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DISCO WEEK: The tragedy of hip. Notes on the last days of disco.

12 Aug

Being that disco music was a surreal sound for surreal times, you’d have to imagine it dying in the most bizarre of ways. On July 12, 1979, between two baseball games, Chicago rock DJ Steve Dahl blew up 100,000 disco records in the middle of center field as part of a stadium promotion called “Disco Demolition Night” at Comiskey Park and incited an on field riot by blue collar stoners in the crowd. The riot was such that it umpires forfeited the second game of the doubleheader between the Detroit Tigers and Chicago White Sox to the Tigers and in many ways was the harbinger of the end of disco’s mainstream chart topping run, and the death of the first run of the music as a vehicle of cultural development. By September 1979, The Knack, an LA New Wave rock act had hit #1 with “My Sharona,” signifying to many the death of disco. Why did this happen to the sound? I introduce to you the theory I call the tragedy of hip.

The tragic part of anything being considered hip and cool comes when definitely not so hip people co-opt it for their own purposes of trying to gain entry into a new level of cool. Let’s look at disco under this model. Disco started in Europe as a name for dance clubs and emigrated to America as an underground, gay, black and Latino movement. So, it stands to reason that when Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes recorded “The Love I Lost,” as fellow black people, it was okay. The influence of someone like Giorgio Moroder, an Italian and European, acceptable. Latin rhythms coming in and infiltrating the sound, fine as well. The tipping point for disco and the beginning of the slippery slope? Saturday Night Fever.

You may think I’m crazy, but when hundreds of thousands of dollars become tens of millions of dollars is when a movement is well on its way to becoming tragically hip. It’s often better to see the mainstream co-opt something entirely but put a different spin on it than to see the underground wholly become mainstream. 1977’s Saturday Night Fever is a magnificent film, but let’s honestly look at what disco had done. Disco had ultimately gone from being a foriegn, gay and minority underground dance movement, to now being the province of Vinny Barbarino from the #1 rated TV show in America in 1976, Welcome Back, Kotter. Disco is an amazing sound tha deserved the growth, but what happened from there.

The Bee Gees, white, long haired balladeers who until that point never had an ounce of funk in them, rode the soundtrack to this move to #1 three separate times with “Staying Alive,” “Night Fever” and “How Deep is Your Love.” Soon thereafter, the Rolling Stones, who were plenty funky but also VERY decidedly rock hit #1 with “Miss You,” which was followed up by rocker Rod Stewart’s “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy.” By this point, balladeers, macho, hard rocking white males and radio DJs (Rick Dees’ forgettable “Disco Duck”) all had hit the charts co-opting disco’s cool. Soon, it felt like disco had no underground at all, and that everyone was making money.

My favorite two and last tragedy of hip moments that sealed disco’s coffin long before Disco Demolition Night did are two separate moments that really show just how full circle the thing had become. Blondie were a talented yet struggling to gain access to the mainstream punk act. Debbie Harry, an ex-Playboy Club employee and model was their lead singer and stuck out like a rose amongst a field of gravel in the punk scene. Magically, one day Blondie stopped being a clash of sound and style, and the two merged for 1979’s “Heart of Glass,” which started as a blues/reggae dirge, but when a producer got his hands on it, finally took punk from downtown to uptown, pretty much killing two birds with one stone.

The Village People are a fitting end to this discussion. French producer Jacques Morali noted one key element that was missing from disco in the mainstream that could really meld it back to the underground. Gay subculture. So, he found five very straight, very hetero, very fit men and dressed them as straight stereotypes that gay men liked to parody and they sang tremendous songs that parodied elements of gay culture for mainstream audiences who missed the point. A police officer, a Native American, a construction worker, a G.I. and a cowboy. The US Navy wanted to use “In the Navy,” a song that predates “don’t ask don’t tell” by some 20 years, for a national recruiting until they became hip to what was really happening. “YMCA,” a song talking about how poor gay men often rented rooms at local YMCAs because it was a place where they would not be frowned upon for their lifestyle choice by mainstream America was #1 mainstream American hit. “Macho Man,” which is an ode to lasciviously ogling a fit man? #1 as well. All great moments for social justice and music, but for keeping something hip and cool? Not so much.

So what happened to disco on the underground? Where was disco’s comeback going to come from? As it turns out, two places. Hip hop, and house music.The one wonderful thing about the tragedy of hip is that from these constantly occurring tragedies when a musical style approaches the mainstream, there’s always something on the underground ready to mutate a sound to keep it fresh, hip and cool. Disco’s tragic hipness is one of the more intriguing cases of that in the 20th century as when disco had to go back underground, it literally spawned an entire system and chain of underground musical styles. Electro, rave, hip hop, house, hip-house, G-Funk and New Jack Swing all have life because disco had to die.

The tragedy of hip is devastating, but at the same time allows for musical magic. A thought to ponder.

DISCO WEEK: Disco for dummies…five disputable "facts" for any disco novice

10 Aug
We’re going to make the huge logical leap and presume that not all of our readers are as enormous disco fans as we are here at TGRIOnline.com. Therefore, we’re taking some time out of our week this week celebrating the wonder that is four on the floor drumming with elegant, orchestral and dance friendly melodies and really giving the non-disco loving reader a bit of a disco education. We want to arm you the reader with some disco “facts” to take out there into the world so that if you ever get into a bar discussion about , are attempting to pick up a potential mate, and disco enters the conversation, well, you’ll have something to say, and won’t get left out in the cold.

Barry White’s Love Unlimited Orchestra were incredible musicians and more important to his success than he was. – Lost in the awesomeness of Barry’s boastful baritone is the true propulsive force of the Barry White experience, the Love Unlimited Orchestra. Barry White couldn’t’ve been a successful loverman without a soundtrack, and his backing orchestra comes through every time. Yes, they had a hit of their own with the magnificent instrumental “Love’s Theme,” but some of their best work obviously came on Barry’s hit singles. My favorite, 1978’s underrated “Your Sweetness is My Weakness,” where the horn and string sections in particular really hit a home run. Take some time and listen to any Barry White hit. “You’re The First, My Last, My Everything,” “Playing Your Game, Baby,” orany great number of jams, and concentrate on those tracks. The Love Unlimited Orchestra are true disco legends.

Barry Gibb’s falsetto may be one of the best voices of the disco era. – Before becoming disco kings with the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb were major league balladeers. “Massachusetts” and “How Can You Mend a Broken Heart” are incredible pop songs with a soul/country edge made amazing because of lead singer Barry Gibb’s high octave falsetto. When transferring the Bee Gees excellence to disco, easily the most key element of that success isn’t the production of “Night Fever,” More Than a Woman” or “Tragedy,” by Barry’s effortless falsetto gliding over the top of those tracks, softening the mix of excellent Bee Gees lyrics and the production of the tracks to create pop domination.

Giorgio Moroder is a genius. – Donna Summer’s 1978 hit “I Feel Love” may be the first electro dance song of all time. Outside of Tom Moulton inventing the 12″ dance remix filling an entire side of an album with a mixed medley of Gloria Gaynor in 1974, Moroder was easily the most innovative of disco producers for the mainstream. Electronic elements, vocoders, heavily synthesized tracks and a number of other innovations were at the heart of his work. Starting from taking Donna Summer’s “Love to Love You” and extending it into a 17 minute musical orgasm to 1983’s hit single the theme to the film Midnight Express, Moroder was a perpetual innovator and one of the most important producers in disco history.

Philadelphia International Records may be the best disco label of all time. – Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff surrounded themselves with soul royalty and created a sound and a label whose greatness cannot be denied. Philadelphia International Records songs are backed by the rhythm section MFSB (Mother Father Sister Brother), one of the most soulful yet orchestral backing groups of all time. In doing things with measures of songs that other rhythm sections of the era dared not try, starting with 1974’s hit for Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes “The Love I Lost,” (which in many ways established the meter and style of the mainstream disco sound) the label, with a sophisticated yet accessible dance floor beat, unleashed a string of major hits.

http://www.youtube.com/v/CPBfrDtQhMw&hl=en_US&fs=1

As important to the success as the orchestration were the gritty and husky yet melodic voices of the lead singers and solo stars of the label. Patti Labelle of LaBelle, Thelma Houston, The Three Degrees, Teddy Pendegrass of Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes, Lou Rawls, Eddie Levert of the O’Jays, and yes, at the end of their Motown run, even Michael Jackson of the Jackson 5. Philadelphia’s working class aggression blended with percussion, strings, horns, pianos and bossa nova influences? Magical.

The Rolling Stones recorded one of the best disco songs ever. – For being a rock star, Mick Jagger sure spent a lot of time discoing the late 70s away in the secret basement party areas of Studio 54. Between trysts with Bianca Jagger, Jerry Hall and yes, David Bowie, he wrote the brilliant “Miss You,” from 1978’s album Some Girls. The song is explicitly not a rock song, as it was mixed by disco remixer Bob Clearmountain into an 8 minute long monster. The addition of Ian McLagan’s electric piano, Sugar Blue’s harmonica and Mel Collins’ saxophone to the typical Stones lineup sets this one apart for sure. Both Charlie Watts on drums and Bill Wyman on bass adopt disco style rhythm parts here, and execute them to perfection.

DISCO WEEK: DJ Deep Sang’s Warner Brothers Records Tribute Mix!

5 Aug

From Deep Sang himself…

Back in spring, Marcus and I were brainstorming about a good disco label for which to do a tribute mix for TGRI. We wanted to keep the vibe accessible, so no backstreet garage bands or private labels for this one. I think Tom Noble (the man behind that killer African Bump edit last year) put it best when he said “Big ass studio disco with rich producers- who have money invested in film production studios and don’t give fuck all about music- made the best disco.” Now don’t get me wrong, I fiend for rare disco cuts, but when it’s time to play in the clubs you’re more likely to hear me play some Bohannon than Belle Farm Estates. So with that in mind we knew Warner Brothers was a perfect label for this mix. WB not only signed lots of great disco acts, but they also featured some of the best soul and jazz musicians that transitioned to disco during the craze.

Most of these cuts are the big time classics, but I’ve tried to throw in a few less likely tracks from WB subsidiaries like RFC, Whitfield, and Curtom. A lot of these tracks were only available on now-rare promo 12″s given to a-list DJs, which means the only people that have them now are nerds who spend too much time trolling record stores and flea markets (guilty) or spend too much money on ebay (also guilty). And big ups to Dimitri from Paris for releasing a killer comp of Ashford and Simpson edits and remixes a couple years ago, which filled a couple other holes in my collection. So, with the intro out of the way, I hope yall enjoy the music.

-Deep Sang

1. New Birth…Deeper
2. Chaka Khan…Some Love
3. Ashford and Simpson…Stay Free (Dimitri’s Edit)
4. Linda Clifford…Runaway Love
5. Lamont Dozier…Going Back to My Roots
6. Ashford and Simpson…It Seems to Hang On
7. Love Deluxe…Here Comes That Sound
8. Candi Station… When You Wake Up Tomorrow
9. Eumir Deodato…Whistle Bump
10. Mighty Pope…Sweet Blindness
11. Undisputed Truth…You + Me = Love
12. Stargard…Wear It Out
13. Ashford and Simpson…One More Try (Dimitri’s Edit)
14. Prince…Just As Long As We’re Together
15. Miroslav Vitous…New York City
16. Sly & The Family Stone…Remember Who You Are

DISCO WEEK: Thoughts on disco and Casablanca Records

5 Aug

I became a fan of disco in 1985. I was sitting around and heard barbershop discussion of Solid Gold. If unaware, Solid Gold was a syndicated TV show in the early 1980s that often featured Marilyn McCoo as the host and featured gold outfitted disco dancers prancing to the hottest hits of the day. This discussion caused many of the patrons to then bring up Deney Terrio and Dance Fever, the disco dance contest TV show. This then spurred on a discussion of disco, which was described as “some funky white people shit that people did drugs to dance to.” At eight years old, all I heard was “funky shit dance drugs.” I knew funky was good, I knew shit was a bad word, I loved dancing, and drugs were bad. Very very very bad. So, when I got home, I went to my mother’s record collection and looked for “disco.” I found the following: The Bee Gees’ Tragedy, Van McCoy’s Disco Baby and Walt Disney presents Mickey Mouse Disco. Of course I’d find more later, but I had these three albums, and started listening, and got hooked. I then went to my grandmother’s and while being babysat on a summer afternoon, and after going through my elementary school library and reading every book on the topic, saw the logo of Casablanca Records on a Donna Summer album and thought it was awesome. The song I remembered the most was Donna Summer’s “Last Dance,” and after a listen, I was hooked. I loved disco, and decided I loved everything about it. As well, the most important label then in disco to me, Casablanca Records.

http://www.youtube.com/v/0MQnXP56DZI&hl=en_US&fs=1
KISS –  “I Was Made For Loving You” – Rock, pop, disco, hooks and ridiculousness. Ahh, Casablanca Records.

Fast forward 23 years and it’s last year. I’m 31 and write a blog about music. I’m also knee deep in studying the punk and disco movements of the 1970s with a far more critical eye than when I was a slavish listener and devotee between the ages of 8 and 21. The more I read and the more I understood, my childhood love of “that cool label with the camel logo” became a great issue of scorn. Payola. Cocaine. Hookers. Typical and should’ve been expected, but imagine my dismay when I fully realized just how much a label I loved was all about the same excess that drove the rest of the era. In many ways in exposing disco to the same mainstream I discovered it in, Casablanca assisted into its demise. Disco was likely the greatest byproduct of an era of excess, and I was a gigantic proponent of one of the most excessive components.

For those unaware, there was very little about Casablanca that appears to be about the development and preservation of music. Label chief Neil Bogart was certainly a music guy, but in many ways far more of a pop impresario. The first band signed to the label was KISS, with Donna Summer, Parliament-Funkadelic and the Village People key signees as well. Casablanca was an amazing music story in that at every explosive point of pop music in the 1970s, Casablanca was at the forefront with a mainstream palatable and completely ridiculous presentation. When arena rock, funk and disco ruled the roost, Casablanca always brought the circus to town. And in the case of disco, it always sounded tremendous. In signing Donna Summer, they acquired the services of her producer, the legendary Giorgio Moroder, whose work on the 17 minute tribute to orgasmic bliss “Love to Love You Baby” and techno/electro predecessor “I Feel Love” were instantaneous classics. Later in their story, their disco dominance became so prevalent on mainstream charts that Tom Moulton, who invented the 12″ dance remix on Gloria Gaynor’s “Never Can Say Goodbye in 1974 joined the label as a remixer and producer, taking things to a bizarre new height.

Presenting the opening sequence of Thank God It’s Friday

Casablanca Records dumbed down disco for the masses. They even entered into the movie realm, with Thank God It’s Friday in 1978, which only a year after Saturday Night Fever’s awesome and highly realistic portrayal of disco culture was a hack and slash job of trite cliches of disco culture aimed directly at mainstream society’s worst fears. Disco divas were drug abusers, being a “square” and entering a disco involved having to meet a certain cultural ideal and potentially losing everything about yourself worth having, while at the same time, discos are places where “you can just be yourself.” Disco DJs were smooth talking ladies men, and with some spunk and spirit, anybody, even Donna Summer without makeup, could be a star. As well, their film Can’t Stop the Music parodized a parody, as a fictitious tale was told of the rise and development of the Village People, involving Broadway dance numbers, stodgy white men in suits, heaping handfuls of camp, and a young Steve Guttenberg. Thankfully, before things really got any more out of hand, Neil Bogart’s pop dreams jumped the shark and he sold the label to Polygram Records.

Disco is a serious music shrouded in camp. In many ways, Casablanca made disco a campy music we had to take seriously. Therein lies the problem. Many labels didn’t take disco seriously at all. However, the individuals tasked with making disco at these labels did, and the presumption of the label from the top down was not that disco was pop, but that disco, was well, disco. The records that Casablanca had as #1s are amazing pop songs. “YMCA” in any format is a hit. The songwriting and hook are enormous. Santa Esmeralda’s “Please Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood” was already a 1965 hit for Eric Burdon and the Animals, and was a melody already familiar to pop listeners. Donna Summer’s “MacArthur Park” could likely be one of the worst written songs of all time like Frank Sinatra’s “My Way,” but there’s something about Summer’s delivery that makes you forget that.

Time and learning changes everything. Casablanca Records will always be a major part of my musical development. There was a period of my life where that logo and those sounds held the answers to the mysteries of the world. As with everything, time and exposure alter how one sees the universe.

TGRIOnline.com presents DISCO WEEK (aka a historical platform to examine the hipster/electro movement)

4 Aug

Here at True Genius Requires Insanity, we’re big fans of history. In fact, we love history so much that we use it to better understand our surroundings. We also giggle when our beloved music industry perpetually forgets the adage that those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. In the hands of those gifted and skilled at making music, the hipster/electro revolution has been a beautiful evolution. The blend of sounds that have become popular over time reflects a breadth and scope of popular music that supersedes culture, environment and musical styles. However, it has expanded so far, and so wide that an eventual point is coming where music is possibly going to rise out of the sea like a monster and eat its young.

Disco was awesome until “Disco Sucks.” “Disco Sucks” was an inevitability of the time and place and the space where the revolution was occurring. Mainstream America in 1979 wasn’t ready for a gay, minority, drug and dance based culture to find a permanent hold on the mainstream. This was still a country that prided itself on it’s strength, it’s muscle, it’s white, heterosexual, work hard and relax with beer and sports culture. Today, things are different. There is an opportunity for society, as culture has expanded and grown in the last 30 years, to be welcoming of minorities, homosexuality, punk culture, drugs and dance. All of these key elements are very much dyed into the wool of social acceptance (or social indifference, whatever the case may be) in the mainstream.

In studying disco for the next seven days, we’ll hopefully be able to take a look at where society was, as opposed to where it will be going. We’ll take a look at disco’s heights, is missteps, it’s growth, it’s development, and the crash. Will the hipster/electro movement meet the same fate? Maybe we’ll find some answers here.