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Topic ClosedWhat do you think of 'disco' in prog?

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bhikkhu View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 13:51
Originally posted by Catholic Flame Catholic Flame wrote:


Originally posted by 70sSoundquality 70sSoundquality wrote:

I like 70's 'disco', not the  boring obvious pop kind, but the musically competant kind- i.e., Heatwave...  borderline Steely Dan in a way, heavy use of jazz chords, competant walking bass lines, lots of analog keys, (i.e. Rhodes, Analog Synth, clav, etc etc). I quite like it.
What do you think about 70's 'disco'?

I have music that most would consider to be "prog" called "Sun City" by Nova, from 1978. Extremely competant playing, awesome songs, and hints of "disco" splashed all over the place. Kind of also why I like "dont kill the whale" so much. Thoughts?   


<p ="Msonormal">You're obviously too young to have lived through that God awful
music!!






I would have to agree. To me it was the antithesis of quality music, and helped push me toward prog (so there's a plus). There may have been some experimentation with disco rhythms in prog, but it's not exclusively in the realm of disco. These are actually just danceable beats. If "70s prog bands included some of these elements, then it would have naturally been labeled disco. At another time, it would have been called something else.

    
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 12:30
Originally posted by 70sSoundquality 70sSoundquality wrote:

I like 70's 'disco', not the  boring obvious pop kind, but the musically competant kind- i.e., Heatwave...  borderline Steely Dan in a way, heavy use of jazz chords, competant walking bass lines, lots of analog keys, (i.e. Rhodes, Analog Synth, clav, etc etc). I quite like it.
What do you think about 70's 'disco'?
I have music that most would consider to be "prog" called "Sun City" by Nova, from 1978. Extremely competant playing, awesome songs, and hints of "disco" splashed all over the place. Kind of also why I like "dont kill the whale" so much. Thoughts?   

You're obviously too young to have lived through that God awful music!!


“Great things are not accomplished by those who yield to trends and fads and popular opinion.”

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 11:25
Originally posted by Prog-man Prog-man wrote:

HEY...
 
WHAT ABOUT E.L.O. - DISCOVERY? Wink
 
THERE ARE SOME DISCO REFERENCES IN IT...
 
SOME REFERENCES?????? LOL Discovery is a play of words that means VERY DISCO.
 
It was a 100% Disco album and XANADU (ELO with Olivia Newton John) was even  worst but at the end I still believe ELO was never a Prog band (I'm taking my risk on Micky's angerWink).
 
Iván
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 11:12
Originally posted by kebjourman kebjourman wrote:

i dont like cheesey sounds in general
Same here, and disco=cheesy. Now that I think of it, disco may be the cheesiest music of all time.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 10:19
i dont like cheesey sounds in general
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 10:13

ClapThat's right, Geddy, and...

I stopped dancing during the disco era -- sorry, but it was music for people who didn't like music (i.e, diots).
 
Arguably, it was Abba & company who killed prog -- thank Chr*st punk & new wave came along to kill disco, in turn!Clap
 
Wanna dance?
 
 
 
 
LOL
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O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!'
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 09:31
Led Zeppelin flirted with disco in Carouselambra (or however it's spelled). That song has a prog rock structure and is over 10 minutes long.
 
The Tangent's "A place in the Quene" album has a disco song that is very catchy.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 09:26
Almost all classics of the prog genre had their hands in disco music, Floyd, Kraftwerk, T. Dream, Gentle Giant ... and some of disco music is quite close to prog, like Deodato or hey, back in 1977 one couldn't make a difference between Donna Summer and T. Dream. Disco is alive and well, it branched into techno, house, chill out ... 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 08:45
Apparently Pink Floyd did a little disco-influenced song called Another Brick In The Wall (part 2)...  Anybody ever heard it? Wink

Edited by Myxamatosis - June 10 2006 at 08:46
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 07:28
It's like poison in candy.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 05:17
     Zappa did some very funny parodies of Disco, like "Dancin' Fool", and the only band I know of that really mixed it up with Disco were the Brecker Brothers...they'd do an album with mostly silly Disco schmalz, then one absolute killer fusion cut. Actually lots of originally fusiony jazz guys went disco, like George Benson & George Duke, but that stuff is only embarassing to hear today.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 04:26
There is a song called "tripot" by Mona Lisa, from 1978 that has a cool disco sound/feel.
FM has some "disco" type art-rock from the late 70's. I really like that sound.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 04:23
Originally posted by TheProgtologist TheProgtologist wrote:

Originally posted by 70sSoundquality 70sSoundquality wrote:

Why was this moved? I'm specifcally asking about disco elements in "prog" music.
 
Because this seems to be basically a discussion about what we think of disco.
 
If you want to discuss prog elements in disco music I will move it back,but if it turns into a discussion about disco music ITSELF I will move it out of the Lounge again for good.
 
And you should made it a little more clear in your topic title,which asks what we think of disco,not the prog elements(if any)in disco music.
 
 
 
 
My deepest apologies.
 
I truly am talking about disco in "prog", like when Yes touched disco on Tormato.
 
Thanks.


Edited by 70sSoundquality - June 10 2006 at 04:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 03:31
HEY...
 
WHAT ABOUT E.L.O. - DISCOVERY? Wink
 
THERE ARE SOME DISCO REFERENCES IN IT...
Arriving somewhere but not here
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 03:13
Originally posted by 70sSoundquality 70sSoundquality wrote:

Why was this moved? I'm specifcally asking about disco elements in "prog" music.
 
Because this seems to be basically a discussion about what we think of disco.
 
If you want to discuss prog elements in disco music I will move it back,but if it turns into a discussion about disco music ITSELF I will move it out of the Lounge again for good.
 
And you should made it a little more clear in your topic title,which asks what we think of disco,not the prog elements(if any)in disco music.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 03:08
Mother Gong play "Disco" on the first track of the first album of the "Robot Woman" trilogy; the song is titled "Disco at the End of the World". It is meant as a satirical parody though. And the sax and guitar solo interludes by Didier Malherbe and Yan Emerick are anything but disco.


Edited by BaldFriede - June 10 2006 at 03:30


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 03:01
Why was this moved? I'm specifcally asking about disco elements in "prog" music.

Edited by 70sSoundquality - June 10 2006 at 03:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 02:40
Who needs disco in prog, when one can dance to other prog tunes? There is a song on the first solo album of Roman Bunka, played on oud and some Afghanistan percussion instrument only, plus some vocals provided by Roman Bunka ("The Heat"). That song kicks so much ass, despite the minimal instrumentation, that I always get up and dance to it.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 02:29
What do I think of disco?
 
It died a quick death for a very good reason.
 
Thank God.
 
I grew up in the 70's and heard way too much of it.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 10 2006 at 01:42

i had to endure this "stuff" in the 70's, i thought the whole world was going mad....!

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Edited by mystic fred - June 10 2006 at 01:42
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