Disco Music
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Disco
is an up-tempo style of dance music that originated in
the early 1970s, mainly from funk and soul music, popular originally
with gay
and black audiences in large U.S. cities, and derives its name from the
French
word discothèque (meaning nightclub), coined from disc +
bibliotèque (library)
by La Discothèque in Rue Huchette (Jones and Kantonen, 1999).
Contents
Origins
Like
all such musical genres, defining a single point of its
development is difficult, as many elements of disco music appear on
earlier
records (such as the 1971 theme from the movie Shaft by Isaac Hayes)
(Jones and
Kantonen, 1999). In general it can be said that first true disco songs
were
released in 1973, however, many consider Manu Dibango's 1972 "Soul
Makossa" the first disco record (Jones and Kantonen, 1999). Initially,
most disco songs catered to a nightclub/dancing audience only, rather
than
general audiences such as radio listeners.
Social
trends that contributed to disco music include the
surpassing of white people by racial and ethnic minorities, black and
hispanic
people, in the purchasing of records and sound equipment, the increased
independence of women in finance and leisure, gay liberation, and the
sexual
revolution. (Jones and Kantonen, 1999)
Musical
influences include funk, soul, and salsa and the
latin or hispanic musics which created salsa.
Pre-disco
soul records include:
- Sly
and the Family Stone - "Dance to the Music"
(1968), "Everyday People" (1968) (Jones and Kantonen, 1999)
- Stevie
Wonder - "Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday"
(1969), "Superstition" (1972) (ibid)
- Incredible Bongo Band -
"Bongo Rock" (1973) (ibid)
- Average White Band - "Pick
Up the Pieces" (1974),
"Cut the Cake" (1975) (ibid)
Philadelphia International Records defined Philly soul and
help define disco (ibid) with records such as:
- Three Degrees - "When Will I
See You Again" (1974)
(ibid)
- Intruders - "I'll Always
Love My Mama" (1973)
(ibid)
- O'Jays - "I Love Music"
(1975), "Love
Train" (1972) (ibid)
- MFSB - "TSOP (The Sound of
Philadelphia)" (1974)
(ibid)
Pre/Early-disco
TK Records tracks:
- Betty Wright - "Clean Up
Woman" (1972) (ibid)
- Harry Casey - "Get Down
Tonight" (1975) (ibid)
- KC and the Sunshine Band -
"That's the Way (I Like
It)" (1975) (ibid)
Early disco hits include:
- Harold
Melvin & the Blue Notes - "The Love I
Lost" (1973)
- George McCrae - "Rock Your
Baby" (1974) (ibid)
- Hues Corporation - "Rock the
Boat" (1974) (ibid)
- LaBelle - "Lady Marmalade"
(containing the lyric:
"Voulez-vous coucher avec moi?") (1975) (ibid)
1975
was the year when disco really took off, with hit songs
like Van McCoy's "The Hustle" and Donna Summer's "Love To Love
You Baby" reaching the mainstream. 1975 also marked the release of the
first disco mix on album, the A side of Gloria Gaynor's Never Can Say
Goodbye
(Jones and Kantonen, 1999). Disco's popularity peaked in the so-called
Disco
era of 1977 - 1980, driven in part by the late-1977 film Saturday Night
Fever.
Disco also gave rise to an increased popularity of line dancing and
other
partly pre-choreographed dances; many line dances can be seen in films
such as
Saturday Night Fever which also features the Hustle.
Among
the most popular disco artists of the 1970s were Abba,
The Bee Gees, Chic, Sister Sledge, Michael Jackson, Donna Summer,
Gloria
Gaynor, Boney M, The Village People, K.C. and the Sunshine Band,
Voyage,
Salsoul Orchestra, The Trammps, and Barry White. However, many disco
fans would
agree that "for every chart hit pounded into the public's
consciousness,
fifty far superior tracks from all over the world were being played at
some
hard-to-find basement club" (Jones and Kantonen, 1999). Many rock
artists,
from The Eagles to The Rolling Stones, from Can to The Clash, discofied
some of
their songs. Blondie disappointed many of their existing New Wave fan
base
(including R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe) by releasing songs such as "Heart of
Glass", though picked up an even larger fan base as a result.
Disco
music diverged from the self-composed and performed rock of the 1960s,
seeing a return (though not universally) to the
influence of producers who hired session musicians to produce hits for
different
artists whose role was purely to sing and market the songs. This may
explain
some rock critics vitrolic hate of disco, as it lacks the same "cred".
Top
disco music producers/mixers included Patrick Adams, Biddu, Cerrone,
Alec R. Costandinos, Gregg Diamond, Bernard Edwards, Rick Gianatos,
Quincy
Jones, François Kevorkian, Meco Monardo, Tom Moulton, Kenton
Nix,
Boris Midney, Vincent Montana Jr, Giorgio Moroder, Rinder and Lewis,
Nile Rodgers,
and Michael Zager. However, what was seen by some rock critics and fans
as
a loss of authenticity and credibility may have marked not a return to
producer driven music, but a return to listener driven music, as fans
participated
through dancing.
Outside the recording industry proper many DJs,
most of whom
also eventually worked in studios as producers or mixers, were hugely
influential. Records sales were often dependent, though not guaranteed
by, floor play in clubs. Notable DJs include Jim Burgess, Walter
Gibbons, Francis
Grasso (Sanctuary), Larry Levan (Paradise Garage), Ian Levine (Heaven),
David
Mancuso (The Loft), and Tom Moulton.
Backlash
There are many reasons for the backlash against
disco in the
extreme late seventies witnessed by the phrase "Disco is dead."
Motivations of the anti-disco backlash ranged from
simple
personal taste and loyalty to rock, to positions involving
not-so-subtle
anti-gay and racist feelings; disco music and disco dancing were
depicted as not only silly (witness Frank Zappa's satirical song
"Dancin' Fool"),
but effeminate.
In Britain, however, during the same year as the
first
American anti-disco demonstrations, see below, The Young Nationalist
publication of the British National Party reported that "disco and its
melting pot pseudo-philosophy must be fought or Britain's streets will
be full
of black-worshipping soul boys," though this had been true for twenty
years with many white male English teens considering themselves "soul
freaks".
As
the minority audiences that originally created and
consumed disco watched its appropriation into the mainstream many of
them
changed their interests and affiliations to other forms of dance music,
sometimes simply disco with a new name.
Avid
disapproval of disco among some rock fans, who
perceived rock as more serious and valuable, existed throughout the
disco era,
growing as disco's influence grew, such that the expression "Disco
Sucks" was common by the late 1970s.
One
example of this backlash occurred in 1979, when a
Chicago rock radio station staged a promotional event with an
anti-disco theme,
"Disco Demolition Night", between games at a major league baseball
doubleheader. The event involved exploding disco records with a bomb,
and ended
in a near-riot.
In
the early 1980s, George Benson, Patrice Rushen, Brothers
Johnson, Commodores, The S.O.S. Band, and many other artists created
disco classics. After 1980, however, disco music morphed into other
forms,
including house and Hi-NRG.
In
the 1990s a revival of the original disco style began and
is exemplified by such songs as "Spend Some Time" by Brand New
Heavies (1994), "Cosmic Girl" by Jamiroquai (1996), "Never Give
Up on the Good Times" by The Spice Girls (1997), and "Strong
Enough" by Cher (1998) who had also released disco songs in the
seventies.
During
the first half of the 2000s, there were disco
releases by a number of artists including "I Don't Understand It" by
Ultra Nate (2001), "Love Foolosophy" by Jamiroquai (2001),
"Murder on the Dancefloor" by Sophie Ellis-Bextor (2001), and
"Love Invincible" by Michael Franti and Spearhead (2003).
Instruments commonly used by disco musicians
included the
rhythm guitar, bass, strings (violin, viola, cello), string synth (a
type of organ), trumpet, saxophone, trombone, piano, and drums
(sometimes using
an auxiliary percussionist as well as somebody on a drum kit). Most
disco
songs have a steady four-on-the-floor beat (sometimes using a 16-beat
pattern on
the hi-hat cymbal, or an eight-beat pattern with an open hi-hat on the
"off" beat) and a heavy, syncopated bassline. Disco also had a
characteristic electric guitar sound, usually from the heavy use of the
wah-wah pedal.
Generally, the difference between a disco, or any
dance
song, and a rock or popular song is that in dance music the bass hits
"four to the floor", at least once a beat (which in 4/4 time is 4
beats per measure), while in rock the bass hits on one and three and
lets the snare take the lead on two and four. (Michaels, 1990) Disco is
further
characterized by a sixteenth note division of the quarter notes
established by the bass as shown in the second drum pattern below,
after a typical
rock drum pattern:
This sixteenth note pattern
is often supported by other instruments, and may be implied rather than
explicitly present, often involving syncopation. As a simpler example,
bass lines
often use the following rhythm:
Initially singles were released on 7-inch 45-rpm
records,
45s, which were shorter in length and of poorer sound quality than
12-inch
singles. Tamla Motown was the first to market these through their Eye
Cue
label, but these and other 12-inch singles were the length of the
original 45s
until Scepter/Wand released the first 12-inch extended version single
in 1975:
Jesse Green's "Nice and Slow" btw Sweet Music's "I Get
Lifted" (engineered by Tom Moulton). The single was packaged in
collectable
picture sleeves, a relatively new concept at the time. 12-inch singles
became commercially available after the first crossover, Tavares'
"Heaven Must
Be Missing an Angel." 12-inch singles allowed longer dance time and
formal
possibilities. (Jones and Kantonen, 1999)
Open from about 1975 to 1980, Ones Discotheque at
111
Houston St. in NYC advertised itself as having the "world's biggest
sound
system". Tuesday nights were "reggae night". Studio 54 in New
York is perhaps the best known of the 70s disco venues internationally.
The
disco song "Le Freak" by Chic includes the lines "So come on
down/ To the 54/ Find a spot/ Out on the floor..."
Other notable discos:
- 12
West
- Heaven
- The Loft
- Paradise Garage
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