Finally, Stevie Wonder seems to have one foot in the stirrup and the other on the dance floor with "I Ain't Gonna Stand For It" on Hotter Than July.
I was just going to mention this song.
― Eric H., Tuesday, 27 January 2009 15:19 (seventeen years ago)
Ha ha, that Stevie Wonder song description reminds me of this verse from "Last Child" by Aerosmith (who were maybe never country-disco, per se' though they were definitely a little bit country on occasion -- e.g., "Chip Away At The Stone" -- and probably at least a little bit disco sometimes, as well):
Hates in the cityAnd my loves in the meadowHands on the plowAnd my feets in the ghetto
― xhuxk, Tuesday, 27 January 2009 16:00 (seventeen years ago)
And Big Al Downing, a black guy mainly known as a country (and, earlier, rockabilly) singer supposedly made a disco move in the late '70s too, I believe; whether he stayed country when he went disco is a subject for further research, I guess.
― xhuxk (xheddy)
"I'll be holding on" by Big Al Downing is one of my favourite disco songs, it's not very country though with the exception of it including good bit of banjo playing.
― Bone Thugs-N-Harmony ft Phil Collins (jim), Tuesday, 27 January 2009 16:02 (seventeen years ago)
Alicia Bridges' "I Love the Nightlife (Disco Round)" sounds country on the verses & then goes disco on the choruses.
― Josefa, Tuesday, 27 January 2009 16:18 (seventeen years ago)
maybe i just imagined that k-tel dance country compilation
No I didn't -- except it's not on K-Tel; It's Warner Special Products. It's called Swingin' Country, subtitled "Dance To The Best Of Country"; came out in 1984. Songs by John Anderson, Emmylou Harris, Gary Morris, The Whites, Hank Williams Jr, Earl Thomas Conley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Bonnie Raitt, Johnny Lee, Gail Davies, Bellamy Brothers, Mel Tellis, Gilley's "Urban Cowboy" Band, and T. G. Sheppard. Not sure off hand whether any of them are remotely disco, though; someday I'll go back and check.
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 28 January 2009 19:02 (seventeen years ago)
Ronnie Milsap's "Stranger In My House" surely counts here, no?
― Euler, Wednesday, 28 January 2009 19:07 (seventeen years ago)
Bonnie Tyler -- "Got So Used To Loving You." (Most country-rock-disco track on her Euro-country-heavy 1978 The Hits Of LP, though "Heaven" is also notable for sounding a lot like "Itchykoo Park.")
― xhuxk, Saturday, 31 January 2009 20:16 (seventeen years ago)
Lotta Love * Nicolette Larson ( 12" Extended Disco Version )
― PappaWheelie V, Saturday, 31 January 2009 20:52 (seventeen years ago)
Disco band Belle Epoque's excellent 1979 album Now has a couple blatant Euro-country songs in the middle of its second side ("Loving You" and especially the very Bonnie Tyler-like "Stranger Once Again"), but like lots of acts they seem to keep their disco in a separate box. (The track I really love, "Lose My Man," is more blues-rock, almost. And in "Com'On Tonight" they revive the Diddley beats they'd used in their earlier hit "Miss Broadway").
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 18 February 2009 15:28 (seventeen years ago)
you have to listen to it all or maybe it'll just sound like disco
― Local Garda, Wednesday, 18 February 2009 15:31 (seventeen years ago)
This seems like a good thread to ask: can anyone think of any country songs with overt use of synthesizers? (I say "overt," because I've checked out, for instance, a couple early '80s Dolly songs in which a synthesizer player is listed but damn if I can actually hear them... I mean synths as providing essential riffs or at least highly audible background texture.) Only one I'm aware of for sure is Rosanne Cash's "Seven Year Ache," which I totally love.
― sw00ds, Saturday, 28 March 2009 02:32 (seventeen years ago)
Not sure if there's technically a synth here or not, Scott (she's playing a piano, and I don't have my copies of her LPs handy to check the liner notes), but the burbling pulse bears a startling resemblance to "I Feel Love" regardless:
There are definitely also '90s country dance mixes (for bands like, say, Confederate Railroad) that have moments in them that sound electronic. But those tend almost inevitably to feel like gratuitous add-ons, more than "essential riffs" (and they usually don't make the songs sound dancier to me, though country line dancers may well disagree.)
The first song on the new Dierks Bentley album (a sort of Bad Company style fugitive boogie) credits "space bass," for whatever that's worth.
― xhuxk, Saturday, 28 March 2009 03:22 (seventeen years ago)
Ah, thanks xhuxk -- you're right, I think there are some lightly-burbling synths in the Terri Gibbs (pretty sure I heard about this song from you, years ago... I really like it -- I actually turned a dance DJ I know on to it several months back; he considers himself an '80s expert and was amazed that he'd never heard of it).
Space Bass counts, far as I'm concerned. I'll look into it.
Kind of surprised, frankly, that synths didn't enter into country in a big way (I mean, it seems like drum machines did, right? like with Shania Twain and stuff... or am I wrong?).
― sw00ds, Saturday, 28 March 2009 03:28 (seventeen years ago)
doesn't Donna Summer, even, do one or two country-ish tracks on *Bad Girls* or *Once Upon a Time*? I'm blanking out on what they're called, though
"There Will Always Be A You" on Bad Girls was one of them.
Hot Chocolate's "So You Win Again" was also a country move of sorts, I think (though I'm told they're only considered a disco group in the U.S., not in Europe, where they were much bigger.)
― xhuxk, Saturday, 28 March 2009 03:30 (seventeen years ago)
See, I'm sure you could come up with a (fairly) sizable list from the other direction: synth-based music gone country, but country gone synth-pop seems more far-fetched, oddly enough.
It's neat how the Gibbs and Rosanne Cash are both 1981, too (my favourite music year, incidentally). I might even consider lumping "Bette Davis Eyes" in there: not strictly speaking country, but at the time, I think I may have thought of it as such, at least for a while (and it strikes me as the sort of thing that might've crossed over into that territory, though I don't know).
― sw00ds, Saturday, 28 March 2009 03:32 (seventeen years ago)
I imagine there's a fair bit of country-rock, like Eagles and stuff, with synths, however, and that sort of counts too.
― sw00ds, Saturday, 28 March 2009 03:33 (seventeen years ago)
Just checked K.T. Oslin's Greatest Hits album Songs From An Aging Sex Bomb, and she credits synth players (usually Glen Ballard) on several songs. Suspect it's not as rare as you think, Scott. (And if you like Terri Gibbs, I suspect you might like K.T. as well.) Might be tough, though, to come up with country songs where synths are a prominent instrument. (Did you skim through all the songs on this thread, though? Bet there's some on here, somewhere. Not remotely convinced that there are more dance-to-country crossovers than the other way around, as much of this thread probably bears out.)
― xhuxk, Saturday, 28 March 2009 03:53 (seventeen years ago)
Synths credited in several tracks on Confederate Railroad's Rockin' Country Party Pack, too (not just the "club mixes.") And I bet lots of times, when artists vaguely credit "keyboards" or "percussion," that includes synths; maybe they're just scared to be more specific. Would be really surprised if there aren't a few, too, on some of those '80s Milsap records mentioned upthread.
― xhuxk, Saturday, 28 March 2009 04:13 (seventeen years ago)
(Okay, possibly not "percussion", who knows; guess that might imply drum machines more than synths. Ditto "drum loop programming," which I'm seeing on some credits. But a latter-day Mindy McCready CD -- self-titled, 2002 -- lists synths per se' too, fwiw.)
― xhuxk, Saturday, 28 March 2009 05:09 (seventeen years ago)
Suspect it's not as rare as you think, Scott.
Well, I think in regards to what I'm looking for, it's possibly even rarer: country music with obvious synth hooks or synth sections, a la "Seven Year Ache" (not to say it has to sound like that, but it has to use synths in as central a way). I dunno... these examples all sound interesting, but it seems to require some serious digging around and to some degree relying on credits. Not that that's a problem or anything, my inquiry's really a shot in the dark to begin with. (Maybe it's safe to say that country absorbs disco and Euro more with its use of beats and subject matter and stuff.)
― sw00ds, Saturday, 28 March 2009 06:38 (seventeen years ago)
I mentioned Ronnie Milsap above, but in particular on the synth in country question he's a good one. There are a number of choices here (e.g. "Back On My Mind Again") but consider in particular his cover of "Any Day Now" (from 1982) (#1 country, #14 pop):
― Euler, Saturday, 28 March 2009 15:03 (seventeen years ago)
Watching that video makes me think of Avalon, both the videos and the songs themselves.
― Euler, Saturday, 28 March 2009 15:05 (seventeen years ago)
Okay wow, that Terri Gibbs song above, I used to hear it on the radio a lot as a kid, and always thought the singer was male. I thought it was a little weird that a man was singing those lyrics. Now all these years later I learn it's a woman.
― Maltodextrin, Monday, 30 March 2009 04:10 (seventeen years ago)
Another example of overt synths on a country song is Sylvia's "Nobody" (#1 country, #15 pop). Naturally it's from 1982. I've linked to a youtube version of the original recording below; but youtube also has two live versions from the era where the synths are replaced with horns.
― Euler, Monday, 30 March 2009 14:17 (seventeen years ago)
Yeah, I just linked to "Nobody" last week on that Alphabetic Video Jukebox thread; should've thought of that. And here's another one from 1981 (somebody should do a mix CD of this stuff...)
― xhuxk, Monday, 30 March 2009 14:22 (seventeen years ago)
And "Islands In The Stream" (1983) must have some synths, right?
― xhuxk, Monday, 30 March 2009 14:32 (seventeen years ago)
Thinking of Eddie Rabbitt: his duet "You And I" with Crystal Gayle (country #1, 1982) has synths, thought not as overt as the others here, it's a softer cut.
"Islands In the Stream", definitely. In fact most of Kenny Rogers hits from 1980 on are heavy on the synths. For instance, "Love Will Turn You Around":
― Euler, Monday, 30 March 2009 14:40 (seventeen years ago)
Juice Newton "Love's Been a Little Bit Hard on Me"
― Maltodextrin, Friday, 3 April 2009 04:39 (seventeen years ago)
So, on a hunch that this might happen (especially given the slick outfit he's wearing in the foldout gatefold), I plopped down $1 for a copy of Ronnie Milsap's 1979 Images LP at Austin's Citywide garage sale last month. First side turned out to be mostly vulnerably hurt sad-sack ballads -- often good, with soul and blues in the phrasing. But then I flipped the record over, and Holy Toledo -- the five-minute-long opening and closing cuts of Side Two, a cover of Tommy Tucker's 1964 r&b hit "Hi Heel Sneakers" and another song called "Get It Up," are absolutely, unabashed disco tracks, period. Almost with no country in them; in fact, "Get It Up" sounds basically like a late '70s live-band party funk number. "Hi Heel Sneakers" is glitzier, but in both cases, Ronnie leaves no doubt about what he was going for here. (Third cut on the side, "Delta Queen," fits on this thread too, just not as blatantly as those other two -- it's probably as disco as Glen Campbell's "Southern Nights," though.)
Album went #5 country; # 98 pop. And "Get It Up," according to Wiki, did not chart country but went to #43 on the pop chart (a position Joel Whitburn confirms, though AMG for some reason skips it in their discography.) I'm guessing it got disco play; curious whether it crossed over to black radio.
Here's "Get It Up." Wasn't kidding, was I?
― xhuxk, Saturday, 4 April 2009 16:39 (seventeen years ago)
wow, that's a hot track! My Ronnie Milsap fandom is mostly from the early 1980s, but it sounds like I'll want to dig deeper.
― Euler, Saturday, 4 April 2009 17:09 (seventeen years ago)
"Delta Queen" fits on this thread too, just not as blatantly as those other two -- it's probably as disco as Glen Campbell's "Southern Nights"
...mainly because it borrows outight the bassline from "Southern Nights," it turns out. But both songs sound more "swamp" than "disco" to me, to be honest. (And nothing else on Glen Campbell's disappointing Southern Nights LP, which I also just bought for $1, is anywhere near as good, or has much of a groove at all. Unless you're into a dead-assed slowed-down version of "God Only Knows" by the Beach Boys, a/k/a the theme from Big Love).
One thing I don't think anybody has talked much about on this thread is how country some (lots of?) really early disco probably was in the first place, simply by virtue of Southern Soul and country music often being kissing cousins. "Morganton, North Carolina," on Johnny Bristol's 1975 Feeling The Magic, definitely has some country in it, to my ears -- from its title on down. And Bristol (born in Morganton, Joel Whitburn confirms) is one of the guys who was then inventing disco, first with "Hang On In There Baby," which went #8 on the pop chart in '74. Curious now about his other stuff, and other '70s Southern soul guys who might fit here.
― xhuxk, Friday, 10 April 2009 20:10 (seventeen years ago)
Guess Big Al Downing (mentioned a few times above) might be an obvious example of that, come to think of it. (But I still don't know his disco stuff, only his country stuff -- and not sure to what extent he ever straddled the line between the two genres.)
― xhuxk, Friday, 10 April 2009 20:17 (seventeen years ago)
post-Angry-Samoans-gig Metal Mike-DJ'd dance-contest party songlist on Angry Samoans myspace lists mostly obvious disco/Euro/dance-pop type stuff (Toy Box, Vengaboys, Gina G, Jocelyn Enriquez, Lady Gaga, Hues Corporation, Carol Douglas, A*Teens, Archies, Kylie, KC, etc.), but also the following three c&w tracks; not sure whether that makes them discofied or not:
YOU CAN FEEL BAD - Patty LovelessBLACK EYES BLUE TEARS - sHaNiA TwAiN I'M DIGGIN' IT - Alecia Elliott
― xhuxk, Friday, 24 April 2009 02:30 (seventeen years ago)
"X-Country" by Invisible Man's Band (former 5 Stairsteps of 1970 "O-o-h Child" fame), off Invisible Man's Band (Mango 1980, bought for $1 last month): history's only explicit merger ever of square-dance hillbilly music and Vaughan Mason-type rollerskate disco?: "This here square dancin' for squares/Let's hear that banjo Slim/Don't he play good/Swing your partner round n round/Doo-cee-doe and don't let her go/PROMENADE -- ROLLERSKATE!" Sort of a precursor of Malcolm McLaren's "Buffalo Gals" too, I guess. (Album's got other interesting stuff as well, especially a disco protest called "Rent Strike" -- "We the tenants of 200 W. 100 & 1/8 St. declare Rent Strike all right!" -- and some Marvin Gaye-style funky-space-reincarnation-style astronomy disco called "Full Moon," and some vulnerable early-disco-style falsetto-soul disco called "9 Xs Out Of 10." "All Night Thing" apparently went #45 on the pop chart, but it might only be my fifth favorite out of the six songs here.)
― xhuxk, Monday, 27 April 2009 15:34 (seventeen years ago)
Six of ten songs credit synthesizers on Juice Newton's very new-wavey looking 1983 Dirty Looks ( a sealed copy of which that is no longer sealed cost me a buck), but the only one I could honestly make a claim for "sounding disco" is the LP-opening title track, which clearly takes its electro-dance pulse from Blondie's "Call Me" (which may have taken its own electo-dance pulse in turn from Black Sabbath's "Children of the Grave" but never mind); only thing is, I don't know how "country" I'd say "Dirty Looks" sounds -- not very; it's closer to early-Benatar Blondie-discoed rock moves like "We Live For Love" or "Treat Me Right," probably. Went #90 as a single in Billboard; next song, a cover of the Zombies' "Tell Her No," went to #27, though I swear I never heard it before. The other track I like a lot is second-side-opener "Don't Bother Me," glam-shout powerchord country-pop that sounds like a missing link between Suzi Quatro and Shania Twain (with maybe one part in 100 of Stacy Lattisaw's "Attack Of the Name Game" in the rhyme scheme, though that's probably just my imagination.) Also: one slightly rockabillish number and too many ballads, though "Slipping Away" sounds a lot like the sort of slower track Donna Summer could have done in the early '80s, after she "went rock."
― xhuxk, Monday, 11 May 2009 02:48 (seventeen years ago)
Wow! I thought Ronnie Milsap was nothing but sad sack ballads. But that track above is pretty hot (could be hotter pitched up a few notches).
And it leads to more potential country-disco on youtube. Here's Roy Orbison's "Easy Way Out" off 1979's very disco looking Laminar Flow album which I've never heard:
And here's Dave Marsh getting all cranky about what a betrayal this album supposedly is including the occasional "trumped-up disco rhythm."
― Kevin John Bozelka, Monday, 11 May 2009 03:41 (seventeen years ago)
Although I gotta admit that both the Milsap track and the Orbison one shortchange the country if it exists at all.
― Kevin John Bozelka, Monday, 11 May 2009 03:45 (seventeen years ago)
Okay there, here's Juice's "Dirty Looks" (theoretically live). Probably some '80s Stevie Nicks in there too, now that I look at it:
― xhuxk, Monday, 11 May 2009 03:55 (seventeen years ago)
27-song playlist I did for Rhapsody a few weeks back. (I'd ammend some of it now, but what the hey):
http://www.rhapsody.com/playlistcentral/playlistdetail?playlistId=ply.28077918
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 17 June 2009 17:54 (sixteen years ago)
someone (ahem) needs to put together a CDR of this shit. awesome thread. thanks for the links chuck.
― figuratively, but in a very real way (amateurist), Friday, 13 November 2009 04:40 (sixteen years ago)
The shotgun marriage of country and disco has been a past obsession on mine that was recently reawakened/refueled by this very thread. First, I've got a few things to add to the list:
"A Country Party" -- Jerline & Friends"Tennessee Waltz" -- Silver Blue"Nashville Soul" -- The Syndicate (a group that billed themselves as "Nashville's disco band")"Hot in the Saddle" – Meco"Big West" – Bionic Boogie
I've also done two podcasts that feature several of the tracks on this thread. You can find them at:
http://www.dsco.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=500440
http://www.dsco.libsyn.com/index.php?post_year=2008&post_month=11
― mottdeterre, Friday, 13 November 2009 19:57 (sixteen years ago)
So...anybody ever heard Carole Chase??? (See here):
Rolling Country 2009 Thread
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 30 December 2009 17:18 (sixteen years ago)
I'm not sure, but maybe this is what you're looking for:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4h9775AAfk
The sound isn't good, b/c I gather the sound comes from the record being played onto the video, not a direct rip. But it was on Casablanca West, a subsidiary of the familiar disco label. You can read a bit about the intention for this label here.
― Euler, Wednesday, 30 December 2009 18:14 (sixteen years ago)
It doesn't sound very disco there, I admit. And this is the first I've heard of it; I'm no expert. But the bass comes in loud enough to hear a few times, and its pulse has a disco throb.
― Euler, Wednesday, 30 December 2009 18:16 (sixteen years ago)
She's been singing back-up for Lynryd Skynryd for about 20 years, and writing these songs:
Do You Know Where Your Man Is Tonight - Recorded by Pam Tillis
True Blue Fool - Recorded By Martina McBride
Civil War - Recorded by Ronnie Milsap
Baby, Take a Picture - Rickey Van Shelton
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 30 December 2009 18:18 (sixteen years ago)
seconding Dolly's "Potential New Boyfriend"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olM4F-w16Ac
― Euler, Friday, 29 January 2010 08:31 (sixteen years ago)
had a feeling that track would be mentioned when I clicked this :)
― Roger Sánchez Broto (vain_bowers), Friday, 29 January 2010 13:29 (sixteen years ago)
haha yeah the new box is amazing, up until the last five or so songs and I'll warm to them too eventually
― Euler, Friday, 29 January 2010 13:36 (sixteen years ago)
I think Joe Ely's Hi-Res album from 1984 deserves a mention on this thread. Not really disco at all, but definitely extremely synthesizer-based, not to mention very influenced by '80s AOR songs (in the vicinity of Survivor's "Eye Of The Tiger" and Aldo Nova's "Fantasy" maybe) that had in turn been inspired by disco. Got horrible reviews as a sell-out at the time, maybe deservedly in the sense that it's not nearly as good as most of Ely's earlier albums. But I found a $1 copy last month, and I'm finding it pretty interesting regardless -- seems the most compelling cuts aren't so much technobilly things like "Cool Rockin' Loretta" as the slower, spacier, more stretched-out ones near the ends of both sides (murder mystery or whatever "Letter To Laredo," for instance, and "Locked In a Boxcar With the Queen Of Spain"), where Ely's using electronics not so much for beats as for spooky spaghetti-western atmosphere. Plus, the move was gutsy, and as far as I know unique, whether it totally worked or not. (On some other thread, though, I compared it to Neil Young's Trans, which is an exagerration; possibly closer to Warren Zevon's Transverse City from 1989, though I admittedly haven't heard that in over 20 years.)
― xhuxk, Sunday, 31 January 2010 18:54 (sixteen years ago)
Theme from The Electric Horseman -- sounds like if the Allman Brothers went full disco.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YG8qq0b3_ZU
― rogue whizzing (Eazy), Sunday, 31 January 2010 19:01 (sixteen years ago)