For those who can remember those high platform soled shoes and wide open blouses (with those flowery chesthair growing out), cool fancy moves of John Travolta: just try to recall how you once moved to all of those infectious grooves. Chic? Ohio Players? Earth, Wind & Fire?
The next song also recalls a few favourite dancefloor fillers. Yes, you'll find out...but first dance.
How did I/ do you do that?
(lyrics/ music: JoosTVD)
Used to dig those disco parties
Freaking dancing on the floor
That backseat hanky panky
Sneaking out backdoors
Still get those chilling fevers
When I play back "Daddy Cool"
And all those desperate leavers
All lined up dancing fools
Now you're gonna show us why you love that dancing floor
You used to go down on it ("that's the way I liked it")
Kooling with the gang ("get down on it")
Well that's the way you liked it (aha aha)
Shake your booty now and then ("shake your body")
DD has been played on:
Croydon radio London
Dancing Dutchman on Talentcast
Posts tonen met het label seventies. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label seventies. Alle posts tonen
zaterdag 21 mei 2016
vrijdag 12 februari 2016
Collecting Music, My Golden Years: 1974-1977
Vinyl anno 1987, Concerto A'dam
It's time for my confession. To talk to you about my chronic addiction. Everyone's got one: well, mine is a my ongoing music collecting habit. These days I'm inclined to go back to my old favourites, so the urge to stay ahead of any new, hip trend is minimilized to a few listens of easy googling. The reason for this sudden come out, is the "sudden" deaths of idols, like David Bowie, Allen Toussaint, Maurice White and Dan Hicks that triggered me to go back to my Golden Years of that addiction. It's far from complete when I talk about specific albums though. They just represent a few precious and personal moments.
Feel free to respond. Why not leave your own anecdote?
![](https://www.organicdesign.co.nz/files/1/1a/Pioneer-turntable.jpg)
How did that start? It was the Summer of Love, this kid was about 4 years old and very curious. My first obsession with music was with my daddy's turntable, (spinning all kind of records that could play different tempos, 33, 45, 78 rpm), by watching the grooves going round. My first auditory learning. My father had an enormous amount of different records, like classical, jazz, blues, pop, rock that kept my ears wide open. This curious kid was also fascinated by that needle...what did that do? And where did that sound come from? As I was forbidden to touch that thing in any way, I could not help myself thinking about it and doing what daddy was doing just by breaking that golden rule. Wrong. I wanted to be the DJ in da house! Wrong. So one night I sneaked downstairs. Wrong! In the darkness I nervously picked out a random record-wrong- and laid it down on the turntable. So wrong! It all went dramatically downhill when I tried to put the needle on the edge of the record. My not so steady fingers pushed it all the way to the center of the plate. Gggrriiiiechhh!! Oeps, did I offend someone? Maybe I was the first scratcher in the dark, before it became hip. Yeah, right. All you see now, is a scratch going right through the grooves where the once powerful voice of Maria Callas stopped in its tracks and instead turned into this upset and hurt witch, as my father would show me many years later. Shame on sneaky me.
"a fixated mindset on the snowball that kept on rolling"
No city was safe. You could find me searching for any secondhand recordstore. I often consulted the dutch pop-encyclopedies, studied them to prepare myself more thoroughly. Listened to the radio. Made lists of "wanna have" items. Read magazines. Followed hitparades. Exchanged news with other nerds. Went to concerts. Got lost at music fairs. A fixated mindset on the snowball that kept on rolling. I Searched for all the-so so- recommended albums and often got them for a nice price. Collector items? Too expensive. Zappa? Not available, only import. Too expensive. Later on, I had my digital revenge. Still I could find a few underrated albums as well before they were collector's items years later.
I was often so, so lucky.
Books to read and the place to be
As my turntables got better, so did the needles and so my records were safe from harm. One of my favourite recordstores at the end of the seventies up until the millennium, was "Concerto" in Amsterdam. The concept of four different stores (secondhand, new popular, jazz and classical) next to eachother under the same banner, was a pretty sight to see. The balance of the old and the new. With the smell of secondhand vinyl in my nose in the morning, I eagerlessly walked the long walk from central station right through the crowded centre to that long street near Rembrandsplein, just to get me some of those rare stuff. That was my only drug then. Didn't need a coffeshop man!
Sometimes I hesitated though
I remember watching David Bowie's "Golden Years" on television around 1976. I found it all too strange. A white man singing "Soul"? I was already familiar with his androgyne look witnessing "Jean Genie" and his haunting "Space Odessey". I even purchased his early work, (a compilation "Changes One"), but this was different altogether. Black music was spreading like oil in influence, as witnessed by his funky track "Fame" from 1975, which James Brown (!) ironically stole its guitar lick from (played by his ex-guitarist Carlos Alomar, then Bowie's) for his 1976 "Hot"song.
Yes, I bought that one instead. O my.
I can't recall how, but eventually I even got my hands on "Station To Station" as well. My mother loved his version of "Wild Is The Wind", as she loved Nina Simone's, so I think she bought it and I usually had to hear her favourite song over and over and then again. Very loud. Maybe we eventually swapped albums. Wathever happened, when I finally listened to the whole record I was hOOked on David Bowie and the snowball rolled on to R&B, Soul and Funk. "Staaaaayyyyy....". When Bowie died, I had to go back to that album. Sure, this one is a favourite, but "Low" and "Heroes" are too. That whole period 1976-1978 was a magical one for me. Soon I was checking out other white guys that "did" black music, even more when I saw this on TV (Vid.): Boz Scaggs. The unavoidable hits "What Can I Say and "Lowdown". That smooth, slick and sophisticated sound and rhythm patterns got me hooked. The word was "crossover", before it became AOR. Melody and rhythm combined, that was the key! Blue-eyed soul it was called.
His old bandmate Steve Miller's "Fly Like An Eagle" crossovered me too. What Could I Say?
I was already aware of the irresistable, hypnotic rhythms though. Of course James Brown's "Sexmachine" comes to mind. It got a lot of spins on seventies radio, so one could not avoid it. No way. I still had to feel it in my gut.
It was the overdone and outragous image of black music that put me off at first. I couldn't take it all too seriously. Found out it was me who was too serious.
when I first heard
"Brickhouse"
Goddamn!
Outragous, hardhitting, intense, sultry, uplifting, hypnotic, chantfunk.
I couldn't find the studio version right away, but then
I saw this double live album by the Commodores.
Wow, why not try out the "live" version, maybe there's more excitement! Got that right brother. And one of the reasons I wanted to play the drums I guess. Still I had to discover Sly and P-Funk. But this gave me some fresh, positive vibes. I was funked and ready for more.
Thanks to that one hell of a smart Mr. Bowie.
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/f/fe/MoonflowerAlbum.jpg/220px-MoonflowerAlbum.jpg)
Speaking of live albums in 1976: it became a trend when Peter Frampton's "Comes Alive" came out and found its way in every household on any block of the world. Yes, the sensation of the big stadium tours.
Another successful double-well, half live- album was Santana's "Moonflower" that turned me on to the more adventurous and unexpected syncopated side of rhythm: Latin music (salsa, samba, bosa nova, jazz).
And then BAM, "Punk" washed the bubbling and overblown progrockhipfest thing away.
And what do you think was my reaction....??
Here's my current situation:
Posing as the proud vinyl collector
The great wall of digital plastic
Labels:
10cc,
artrock,
Beatles,
Can,
collecting,
David bowie,
James Brown,
kid,
Kinks,
progrock,
R&B,
records,
Rolling Stones,
secondhand,
seventies,
sixties,
soul,
story,
Who
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