When I was a kid I hated disco. I had no reason to hate it but everybody else seemed to so why rock the boat? People would talk about disco like it committed an unforgivable crime. My first memories of getting into music was the early 80s; MTV, arena rock, new wave, hair metal, pop and rap. Most of those things looked down on disco. I didn’t know it at the time but this was the first instance where I ever experienced what we now call cancel culture. Disco got too big, too cheesy, too commercial and it was everywhere. The record companies and money people ruined it. Radio was flooded with it. Rock bands as varied as the Rolling Stones, Kiss, Blondie, Rod Stewart, Queen, the Clash, Zeppelin and many others dipped their toes into the disco pool and had success. I guess it was too much of a good thing. Yes, it was a good thing. I say that because even though I was taught to dislike disco having grown up in the post disco era, I have really come to enjoy it over time, especially as I learned more about where it came from and what it truly was meant to be. Sure there’s some forgettable disco music out there but there was a lot of excellent stuff too. Since I wasn’t really a part of it but its’ demise happened during my lifetime, I think a lot about how it went from being the biggest thing sweeping the world to becoming the antichrist so quickly.
Today people get “cancelled” by doing and saying awful, hateful things. In the beginning, all disco wanted to do was have a good time. It’s not lost on me that the death of disco coincided with the dawn of Reagan and trickle down economics, and all that vile stuff we haven’t been able to get rid of. It was like when the 70s ended, the party was over and a cultural backlash was underway. Of course, systemic change usually happens slowly so while the dawn of the 80s and Reaganism took hold it took many years before we really started to feel the long term effects of the damage they did by giving the rich lower taxes, all the deregulation, the increased privatization and all the havoc the new conservative “leadership” would wreak upon us. While the foundation was silently cracking we still had fun in the 80s supersizing our hair, our music, wearing the bright colors and doing many other totally awesome things so it’s easy to dismiss what happened at the turn of the decade as not a big deal but I don’t accept that.
While the decline took time, when disco got cancelled, it seemed like the spirit of the 60s and 70s went with it. I remember a bit where George Carlin talked about the baby boomers and how in the 60s and 70s they took all the sex, drugs and rock n roll and had a free ride. This was true. It might have been the most progressive time in American history. I realize that isn’t saying much. But eventually the free ride did have a cost. The sex party wasn’t the same after AIDS hit the scene in the early 80s. The drugs went from less harmful things like grass, poppers and ludes to increasingly addictive and lethal things like coke and crack. The amount of drug deaths climbed in the 80s as did the number of gun deaths. The music underwent changes, evolved and disco died and gave way to punk rock, new wave, rap and the dawn of MTV. Disco artists were basically shunned and many careers were ended with just a few exceptions. The Bee Gees became public enemy number #1 and a group that had six #1 singles in a row during the last few years of the 70s would never have another. In fact, they only had 1 more top 20 song and that took until 1989 to get there. At the beginning of 1979 disco was still raking in huge money but by the end of that year, the end was near. I find it amazing how quickly this massive bubble burst.
Disco started in the early 70s and like most good cultural
movements, it began underground with people of color and other marginalized
communities. Glorious dance parties happened in warehouses and lofts. The
majority of the early attendees were black. They were gay. They weren’t trying
to make a buck, they just wanted to dance and let loose. They were people who
created fun safespaces that existed on the dance floor. Over time it grew
beyond the black, Puerto Rican and gay communities and more clubs and
discotechques began popping up around
Disco was everywhere, in commercials, movies and there were
disco novelty songs and albums coming out all the time. It was dominating the
charts, the Grammys and selling like hotcakes. It was all over the radio and in
these times, unless you had records of your own to listen to, the radio was all
you had. Some stations changed to all disco formats. You couldn’t skip songs,
stream or play DJ so easily like we do today. Because of where disco had its’
roots I believe there was a racial element to the backlash that finally came.
Yes, people were tired of it but who led the charge? If you look at video or
pictures of the infamous Disco Demolition night in the southside of
At the beginning of the 70s, disco was people just getting
together to dance and have a great time. By the end of the decade, disco was
massive business and everyone was trying to exploit it and make more money
before the train inevitably crashed. Disco was the poster child for excess,
decadence, everything the conservative 80s aspired to leave behind during this
new morning in