One of the largest
collections of disco music in the academic world can be found in the library of the University of North Texas.
The Denton-Record Chronicle explains:
Even Morris Martin, librarian of UNT’s music library, is unsure how many records are in the Bert Hile Collection, as it is formally known, though the number is probably well above the university’s Web site estimate of 2,500.
The amount of scholarly interest is easier to count."Hardly any, frankly," he said.Part of the problem, Martin said, is that the collection has never been cataloged, which would make it more accessible to researchers. Another reason is that few musicologists are willing to invest their careers researching lyrics such as:"Shake it/Doo, doo, doo, whoa/Shake it/Doo, doo, doo, whoa/Shake your groove thing/Shake your groove thing."
The tracks
were donated by Bert Hile, who was a deejay at popular
Dallas-area disco clubs in the late 70s. He reflects on
the demise of the era of mirror balls and polyester
leisure suits:
Disco is said to have died on Feb. 3, 1980, the day New York’s Studio 54 closed. But Hile said its fate was sealed by a movie released three years earlier."Saturday Night Fever is what killed disco. It ran it into the ground," he said. "You know how when you have a scratch and you keep itching and itching until it starts to bleed? Well, that’s what happened to disco. It got overplayed."
The article
ends with Dallas Morning News music critic Mario
Tarradell listing what in his opinion are the five best
and five worst disco songs. The five best:
1. "Got to Be Real," Cheryl Lynn
2. "This Time Baby," Jackie Moore
3. "I Feel Love," Donna Summer
4. "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe," Barry White
5. "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)," Sylvester
And the five
worst:
1. "Disco Duck," Rick Dees and His Cast of Idiots
2. "Get Dancin'," Disco-Tex and His Sex-O-Lettes
3. "Ring My Bell," Anita Ward
4. "(Shake, Shake, Shake) Shake Your Booty," KC and the Sunshine Band
5. "Macho Man," Village People
Can't say I really disagree with any of Tarradell's picks
- I especially agree with his selection of "I Feel
Love" as one of the five best. Kraftwerk may have
pioneered the genre of electronic music, but Giorgio
Moroder gave it a sound with this song. The eerie
synthesizer chords, the galloping baseline, Donna
Summer's sparse yet sexy lyrics... An all-around awesome
tune. Here are a few other tunes that would be on my
personal list of best disco songs:
"Don't
Stop Til You Get Enough," Michael Jackson: the
younger generation might not believe this, but a long,
long time ago, before he became a bleached, plastic freak
of nature who (allegedly) molested cancer-stricken young
boys or dangled babies out of hotel windows, Wacko Jacko
actually made some great music. If this whirlwind of a
song didn't get you off the couch and onto the plexiglass
dance floor with the blinking lights underneath, you
simply didn't have a pulse.
"I Will
Survive," Gloria Gaynor: This disco standard had a
message as well as a beat. Her man left her, but she
"was strong, and learned how to get along"
without him. When he returns, she tells him off with a
voice and a brilliance that is nothing short of
triumphant.
"Born to
Be Alive," Patrick Hernandez: this is the
quintessential disco song, incorporating a thumping beat,
teeth-sucking cymbals, synthesized baseline, guitars,
horns, strings, backing vocals, the nonsensical lyrics,
the works. When this piece of vinyl hit the turntable, it
was indeed "good to be alive." I'd have to say
that this song is, in my
opinion, the greatest disco song
ever recorded.
Of course, I
didn't exactly experience the disco scene first hand - I
was a bit young for that, although I do remember, as a
five or six year old kid, hearing a lot of these tunes on
the radio as I rode around in the car with my mom.
Throughout my childhood and teen years, disco was
considered "trash" and nobody played it; it
didn't get popular again until the early 1990s, and
that's when I started paying attention to to the music. I
realized that, contrary to what the bumper stickers of the
early 80s claimed, not all disco sucked.
(Retroblogged on August 23, 2015.)
(Retroblogged on August 23, 2015.)