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Italo disco

Italo disco (variously capitalized, and sometimes hyphenated as Italo-disco)[1] is a music genre which originated in Italy in the late 1970s and was mainly produced in the 1980s. Italo disco evolved from the then-current underground dance, pop, and electronic music, both domestic and foreign (hi-NRG, Euro disco) and developed into a diverse genre.[2] The genre employs electronic drums, drum machines, synthesizers, and occasionally vocoders. It is usually sung in English, and to a lesser extent in Italian and Spanish.

Italo disco
Italo Disco logo
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsLate 1970s – early 1980s, Italy
Derivative forms
Other topics

The origin of the genre's name is strongly tied to marketing efforts of the ZYX record label, which began licensing and marketing the music outside Italy in 1982.[3] Italo disco faded in the early 1990s and then split into many genres (Eurobeat, Italo house, Italo dance).

Terminology edit

The term "Italo", a generic prefix meaning Italian, had been used on pop music compilation albums in West Germany as early as 1978, such as Italo Top Hits on the K-Tel label and the first volume of Italo Super Hits on the Ariola label.[4]

There is no documentation of where the term "Italo-Disco" first appeared, but its origins are generally traced to Italian and other European disco recordings released in the West-German market. Examples include the phrase "Original Italo-Disco" on the sleeve of the West-German edition of "Girls on Me" by Amin-Peck in 1982, and the 1983 compilation album The Best of Italo-Disco.[5] These records, along with the Italo Boot Mix megamix, were released by Bernhard Mikulski on his ZYX label, who was therefore credited with coining the term "Italo disco".[1][6] The Best of and Boot Mix compilations each became a 16-volume series that culminated in 1991. Both series primarily featured disco music of Italian origin, often licensed from independent Italian labels which had limited distribution outside Italy, as well as songs in a similar style by other European artists.

The presenters of the Italian music show Discoring (produced by RAI) usually referred to Italo disco tracks as "rock elettronico" (electronic rock) or "balli da discoteca" (disco dance) before the term "Italo disco" came into existence.

History edit

Origins: 1977–1990 edit

Italo disco originated in Europe in the late 1970s. After Disco Demolition Night in 1979, American interest in disco sharply declined, whereas in Europe the genre maintained mainstream popularity and survived into the 1980s.

The adoption of synthesizers and other electronic instruments by disco artists led to electronic dance music, which spawned many subgenres such as hi-NRG in America and space disco in Europe. Italo disco's influences include Italian producer Giorgio Moroder, French musician Didier Marouani, Italo-French drummer Cerrone, and the San Francisco-based hi-NRG producer Patrick Cowley, who worked with singers as Sylvester and Paul Parker.

In the late 1970s, Italo disco group D. D. Sound (La Bionda) released the song "1, 2, 3, 4, Gimme Some More".[7] In 1979, Jacques Fred Petrus and Mauro Malavasi created the soulful post-disco groups Change and B. B. & Q. Band.[8] In 1981, both groups gained US R&B and Dance hits with "Paradise" and "On the Beat" respectively.

Italo disco often features electronic sounds, electronic drums, drum machines, catchy melodies, vocoders, overdubs, and heavily accented English lyrics. By 1983, Italo disco's instrumentation was predominantly electronic. Along with love, Italo disco themes deal with robots and space, sometimes combining all three in songs like "Robot Is Systematic" (1982) by Lectric Workers and "Spacer Woman" (1983) by Charlie.

Then also new musical genres that had set aside the rock of the 1970s thanks to new groups, such as Duran Duran, Depeche Mode, Spandau Ballet and great pop artists Michael Jackson and Madonna. The 1980s brought the electronics with real instruments, experimenting new sounds, in short, it was a decade of great change in modern music.[9]

Claudio Simonetti

In 1983, there were frequent hit singles, and labels such as American Disco, Crash, Merak, Sensation and X-Energy appeared. The popular label Discomagic Records released more than thirty singles within the year. It was also the year that the term "Italo disco" became widely known outside Italy, with the release of the first volumes of The Best of Italo Disco compilation series on the West-German record label ZYX. After 1983, Italo disco was also produced outside Italy.

Although Italo disco was successful in mainland Europe during the 1980s, only few singles reached the UK charts, such as Ryan Paris's "Dolce Vita", Laura Branigan's "Self Control", Baltimora's "Tarzan Boy", Spagna's "Call Me" and Sabrina's "Boys", all of which were top 5 hits. Italo disco maintained an influence in the UK's underground music scenes in the UK, and its impact can be heard in the music of several British electronic acts such as the Pet Shop Boys, Erasure and New Order.[1]

Derivative styles edit

Canada, particularly Quebec, produced several remarkable Italo disco acts, including Trans X ("Living on Video"), Lime ("Angel Eyes"), Rational Youth ("City of Night"), Pluton & the Humanoids ("World Invaders"), Purple Flash Orchestra ("We Can Make It"), and Tapps ("Forbidden Lover"). Those productions were called "Canadian disco" during 1980–1984 in Europe and hi-NRG disco in the U.S.

In English-speaking countries, it was called Italo disco and hi-NRG. In Mexico the style is known just as "disco", having nothing to do with the 1970s genre.[citation needed] West-German productions were sung in English and were characterized by an emphasis on melody, exaggerated production, and a more earnest approach to the themes of love; examples may be found in the works of: Modern Talking, Fancy, American-born singer and Fancy protégé Grant Miller, Bad Boys Blue, Joy, Silent Circle, the Twins, Lian Ross, C. C. Catch, Blue System and London Boys.

During the mid-1980s, spacesynth, a derivation of Italo disco, developed. It was mostly instrumental, featured space sounds, and was exemplified by musicians, such as: Koto, Proxyon, Rofo, Cyber People, Hipnosis, Laserdance and Mike Mareen (whose music inhabited the spacesynth/hi-NRG overlap).

Eurobeat edit

As Italo disco declined in Europe, Italian and West-German producers adapted the sound to Japanese tastes, creating "Eurobeat". Music produced in this style is sold exclusively in Japan due to the country's Para Para culture, produced by Italian producers for the Japanese market. The two most famous Eurobeat labels are A-Beat-C Records and Time Records. One traditional Italo disco label, S.A.I.F.A.M., still produces Eurobeat music for Japan.

Around 1989 in Italy, Italo disco evolved into Italo house when Italian Italo disco artists experimented with harder beats and the "house" sound.

Revival: 1998–present edit

A big comeback of German disco began in 1998, when Modern Talking reunited. Rete 4 channel in Italy, Hits 24, Goldstar TV, and ProSieben channels in Germany, and the program Nostalgia on Spain's TVE channel started to broadcast Italo disco.[citation needed]

Several online radio stations, like Radio Stad Den Haag (Netherlands), stream the genre. The renewed popularity inspired re-releases and new mixes by many of the original Italo disco record labels. ZYX Records has released many new CD mixes since 2000. Panama Records and Radius Records have re-released Italo tracks on vinyl. Northern European labels I Venti d'Azzurro (Netherlands) and Flashback Records (Finland) have produced unreleased demos, new versions of old hits, and new songs.[citation needed]

A number of new Italo disco artists have emerged and have been featured on the ZYX Italo Disco New Generation discs: Birizdo I Am, Boris Zhivago, D-White, Estimado, Italove, Mirko Hirsch, Nation in Blue, Siberian Heat, among many others.[citation needed]

Italo disco is also one of the major influences to the sound of the synthwave genre. Synthwave and Italo disco revival artists are often featured on the same mixtapes, playlists, and labels.[citation needed]

Related styles and legacy edit

Space disco edit

Space disco
Stylistic origins
Cultural originsMid-1970s, Europe
Local scenes
Norway

At least one modern history of "space disco" traces the genre's origins to science fiction themes (outer space, robots, and the future) in the titles, lyrics and cover artwork of dance music in the late 1970s.[11] Plausible associations are drawn between the popularity of Star Wars (released mid-1977), the subsequent surge of interest in science fiction themes in popular culture, and the release of a number of science fiction themed and "futuristic"-sounding (synthesizer and arpeggiator-infused) disco music worldwide.[11][12] The most commercially successful space disco tracks were "Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band" (1977) by Meco, and "Automatic Lover" (1978) by Dee D. Jackson, with each song reaching the top ten in a number of countries, including the United Kingdom.

 
Didier Marouani, founder of Space, a pioneering space disco band

Additional examples of space disco usually include the compositions "Just Blue" and "Symphony" (both 1978) of French band Space,[11] the same for the track Magic Fly; additional tracks by Dee D. Jackson during the 1970s and 1980s, and "I Feel Space"[12] by Lindstrøm.

Labels producing this type of music include[12]

  • Whatever We Want Records (Quiet Village Project, Map Of Africa, Bobby Marie) (Brooklyn, NY, US)
  • Feedelity (run by Lindstrøm) (Europe)
  • Eskimo (Rub'N'Tug Present Campfire mix), Bear Entertainment/Bear Funk, Prins Thomas' Full Pupp (Belgium)
  • Tirk (UK) and D. C. Recordings (UK).

Post-disco and house music edit

New York City-based post-disco record label Emergency Records specialized in reissuing/selling records from Italy (e.g. Kano "I'm Ready"),[13] since the 1970s. Kano is noted for incorporating American musical elements ("heavy funk" influences, "breakbeat" rhythm, the use of vocoder) with electronic music while using rudimentary synthesizers,[9] constituting one of the earliest forms of Italo disco. This form of Americanized Italo disco, that also includes Klein + M.B.O.[9] ("Dirty Talk", "Wonderful", "The M. B. O. Theme"), re-entered the States and was known to be influential on the development of house music.[9] Doctor's Cat ("Feel the Drive"), likewise, was one of the earliest "house music" songs.[14]

Record labels include

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c McDonnell, John (1 September 2008). "Scene and heard: Italo-disco". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
  2. ^ "Italo disco's eternal evolution". DJ Mag. 26 July 2022. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  3. ^ Folklore that ZYX boss Bernhard Mikulski coined the term Italo-disco in 1983 was long published on Wikipedia, but is unsubstantiated; to date, reliable third-party documentation has not been found to support whether ZYX label boss Mikulski himself named it, or whether ZYX was even the first to publish the term; it could just as easily have been a descriptor people were already using before someone at ZYX picked up on it.
  4. ^ Italo Super Hits in WorldCat. OCLC 725614824.
  5. ^ "Various – The Best Of Italo-Disco". Discogs. 12 October 1983. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  6. ^ "2011: WHAT IS ITALO DISCO??". the social seattle. 20 December 2011. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  7. ^ DD Sound Retrieved 06 July 2022
  8. ^ B. B. & Q. Band Artist Bio AllMusic. Retrieved 06 July 2022
  9. ^ a b c d Verrina, Francesco Cataldo (2015). The History of Italo Disco. Morrisville, North Carolina: Lulu. p. 81. ISBN 978-1326355524.
  10. ^ "La Bionda". Sonyatv.com. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  11. ^ a b c Kantonen, Jussi (10 November 2006). . DiscoStyle.com. Archived from the original on 17 February 2010. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
  12. ^ a b c Leone, Dominique (6 February 2006). "Space Disco". pitchfork.com. Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  13. ^ a b Lawrence, Tim (2016). Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor, 1980–1983. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-6186-2. LCCN 2016007103.
  14. ^ SPIN Media LLC (December 1989). SPIN. SPIN Media LLC. pp. 104–. ISSN 0886-3032.

Bibliography edit

  • Peterink, Jeroen (2012). I Venti D'Azzurro presents The History of Italo Disco.
  • Reynolds, Simon (2013). Generation Ecstasy: Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-78316-6.
  • Catalda Verrina, Francesco (2015). The History Of Italo Disco
  • Todesco, Raff (2020). ITALO DISCO: History of Dance Music in Italy from 1975 to 1988
  • Halve, Michael (2022). Crazy About Italo

External links edit

  • Eurodance Magazine 2021-12-03 at the Wayback Machine - music blog about Eurodance and Italo disco
  • Club Disco
  • The World of Italo Disco interviews
  • Scene and heard: Italo-disco The Guardian
  • Italo song lyrics
  • [1]

italo, disco, this, article, about, music, genre, song, italodisco, song, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sou. This article is about the music genre For the song see Italodisco song This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Italo disco news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Italo disco variously capitalized and sometimes hyphenated as Italo disco 1 is a music genre which originated in Italy in the late 1970s and was mainly produced in the 1980s Italo disco evolved from the then current underground dance pop and electronic music both domestic and foreign hi NRG Euro disco and developed into a diverse genre 2 The genre employs electronic drums drum machines synthesizers and occasionally vocoders It is usually sung in English and to a lesser extent in Italian and Spanish Italo discoItalo Disco logoStylistic originsEuro discopost discoItalian popular musicelectronic rocksynth pophi NRGCultural originsLate 1970s early 1980s ItalyDerivative formsEurobeatItalo houseItalo danceelectroclashsynthwavespace discoOther topicsList of artists and songsAfro cosmic music The origin of the genre s name is strongly tied to marketing efforts of the ZYX record label which began licensing and marketing the music outside Italy in 1982 3 Italo disco faded in the early 1990s and then split into many genres Eurobeat Italo house Italo dance Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Origins 1977 1990 2 2 Derivative styles 2 3 Eurobeat 2 4 Revival 1998 present 3 Related styles and legacy 3 1 Space disco 3 2 Post disco and house music 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksTerminology editThe term Italo a generic prefix meaning Italian had been used on pop music compilation albums in West Germany as early as 1978 such as Italo Top Hits on the K Tel label and the first volume of Italo Super Hits on the Ariola label 4 There is no documentation of where the term Italo Disco first appeared but its origins are generally traced to Italian and other European disco recordings released in the West German market Examples include the phrase Original Italo Disco on the sleeve of the West German edition of Girls on Me by Amin Peck in 1982 and the 1983 compilation album The Best of Italo Disco 5 These records along with the Italo Boot Mix megamix were released by Bernhard Mikulski on his ZYX label who was therefore credited with coining the term Italo disco 1 6 The Best of and Boot Mix compilations each became a 16 volume series that culminated in 1991 Both series primarily featured disco music of Italian origin often licensed from independent Italian labels which had limited distribution outside Italy as well as songs in a similar style by other European artists The presenters of the Italian music show Discoring produced by RAI usually referred to Italo disco tracks as rock elettronico electronic rock or balli da discoteca disco dance before the term Italo disco came into existence History editOrigins 1977 1990 edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Italo disco originated in Europe in the late 1970s After Disco Demolition Night in 1979 American interest in disco sharply declined whereas in Europe the genre maintained mainstream popularity and survived into the 1980s The adoption of synthesizers and other electronic instruments by disco artists led to electronic dance music which spawned many subgenres such as hi NRG in America and space disco in Europe Italo disco s influences include Italian producer Giorgio Moroder French musician Didier Marouani Italo French drummer Cerrone and the San Francisco based hi NRG producer Patrick Cowley who worked with singers as Sylvester and Paul Parker In the late 1970s Italo disco group D D Sound La Bionda released the song 1 2 3 4 Gimme Some More 7 In 1979 Jacques Fred Petrus and Mauro Malavasi created the soulful post disco groups Change and B B amp Q Band 8 In 1981 both groups gained US R amp B and Dance hits with Paradise and On the Beat respectively Italo disco often features electronic sounds electronic drums drum machines catchy melodies vocoders overdubs and heavily accented English lyrics By 1983 Italo disco s instrumentation was predominantly electronic Along with love Italo disco themes deal with robots and space sometimes combining all three in songs like Robot Is Systematic 1982 by Lectric Workers and Spacer Woman 1983 by Charlie Then also new musical genres that had set aside the rock of the 1970s thanks to new groups such as Duran Duran Depeche Mode Spandau Ballet and great pop artists Michael Jackson and Madonna The 1980s brought the electronics with real instruments experimenting new sounds in short it was a decade of great change in modern music 9 Claudio SimonettiIn 1983 there were frequent hit singles and labels such as American Disco Crash Merak Sensation and X Energy appeared The popular label Discomagic Records released more than thirty singles within the year It was also the year that the term Italo disco became widely known outside Italy with the release of the first volumes of The Best of Italo Disco compilation series on the West German record label ZYX After 1983 Italo disco was also produced outside Italy Although Italo disco was successful in mainland Europe during the 1980s only few singles reached the UK charts such as Ryan Paris s Dolce Vita Laura Branigan s Self Control Baltimora s Tarzan Boy Spagna s Call Me and Sabrina s Boys all of which were top 5 hits Italo disco maintained an influence in the UK s underground music scenes in the UK and its impact can be heard in the music of several British electronic acts such as the Pet Shop Boys Erasure and New Order 1 nbsp Giorgio Moroder pioneer of Eurodisco and electronic dance music and highly influential to the Italo disco genre nbsp La Bionda considered among the pioneers of Italo disco 10 nbsp Carmen Russo nbsp Sabrina Salerno Derivative styles edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Canada particularly Quebec produced several remarkable Italo disco acts including Trans X Living on Video Lime Angel Eyes Rational Youth City of Night Pluton amp the Humanoids World Invaders Purple Flash Orchestra We Can Make It and Tapps Forbidden Lover Those productions were called Canadian disco during 1980 1984 in Europe and hi NRG disco in the U S In English speaking countries it was called Italo disco and hi NRG In Mexico the style is known just as disco having nothing to do with the 1970s genre citation needed West German productions were sung in English and were characterized by an emphasis on melody exaggerated production and a more earnest approach to the themes of love examples may be found in the works of Modern Talking Fancy American born singer and Fancy protege Grant Miller Bad Boys Blue Joy Silent Circle the Twins Lian Ross C C Catch Blue System and London Boys During the mid 1980s spacesynth a derivation of Italo disco developed It was mostly instrumental featured space sounds and was exemplified by musicians such as Koto Proxyon Rofo Cyber People Hipnosis Laserdance and Mike Mareen whose music inhabited the spacesynth hi NRG overlap Eurobeat edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message As Italo disco declined in Europe Italian and West German producers adapted the sound to Japanese tastes creating Eurobeat Music produced in this style is sold exclusively in Japan due to the country s Para Para culture produced by Italian producers for the Japanese market The two most famous Eurobeat labels are A Beat C Records and Time Records One traditional Italo disco label S A I F A M still produces Eurobeat music for Japan Around 1989 in Italy Italo disco evolved into Italo house when Italian Italo disco artists experimented with harder beats and the house sound Revival 1998 present edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A big comeback of German disco began in 1998 when Modern Talking reunited Rete 4 channel in Italy Hits 24 Goldstar TV and ProSieben channels in Germany and the program Nostalgia on Spain s TVE channel started to broadcast Italo disco citation needed Several online radio stations like Radio Stad Den Haag Netherlands stream the genre The renewed popularity inspired re releases and new mixes by many of the original Italo disco record labels ZYX Records has released many new CD mixes since 2000 Panama Records and Radius Records have re released Italo tracks on vinyl Northern European labels I Venti d Azzurro Netherlands and Flashback Records Finland have produced unreleased demos new versions of old hits and new songs citation needed A number of new Italo disco artists have emerged and have been featured on the ZYX Italo Disco New Generation discs Birizdo I Am Boris Zhivago D White Estimado Italove Mirko Hirsch Nation in Blue Siberian Heat among many others citation needed Italo disco is also one of the major influences to the sound of the synthwave genre Synthwave and Italo disco revival artists are often featured on the same mixtapes playlists and labels citation needed Related styles and legacy editSpace disco edit Space discoStylistic originsEurodiscoelectrosynth popcosmic discoCultural originsMid 1970s EuropeLocal scenesNorwayAt least one modern history of space disco traces the genre s origins to science fiction themes outer space robots and the future in the titles lyrics and cover artwork of dance music in the late 1970s 11 Plausible associations are drawn between the popularity of Star Wars released mid 1977 the subsequent surge of interest in science fiction themes in popular culture and the release of a number of science fiction themed and futuristic sounding synthesizer and arpeggiator infused disco music worldwide 11 12 The most commercially successful space disco tracks were Star Wars Theme Cantina Band 1977 by Meco and Automatic Lover 1978 by Dee D Jackson with each song reaching the top ten in a number of countries including the United Kingdom nbsp Didier Marouani founder of Space a pioneering space disco band Additional examples of space disco usually include the compositions Just Blue and Symphony both 1978 of French band Space 11 the same for the track Magic Fly additional tracks by Dee D Jackson during the 1970s and 1980s and I Feel Space 12 by Lindstrom Labels producing this type of music include 12 Whatever We Want Records Quiet Village Project Map Of Africa Bobby Marie Brooklyn NY US Feedelity run by Lindstrom Europe Eskimo Rub N Tug Present Campfire mix Bear Entertainment Bear Funk Prins Thomas Full Pupp Belgium Tirk UK and D C Recordings UK Post disco and house music edit New York City based post disco record label Emergency Records specialized in reissuing selling records from Italy e g Kano I m Ready 13 since the 1970s Kano is noted for incorporating American musical elements heavy funk influences breakbeat rhythm the use of vocoder with electronic music while using rudimentary synthesizers 9 constituting one of the earliest forms of Italo disco This form of Americanized Italo disco that also includes Klein M B O 9 Dirty Talk Wonderful The M B O Theme re entered the States and was known to be influential on the development of house music 9 Doctor s Cat Feel the Drive likewise was one of the earliest house music songs 14 Record labels include Emergency Records NYC US 1980s 13 See also editList of Italo disco artists and songs List of Euro disco artists Disco poloReferences editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message a b c McDonnell John 1 September 2008 Scene and heard Italo disco The Guardian London Retrieved 14 July 2012 Italo disco s eternal evolution DJ Mag 26 July 2022 Retrieved 19 February 2024 Folklore that ZYX boss Bernhard Mikulski coined the term Italo disco in 1983 was long published on Wikipedia but is unsubstantiated to date reliable third party documentation has not been found to support whether ZYX label boss Mikulski himself named it or whether ZYX was even the first to publish the term it could just as easily have been a descriptor people were already using before someone at ZYX picked up on it Italo Super Hitsin WorldCat OCLC 725614824 Various The Best Of Italo Disco Discogs 12 October 1983 Retrieved 3 December 2020 2011 WHAT IS ITALO DISCO the social seattle 20 December 2011 Retrieved 7 June 2012 DD Sound Retrieved 06 July 2022 B B amp Q Band Artist Bio AllMusic Retrieved 06 July 2022 a b c d Verrina Francesco Cataldo 2015 The History of Italo Disco Morrisville North Carolina Lulu p 81 ISBN 978 1326355524 La Bionda Sonyatv com Retrieved 3 May 2012 a b c Kantonen Jussi 10 November 2006 Dance Music 101 Space Disco DiscoStyle com Archived from the original on 17 February 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2008 a b c Leone Dominique 6 February 2006 Space Disco pitchfork com Pitchfork Media Retrieved 13 March 2012 a b Lawrence Tim 2016 Life and Death on the New York Dance Floor 1980 1983 Durham North Carolina Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 6186 2 LCCN 2016007103 SPIN Media LLC December 1989 SPIN SPIN Media LLC pp 104 ISSN 0886 3032 Bibliography editPeterink Jeroen 2012 I Venti D Azzurro presents The History of Italo Disco Reynolds Simon 2013 Generation Ecstasy Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 78316 6 Catalda Verrina Francesco 2015 The History Of Italo Disco Todesco Raff 2020 ITALO DISCO History of Dance Music in Italy from 1975 to 1988 Halve Michael 2022 Crazy About ItaloExternal links editEurodance Magazine Archived 2021 12 03 at the Wayback Machine music blog about Eurodance and Italo disco Club Disco The World of Italo Disco interviews Scene and heard Italo disco The Guardian Italo artists real names Italo song lyrics 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Italo disco amp oldid 1213979541, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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