Early in the 1974-79 heyday of “disco music,” the music didn’t really have a definable sameness – it happened to be R&B and pop music with a strong beat that people could dance to.
If people ask me my favorite disco songs, they’re likelier to get examples from this era (1974-76), when it sounded like musicians and singers were grooving and before synthesizers became so common.
Don’t get me wrong: I love I Feel Love, etc., but to me those songs evoke a different mood than the early disco hits.
K-tel released a number of disco collections, but its first, 1975’s Disco Mania, evokes the R&B roots of disco satisfyingly.
It also includes some real outliers, given the more diffuse description of 1975 disco music. The studio version of Kiss’ Rock and Roll All Nite, a Hot 100 stiff in the summer of ’75, is on side two!
(It would take four more years for the quartet to record a bonafide disco hit.)
Bachman-Turner Overdrive’s Hey You and Styx’s Lady can’t be considered disco, either. And Jim Gilstrap’s Swing Your Daddy might make for a good shag dance – but is no glitter-ball favorite.
There’s less variation in the era for this collection. Most songs peaked on the Hot 100 between summer ’74 and summer ’75. (For the one big exception, see Question Marks)
Fans of the McCraes, George and Gwen, will find each of their biggest pop hits here, as will fans of the unrelated Carol Douglas and Carl Douglas.
My biggest issue with this collection is something that would become increasingly evident as the decade progressed:
To get 10 songs on a side, not only would the songs be compressed, affecting the sound quality, but the edits went beyond what it took to adjust an album version for a 45 single.
tnocs.com contributing author and record collector extraordinaire chuck small
Still, I have a soft spot for this collection as oddball as it is. Later disco collections would seem monotonous and not nearly as much fun. To hear the album for yourself, go here:
Top-shelf:
• Van McCoy and the Soul City Symphony’s The Hustle
• Blackbyrds’ Walking in Rhythm
• Gwen McCrae’s Rockin’ Chair
• Gloria Gaynor’s Never Can Say Goodbye
• Carol Douglas’ Doctor’s Orders•
• Shirley & Company’s Shame, Shame, Shame
• Carl Douglas’ Kung Fu Fighting
• George McCrae’s Rock Your Baby
• B.T. Express’ Express
Decent:
• Sugarloaf featuring Jerry Corbetta’s Don’t Call Us, We’ll Call You
(a great song, marred by a dumb edit that removes the “John, Paul and George” reference)
• Styx’s’ Lady
• Hot Chocolate’s Disco Queen
• Kool and the Gang’s Spirit of the Boogie
• Jim Gilstrap’s Swing Your Daddy
Yuck:
• …The Stylistics’ Disco Baby.
• The Hues Corporation’s Rockin’ Soul, and
• Disco Tex’s I Wanna Dance Wit’ Choo …
… aren’t terrible songs, but the slices here are mere teases. And the studio version of Rock and Roll All Nite deserved to fail – the live version, which brought them to AT40, was vastly superior.
Question Marks:
I have no idea what possessed K-tel to include Billy Preston’s 1973 No. 1, Will It Go Round in Circles? in this collection. Not only did it predate the songs popularly thought to kick off the disco era – Rock Your Baby and Rock the Boat – but Preston had another No. 1 from late 1974, Nothing from Nothing, that would have been a good stylistic fit.
I’ll guess it wasn’t included because it was used on a previous 1975 K-tel compilation, “Sounds Spectacular.” But then again, so were Shame, Shame, Shame and Never Can Say Goodbye!
Maybe K-tel thought three repeats were one too many.
Overall, far more “top-shelf” than “yuck” – and, really, those are more because of the collection’s edits than the songs themselves…
…so it’s not a bad set to have.
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I like “Disco Baby” by the Stylistics, but I can totally understand why others would not. It’s kind of annoying! 🙂
Perhaps even worse considering the silken sounds the group used to be known for.
That’s a solid comp, and thanks for the streaming link!
My favorite song on this album is….
Rock Your Baby is definitely the best and disco-est of the bunch.
(Ok, 2nd disco-est after The Hustle.)
How jarring is it to listen to these compilations, expecting the song to go a particular way that you know by heart from elsewhere, only for 2 minutes to suddenly be chopped out?
It’s like when your Walkman batteries started dying, and the cassette started playing juuussst a bit slower? I hated that!!
“Kung Fu Fighting” sounds a little deeper if you get around to watching The Big Boss like I did when Criterion released The Bruce Lee Collection. Carl Douglas is singing about the joy of cinema. Imagine Pauline Kael as a recording artist. After watching Robert Altman’s Nashville, she goes to the studio and cuts “Coun Try Singing”, while it’s still fresh in her head.
My apologies to Chuck for the mini-hijack link of “Carl Douglas” in his article.
Many of you may remember that when it comes to defending Kung Fu Fighting, I will do my jailhouse-lawyer thing all day long.
It’s a great pop artifact – and not a novelty record.
I liked your defense. So, hijack away!
Actually given the time frame of that K-tel album, “Hijack” by Herbie Mann definitely could’ve been on it. Yes, it’s a bit smooth jazz for this collection, but hey, if Kiss and Styx could make it …
Maybe it comes down to musicianship. If Buckner and Garcia had Carl Jackson’s backing band, maybe “Pac Man Fever” would sound less like a novelty record.
Berry Gordy’s The Last Dragon is a lot of fun.
Chuck, your article got me searching through my albums and the K-Tel compilation I have is “Hot Nights&City Lights” from 1979.
It’s on the other end of the spectrum as it plays the top disco songs as that era was coming to an end.
To use your ratings.
TOP SHELF
“We Are Family”
Ring My Bell”
“In The Navy”
“Haven’t Stopped Dancing Yet”
“Knock On Wood”
“I Will Survive”
“Love and Desire”
OKAY
“At Midnight”
“I Got My Mind Made Up”
“I Don’t Know If It’s Right”
SHADES OF THINGS TO COME
“Heart Of Glass”
“Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground”)
YUCK
“Chains”
And, as Dutch8er pointed out, many of them are time compressed, so you just get into the groove and they end.
But as a musical, historical moment out of time, It’s priceless.
Thanks for sharing this, DanceFever. I’ve got this one, too, but I don’t know when if ever I’d get around to spotlighting it. (I’ve got a lot to go before summer ’79 and many aren’t K-tel collections…) So I appreciate the opportunity for a quick fast-forward.
I agree with most of your observations and I like the “Shades of Things to Come” category! The only place I disagree is “Ring My Bell,” which I never was fond of. I can’t remember whether I told this story at the mothership when that song was No. 1, but my younger sister (who was 12 at the time) seriously thought it was an extended commercial for the phone company! It was a simpler time then… 🙂
Early Disco – Don’t forget “The Love I Lost” by Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes!
reggie!
Good welcome to you!!!
Thanks for joining in the fun with us at tnocs.com!
Hello friend mt! I have lurked for quite some time, my hesitancy being the fear of getting nothing done away from my keyboard if I jump into another community. Oh well, time to capitulate. Many of my veteran friends hang out here and I have been missing them over at the Number Ones.
You may remember me as 17 in 77. I changed my handle back when Stereogum was undergoing upgrades and the site would not accept my old username, just never got around to changing it back. Hope to spend more time here, love the site!
AHA! Well, what do you know: it’s good ol’ 17-in-double-seven!
We all welcome you to the fun. Very glad for your participation!
17 in 77! I wondered what happen to you! There are several others who have gone missing and now I wonder if they’re still around but under a different name.
Shortly after I changed my handle some life challenges had me preoccupied and I was not very active. By the time those had passed and I was able to re-engage we were full on into New Jack Swing. That style of music, and most everything after, does not do much for me so now it’s mostly polls and any 70/80’s discussion thread that draw me in. Highly probable there are others with a similar tale. It would be nice to find more veterans. Perhaps we should start a call out thread for anyone who has changed their handle?
Good idea!