development of electronic dance music genres like house techno and eurodance The Eurodisco song I Feel Love produced by Giorgio Moroder for Donna Summer in 1976 has been described as a milestone and blueprint for electronic dance music because it was the first to combine repetitive synthesizer loops with a continuous four on the floor bass drum and an off beat hi hat which would become a main feature of techno and house ten years later 68 69 110 During the first years of the 1980s the traditional disco sound characterized by complex arrangements performed by large ensembles of studio session musicians including a horn section and an orchestral string section began to be phased out and faster tempos and synthesized effects accompanied by guitar and simplified backgrounds moved dance music toward electronic and pop genres starting with hi NRG Despite its decline in popularity so called club music and European style disco much remained relatively successful in the early 1980s with songs like Aneka s Japanese Boy The Gap Band s You Dropped a Bomb on Me The Weather Girls s It s Raining Men Donna Summer s She Works Hard for the Money Irene Cara s Flashdance What a Feeling theme to the film Flashdance Madonna s Lucky Star Laura Branigan s Self Control The Pointer Sisters s album Break Out Expose s Point of No Return Val Young s If You Should Ever Be Lonely and The Whispers s Rock Steady However a revival of the traditional style disco called nu disco has been popular since the 1990s House music displayed a strong disco influence which is why house music regarding its enormous success in shaping electronic dance music and contemporary club culture is often described being disco s revenge 111 Early house music was generally dance based music characterized by repetitive four on the floor beats rhythms mainly provided by drum machines 112 off beat hi hat cymbals and synthesized basslines While house displayed several characteristics similar to disco music it was more electronic and minimalist 112 and the repetitive rhythm of house was more important than the song itself As well house did not use the lush string sections that were a key part of the disco sound Legacy EditDJ culture Edit Classic DJ Station A DJ mixer is placed between two Technics SL 1200 MK 2 turntables The rising popularity of disco came in tandem with developments in the role of the DJ DJing developed from the use of multiple record turntables and DJ mixers to create a continuous seamless mix of songs with one song transitioning to another with no break in the music to interrupt the dancing The resulting DJ mix differed from previous forms of dance music in the 1960s which were oriented towards live performances by musicians This in turn affected the arrangement of dance music since songs in the disco era typically contained beginnings and endings marked by a simple beat or riff that could be easily used to transition to a new song The development of DJing was also influenced by new turntablism techniques such as beatmatching and scratching a process facilitated by the introduction of new turntable technologies such as the Technics SL 1200 MK 2 first sold in 1978 which had a precise variable pitch control and a direct drive motor DJs were often avid record collectors who would hunt through used record stores for obscure soul records and vintage funk recordings DJs helped to introduce rare records and new artists to club audiences Disco dance performance at the 30th anniversary of Kontula in Helsinki Finland in 1994 In the 1970s individual DJs became more prominent and some DJs such as Larry Levan the resident at Paradise Garage Jim Burgess Tee Scott and Francis Grasso became famous in the disco scene Levan for example developed a cult following among club goers who referred to his DJ sets as Saturday Mass Some DJs would use reel to reel tape recorders to make remixes and tape edits of songs Some DJs who were making remixes made the transition from the DJ booth to becoming a record producer notably Burgess Scott developed several innovations He was the first disco DJ to use three turntables as sound sources the first to simultaneously play two beat matched records the first user of electronic effects units in his mixes and an innovator in mixing dialogue in from well known movies into his mixes typically over a percussion break These mixing techniques were also applied to radio DJs such as Ted Currier of WKTU and WBLS Grasso is particularly notable for taking the DJ profession out of servitude and making the DJ the musical head chef 113 Once he entered the scene the DJ was no longer responsible for waiting on the crowd hand and foot meeting their every song request Instead with increased agency and visibility the DJ was now able to use their own technical and creative skills to whip up a nightly special of innovative mixes refining their personal sound and aesthetic and building their own reputation 114 Post disco Edit Main articles Post disco Italo disco and alternative dance The post disco sound and genres associated with it originated in the 1970s and early 1980s with R amp B and post punk musicians focusing on a more electronic and experimental side of disco spawning boogie Italo disco and alternative dance Drawing from a diverse range of non disco influences and techniques such as the one man band style of Kashif and Stevie Wonder and alternative approaches of Parliament Funkadelic it was driven by synthesizers keyboards and drum machines Post disco acts include D Train Patrice Rushen ESG Bill Laswell Arthur Russell Post disco had an important influence on dance pop and was bridging classical disco and later forms of electronic dance music 115 Early hip hop Edit Main articles Hip hop music and Old school hip hop The disco sound had a strong influence on early hip hop Most of the early hip hop songs were created by isolating existing disco bass guitar lines and dubbing over them with MC rhymes The Sugarhill Gang used Chic s Good Times as the foundation for their 1979 song Rapper s Delight generally considered to be the song that first popularized rap music in the United States and around the world With synthesizers and Krautrock influences that replaced the previous disco foundation a new genre was born when Afrika Bambaataa released the single Planet Rock spawning a hip hop electronic dance trend that includes songs such as Planet Patrol s Play at Your Own Risk 1982 C Bank s One More Shot 1982 Cerrone s Club Underworld 1984 Shannon s Let the Music Play 1983 Freeez s I O U 1983 Midnight Star s Freak a Zoid 1983 Chaka Khan s I Feel For You 1984 House music and rave culture Edit Main articles House music and rave Like disco house music was based around DJs creating mixes for dancers in clubs Pictured is DJ Miguel Migs mixing using CDJ players House music is a genre of electronic dance music that originated in Chicago in the early 1980s also see Chicago house It quickly spread to other American cities such as Detroit where it developed into the harder and more industrial techno New York City also see garage house and Newark all of which developed their own regional scenes In the mid to late 1980s house music became popular in Europe as well as major cities in South America and Australia 116 Early house music commercial success in Europe saw songs such as Pump Up The Volume by MARRS 1987 House Nation by House Master Boyz and the Rude Boy of House 1987 Theme from S Express by S Express 1988 and Doctorin the House by Coldcut 1988 in the pop charts Since the early to mid 1990s house music has been infused in mainstream pop and dance music worldwide House music in the 2010s while keeping several of these core elements notably the prominent kick drum on every beat varies widely in style and influence ranging from the soulful and atmospheric deep house to the more aggressive acid house or the minimalist microhouse House music has also fused with several other genres creating fusion subgenres 112 such as euro house tech house electro house and jump house Strobing lights flash at a rave dance event in Vienna 2005 In the late 1980s and early 1990s rave culture began to emerge from the house and acid house scene 117 Like house it incorporated disco culture s same love of dance music played by DJs over powerful sound systems recreational drug and club drug exploration sexual promiscuity and hedonism Although disco culture started out underground it eventually thrived in the mainstream by the late 1970s and major labels commodified and packaged the music for mass consumption In contrast the rave culture started out underground and stayed mostly underground In part this was to avoid the animosity that was still surrounding disco and dance music The rave scene also stayed underground to avoid law enforcement attention that was directed at the rave culture due to its use of secret unauthorized warehouses for some dance events and its association with illegal club drugs like ecstasy Post punk Edit Main articles Post punk and dance punk The post punk movement that originated in the late 1970s both supported punk rock s rule breaking while rejecting its move back to raw rock music 118 Post punk s mantra of constantly moving forward lent itself to both openness to and experimentation with elements of disco and other styles 118 Public Image Limited is considered the first post punk group 118 The group s second album Metal Box fully embraced the studio as instrument methodology of disco 118 The group s founder John Lydon the former lead singer for the Sex Pistols told the press that disco was the only music he cared for at the time No wave was a subgenre of post punk centered in New York City 118 For shock value James Chance a notable member of the no wave scene penned an article in the East Village Eye urging his readers to move uptown and get trancin with some superradioactive disco voodoo funk His band James White and the Blacks wrote a disco album titled Off White 118 Their performances resembled those of disco performers horn section dancers and so on 118 In 1981 ZE Records led the transition from no wave into the more subtle mutant disco post disco punk genre 118 Mutant disco acts such as Kid Creole and the Coconuts Was Not Was ESG and Liquid Liquid influenced several British post punk acts such as New Order Orange Juice and A Certain Ratio 118 Nu disco Edit Main article Nu disco Nu disco is a 21st century dance music genre associated with the renewed interest in 1970s and early 1980s disco 119 mid 1980s Italo disco and the synthesizer heavy Euro disco aesthetics 120 The moniker appeared in print as early as 2002 and by mid 2008 was used by record shops such as the online retailers Juno and Beatport 121 These vendors often associate it with re edits of original era disco music as well as with music from European producers who make dance music inspired by original era American disco electro and other genres popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s It is also used to describe the music on several American labels that were previously associated with the genres electroclash and French house Revivals and return to mainstream success EditMain article Nu disco 1990s resurgence Edit In the 1990s after a decade of backlash disco and its legacy became more accepted by pop music artists and listeners alike as more songs films and compilations were released that referenced disco This was part of a wave of 1970s nostalgia that was taking place in popular culture at the time Examples of songs during this time that were influenced by disco included Deee Lite s Groove Is in the Heart 1990 U2 s Lemon 1993 Blur s Girls amp Boys 1994 and Entertain Me 1995 Pulp s Disco 2000 1995 and Jamiroquai s Canned Heat 1999 while films such as Boogie Nights 1997 and The Last Days of Disco 1998 featured primarily disco soundtracks 2000s resurgence Edit Students from Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education Mexico City dancing to disco during a cultural event on campus In the early 2000s an updated genre of disco called nu disco began breaking into the mainstream A few examples like Daft Punk s One More Time and Kylie Minogue s Love at First Sight and Can t Get You Out of My Head became club favorites and commercial successes Several nu disco songs were crossovers with funky house such as Spiller s Groovejet If This Ain t Love and Modjo s Lady Hear Me Tonight both songs sampling older disco songs and both reaching number one on the UK Singles Chart in 2000 Robbie Williams disco single Rock DJ was the UK s fourth best selling single the same year Jamiroquai s song Little L and Murder on the Dancefloor by Sophie Ellis Bextor were hits on 2001 too Rock band Manic Street Preachers released a disco song Miss Europa Disco Dancer in 2001 The song s disco influence which appears on Know Your Enemy was described as being much discussed 122 In 2005 Madonna immersed herself in the disco music of the 1970s and released her album Confessions on a Dance Floor to rave reviews In addition to that her song Hung Up became a major top 10 song and club staple and sampled ABBA s 1979 song Gimme Gimme Gimme A Man After Midnight In addition to her disco influenced attire to award shows and interviews her Confessions Tour also incorporated various elements of the 1970s such as disco balls a mirrored stage design and the roller derby In 2006 Jessica Simpson released her album A Public Affair inspired on disco and 1980s Music The first single of the album A Public Affair was reviewed as a disco dancing competition influenced by Madonna s early works The video of the song was filmed on a skating rink and features a line dance of hands 123 124 125 The success of the nu disco revival of the early 2000s was described by music critic Tom Ewing as more interpersonal than the pop music of the 1990s The revival of disco within pop put a spotlight on something that had gone missing over the 90s a sense of music not just for dancing but for dancing with someone Disco was a music of mutual attraction cruising flirtation negotiation Its dancefloor is a space for immediate pleasure but also for promises kept and otherwise It s a place where things start but their resolution let alone their meaning is never clear All of 2000s great disco number ones explore how to play this hand Madison Avenue look to impose their will upon it to set terms and roles Spiller is less rigid Groovejet accepts the night s changeability happily sells out certainty for an amused smile and a few great one liners 126 2010s resurgence Edit In 2013 several 1970s style disco and funk songs charted and the pop charts had more dance songs than at any other point since the late 1970s 127 The biggest disco song of the year as of June was Get Lucky by Daft Punk featuring Nile Rodgers on guitar Random Access Memories also ended up winning Album of the Year at the 2014 Grammys 127 128 Other disco styled songs that made it into the top 40 were Robin Thicke s Blurred Lines number one Justin Timberlake s Take Back the Night number 29 Bruno Mars Treasure number five 127 128 Arcade Fire s Reflektor featured strong disco elements In 2014 disco music could be found in Lady Gaga s Artpop 129 130 and Katy Perry s Birthday 131 Other disco songs from 2014 include I Want It All By Karmin Wrong Club by the Ting Tings Blow by Beyonce and the William Orbit mix of Let Me in Your Heart Again by Queen In 2014 Brazilian Globo TV the second biggest television network in the world aired Boogie Oogie a telenovela about the Disco Era that takes place between 1978 and 1979 from the hit fever to the decadence The show s success was responsible for a Disco revival across the country bringing back to stage and to Brazilian record charts local disco divas like Lady Zu and As Freneticas Other top 10 entries from 2015 like Mark Ronson s disco groove infused Uptown Funk Maroon 5 s Sugar the Weeknd s Can t Feel My Face and Jason Derulo s Want To Want Me also ascended the charts and have a strong disco influence Disco mogul and producer Giorgio Moroder also re appeared with his new album Deja Vu in 2015 which has proved to be a modest success Other songs from 2015 like I Don t Like It I Love It by Flo Rida Adventure of a Lifetime by Coldplay Back Together by Robin Thicke and Levels by Nick Jonas feature disco elements as well In 2016 disco songs or disco styled pop songs are showing a strong presence on the music charts as a possible backlash to the 1980s styled synthpop electro house and dubstep that have been dominating the current charts Justin Timberlake s 2016 song Can t Stop the Feeling which shows strong elements of disco became the 26th song to debut at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in the history of the chart The Martian a 2015 film extensively uses disco music as a soundtrack although for the main character astronaut Mark Watney there s only one thing worse than being stranded on Mars it s being stranded on Mars with nothing but disco music 132 Kill the Lights featured on an episode of the HBO television series Vinyl 2016 and with Nile Rodgers guitar licks hit number one on the US Dance chart in July 2016 2020s resurgence Edit British singer Dua Lipa has been credited by music critics with leading the revival of disco following the widespread international success of her single Don t Start Now and her album Future Nostalgia 133 In 2020 disco continued its mainstream popularity and has become a recent fad in popular music 134 135 In early 2020 disco influenced hits such as Doja Cat s Say So Lady Gaga s Stupid Love and Dua Lipa s Don t Start Now experienced widespread success on global music charts with the three songs charting at numbers 1 5 and 2 respectively on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart At the time Billboard declared that Lipa was leading the charge toward disco influenced production a day after her retro and disco influenced album Future Nostalgia was released on March 27 2020 133 136 By mid 2020 multiple disco albums and songs had been released In early September 2020 South Korean group BTS debuted at number 1 in the US with their English language disco single Dynamite having sold 265 000 downloads in its first week in the US marking the biggest pure sales week since Taylor Swift s Look What You Made Me Do 2017 137 Other critically acclaimed disco albums from the year include Jessie Ware s What s Your Pleasure and Roisin Murphy s Roisin Machine In July 2020 Australian singer Kylie Minogue announced she would be releasing her fifteenth studio album Disco on November 6 2020 The album was preceded by two singles the lead single from the album Say Something was released on July 23 of the same year and premiered on BBC Radio 2 138 The second single Magic was released on September 24 139 Both singles received critical acclaim with critics praising Minogue for returning to disco roots which were prominent in her albums Light Years 2000 Fever 2001 and Aphrodite 2010 See also EditClub Kids List of number one dance singles of 1978 U S List of number one dance singles of 1979 U S Roller disco Stealth discoReferences EditWorks citedBrewster Bill Broughton Frank 2000 1999 Last Night a DJ Saved My Life The History of the Disc Jockey 2nd ed New York Headline Book Publishing ISBN 978 0 80213 6886 Sanneh Kelefa 2021 Major Labels A History of Popular Music in Seven Genres New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 0 525 55959 7 Shapiro Peter 2006 2005 Turn The Beat Around The Secret History of Disco Paperback ed New York Faber And Faber ISBN 978 0 86547 952 4 Notes Disco Music Sam Houston State University Retrieved November 1 2019 Zaleski Anne February 26 2015 Where to start with 80s U K synth pop The A V Club Retrieved August 27 2015 Bernard Edwards 43 Musician In Disco Band and Pop Producer The New York Times April 22 1996 As disco waned in the late 70s so did Chic s album sales But its influence lingered on as new wave rap and dance pop bands found inspiration in Chic s club anthems Dance pop AllMusic October 30 2011 Broadly speaking the typical New York discotheque DJ is young between 18 and 30 and Italian journalist Vince Lettie declared in 1975 Remarkably almost all of the important early DJs were of Italian extraction Italian Americans have played a significant role in America s dance music culture While Italian Americans mostly from Brooklyn largely created disco from scratch Readers Poll The Best Disco Songs of All Time Rolling Stone May 23 2012 Archived from the original on March 20 2018 Retrieved March 20 2018 The Legacy of Giorgio Moroder the Father of Disco Blisspop Archived from the original on October 19 2020 Retrieved December 14 2020 From Bengal to boogie Rupa Biswas India s rediscovered disco diva TheGuardian com June 21 2019 Ihsan Al Mounzer The godfather of belly dance disco The 50 best albums of 2020 the full list The Guardian December 18 2020 Retrieved February 27 2021 FanLabel Staff April 30 2020 2020 s Disco Pop Revival FanLabel Music Scene Playlist FanLabel Retrieved February 27 2021 Kornhaber Story by Spencer The Eeriness of the 2020 Disco Revival The Atlantic ISSN 1072 7825 Retrieved February 27 2021 Sancho Xavi August 3 2014 Madonna eterno regreso a la provocacion El Pais in Spanish Madrid Spain Retrieved December 6 2014 a b c Hilton Denny October 19 2012 The birth of disco OUPblog Oxford University Press Retrieved December 21 2020 Playing favourites Vince Aletti Resident Advisor Archived from the original on December 29 2019 Retrieved February 8 2019 Morley Paul August 20 2009 Paul Morley s showing off Vince Aletti Bill Brewster and Luke Howard via www theguardian com a b ARTS IN AMERICA Here s to Disco It Never Could Say Goodbye The New York Times USA December 10 2002 archived from the original on November 6 2015 retrieved August 25 2015 What the Funk How to Get That James Brown Sound Gibson com Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved October 27 2017 Sanneh 2021 pp 375 376 a b Sanneh 2021 p 364 Curry Oliver May 18 2013 Lessons from Disco page 2 Attack Archived from the original on September 9 2013 Retrieved June 15 2022 DISCO History Disco Disco com disco disco com Archived from the original on January 21 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 Once a Hot Disco Now a Cool Opportunity Philadelphia Magazine Philadelphia Magazine May 18 2016 Archived from the original on October 28 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Everybody s Doing The hustle Archived April 29 2020 at the Wayback Machine Associated Press October 16 1975 Lawrence Tim 2004 Love Saves the Day A History of American Dance Music Culture 1970 1979 Duke University Press p 315 ISBN 0822385112 Redinger Bob Jr October 20 1979 Franchise Concept More than a Pipe Dream Billboard p 58 Beyond the Hustle Seventies Social Dancing Discotheque Culture and the Emergence of the Contemporary Club Dancer Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press 2009 199 214 Tim Lawrence Archived from the original on June 14 2017 Retrieved June 5 2017 Former Pocket area resident was Sacto s disco king Valley Community Newspapers Inc www valcomnews com Retrieved August 14 2020 a b c d e f Disco Fashion That s the way They Liked It The Ultimate History Project Archived from the original on October 6 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Gootenberg Paul 1954 Between Coca and Cocaine A Century or More of U S Peruvian Drug Paradoxes 1860 1980 Hispanic American Historical Review 83 1 February 2003 pp 119 150 The relationship of cocaine to 1970s disco culture cannot be stressed enough Amyl butyl and isobutyl nitrite collectively known as alkyl nitrites are clear yellow liquids inhaled for their intoxicating effects Nitrites originally came as small glass capsules that were popped open This led to nitrites being given the name poppers but this form of the drug is rarely found in the UK The drug became popular in the UK first on the disco club scene of the 1970s and then at dance and rave venues in the 1980s and 1990s a b Braunstein Peter November 1999 DISCO American Heritage Vol 50 no 7 Archived from the original on February 5 2010 Retrieved February 5 2010 PCP Quaaludes Mescaline What Became of Yesterday s It Drugs The Fix Thefix com December 30 2011 Archived from the original on October 27 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 Brownstein Henry H The Handbook of Drugs and Society John Wiley amp Sons 2015 p 101 Tim Lawrence Beyond the Hustle Seventies Social Dancing Discotheque Culture and the Emergence of the Contemporary Club Dancer In Julie Malnig ed Ballroom Boogie Shimmy Sham Shake A Social and Popular Dance Reader Urbana and Chicago University of Illinois Press 2009 pp 199 214 Online version Beyond the Hustle Seventies Social Dancing Discotheque Culture and the Emergence of the Contemporary Club Dancer Timlawrence info Archived from the original on October 12 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Tim Lawrence The Forging of a White Gay Aesthetic at the Saint 1980 84 In Dancecult 3 1 2011 pp 1 24 Online version The Forging of a White Gay Aesthetic at the Saint 1980 84 Timlawrence info Archived from the original on October 31 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 The Decade of Decadence A Quick Look at The Sexual Revolution Flashbak Flashbak com March 2 2015 Archived from the original on October 28 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b c d Richard Dyer In Defense of Disco In Gay Left 8 Summer 1979 pp 20 23 Reprinted in Mark J Butler ed Electronica Dance and Club Music New York London Routledge 2017 pp 121 127 Shapiro Peter 2000 Modulations a history of electronic music throbbing words on sound Caipirinha Productions pp 40 49 ISBN 1 891024 06 X Shapiro Peter 2000 Modulations a history of electronic music throbbing words on sound Caipirinha 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primarily gay African Americans and Latinos But the pre Saturday Night Fever dance underground was actually sweetly earnest and irony free in its hippie dippie positivity as evinced by anthems like MFSB s Love Is the Message Village Voice July 10 2001 Echols Alice March 29 2010 Hot Stuff Disco and the Remaking of American Culture W W Norton amp Company p 24 ISBN 9780393066753 via Internet Archive shaft disco Official Singles Chart Top 50 04 May 1975 10 May 1975 officialchart com Retrieved January 19 2021 The First Years of Disco 1972 1974 discosavvy com Retrieved June 18 2019 In November 1974 WPIX FM launched the world s first disco radio show Disco 102 hosted by Steve Andrews for 4 hours every Saturday night Shapiro 2006 pp 5 7 Lawrence Tim March 2011 Disco and the Queering of the Dance Floor Cultural Studies 25 2 230 243 doi 10 1080 09502386 2011 535989 S2CID 143682409 Alan McKee Beautiful Things in Popular Culture John Wiley amp Sons April 15 2008 p 196 Tim Lawrence tim lawrence 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October 2009 Good Bye Blue Sky Pink Floyd 30th Anniversary The Wall Revisited Guitar World Future 30 10 79 80 Archived from the original on May 13 2011 A few other Pink Floyd songs of the 1970s incorporated disco elements especially songs like Part 8 of Shine On You Crazy Diamond 1975 Pigs Three Different Ones 1977 and Young Lust 1979 which all featured a funky syncopated bass line Don Henley commented on One of These Nights s disco connection in the liner notes of The Very Best Of 2003 Paul Stanley a guitarist for the rock group Kiss became friends with Desmond Child and as Child remembered in Billboard Paul and I talked about how dance music at that time didn t have any rock elements To counteract the synthesized disco music dominating the airwaves Stanley and Child wrote I Was Made For Loving You So we made history Child further remembered in Billboard because we created the first rock disco song Barnes Terry November 27 1999 Gifted Child Billboard Vol 111 no 48 pp DC 23 Retrieved 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Question Archived October 4 2009 at the Wayback Machine Robert Christgau for the Village Voice Pop amp Jop Poll January 22 1978 1979 a b c Top Sports Searches ESPN Archived from the original on May 4 2010 England s Dreaming Jon Savage Faber amp Faber 1991 pp 93 95 185 186 DEVO Juicemagazine com September 1 2001 Archived from the original on June 20 2017 Retrieved October 27 2017 a b Andersen Mark Jenkins Mark August 1 2003 Dance of days two decades of punk in the nation s capital Akashic Books pp 17 ISBN 978 1 888451 44 3 Retrieved March 21 2011 Steve Hillage Terrascope Feature terrascope co uk Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 27 2017 Foster Buzz May 17 2012 Disco Lives Forever YouTube Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved November 4 2021 a b c Campion Chris Walking on the Moon The Untold Story of the Police and the Rise of New Wave Rock John Wiley amp Sons 2009 ISBN 978 0 470 28240 3 pp 82 84 a b c From Comiskey Park to Thriller The 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First Leader Billboard Archived from the original on September 1 2020 Retrieved September 23 2020 Kelleher Patrick July 21 2020 Kylie Minogue is about to save 2020 with the joy filled first single from her disco drenched new album PinkNews Retrieved July 21 2020 Copsey Rob September 21 2020 Kylie Minogue announces details of new single Magic Official Charts Company Retrieved September 21 2020 Cite error A list defined reference with group name is not used in the content see the help page Further reading Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Disco Wikimedia Commons has media related to Disco Andrea Angeli Bufalini amp Giovanni Savastano 2014 La Disco Storia illustrata della discomusic Arcana Italy ISBN 978 8862313223 Aletti Vince 2009 The Disco Files 1973 78 New York s underground week by week DJhistory com ISBN 978 0956189608 Angelo Marty 2006 Once Life Matters A New Beginning Impact Publishing ISBN 978 0961895440 Beta Andy November 2008 Disco Inferno 2 0 A Slightly Less Hedonistic Comeback Charting the DJs labels and edits fueling an old new craze Archived December 19 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Village Voice Campion Chris 2009 Walking on the Moon The Untold Story of the Police and the Rise of New Wave Rock John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0470282403 Echols Alice 2010 Hot Stuff Disco and the Remaking of American Culture W W Norton and Company Inc ISBN 978 0 393 06675 3 Flynn Daniel J February 18 2010 How the Knack Conquered Disco The American Spectator Gillian Frank May 2007 Discophobia Antigay Prejudice and the 1979 Backlash against Disco Journal of the History of Sexuality Volume 15 Number 2 pp 276 306 Electronic ISSN 1535 3605 print ISSN 1043 4070 Hanson Kitty 1978 Disco Fever The Beat People Places Styles Deejays Groups Signet Books ISBN 978 0451084521 Jones Alan and Kantonen Jussi 1999 Saturday Night Forever The Story of Disco Chicago Illinois A Cappella Books ISBN 978 1556524110 Lawrence Tim 2004 Love Saves the Day A History of American Dance Music Culture 1970 1979 Duke University Press ISBN 978 0822331988 Lester Paul February 23 2007 Can you feel the force The Guardian Michaels Mark 1990 The Billboard Book of Rock Arranging ISBN 978 0823075379 Narvaez Richie 2020 Holly Hernandez and the Death of Disco Pinata Books ISBN 978 1558859029 Reed John September 19 2007 DVD Review Saturday Night Fever 30th Anniversary Special Collector s Edition Blogcritics Rodgers Nile 2011 Le Freak An Upside Down Story of Family Disco and Destiny Spiegel amp Grau ISBN 978 0385529655 Sclafani Tony July 10 2009 When Disco Sucks echoed around the world Archived February 15 2020 at the Wayback Machine MSNBC Portals Music 1970s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Disco amp oldid 1132516378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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