Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year
The Perfect Holiday Gift Gift Now

THE RHYTHM DIVINE

Record Collector

|

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

By the late 70s it ostensibly sucked, but by the early 80s it was enjoying renewed and rude health. It was the dance music that could never die: here, we look at what disco did next after Comiskey Park.Boogie wander: Kris Needs

THE RHYTHM DIVINE

As the 70s came to an end it was widely reported that disco was dead, but many thought otherwise. The idea that such gloriously life-affirming music could be snuffed out by a racist, homophobic lynch-mob blowing up 10,000 disco records at a Chicago baseball game was ridiculous to anyone familiar with its history.

Maybe the term ceased to exist for major record companies axing their disco departments but the underground that spawned it was built of stronger stuff. Led by New York City, the dance music community simply carried on regardless, defiantly retooling its next incarnation for the 80s with the mirror ball beaming brighter than ever.

Embracing the drum machines and synths concurrently rewiring hip-hop - NYC's next sociocultural movement to take the world - disco morphed into electro-boogie, boogie or just post-disco, according to Tim Lawrence's definitive book, Life & Death On The New York Dancefloor 1980-1983, feeding “one of the most creatively vibrant and socially dynamic periods in the history of New York”. This was born out by revelatory cassettes, filtering into London, of the city’s black music radio stations that revealed disco’s next step in all its glory.

Visiting New York for the first time in 1983, this writer found the city that never slept at full throttle as the radio broadcast audacious mastermixes created on KISS FM by Shep Pettibone and Tony Humphries, or Timmy Regisford on WBLS, tangibly hotwiring templates for dance music's future, reshaping songs and redefining remix culture by extending grooves and adding samples. Disco had shed one skin to reveal another, sporting gleaming boogie body armour, ready to start its next revolution.

MORE STORIES FROM Record Collector

Record Collector

Record Collector

UNDER THE RADAR

Artists, bands, and labels meriting more attention

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

LOOKIN' AFTER No 1s THE XMAS FACTOR

Does your granny always tell ya that the old songs are the best? The truth might be more curious and complex, as Chris Roberts finds, tearing off the wrapping paper to discover the full history of the Christmas No 1

time to read

13 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

Behold The Man Friday, The Leader Of The Virgin Prunes

Since the late 70s, Gavin Friday has trod a singular path, whether as part of influential post-punks The Virgin Prunes, soundtracking Hollywood blockbusters.

time to read

10 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

THE ENGINE ROOM

The unsung heroes who helped forge modern music

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACKERS

In 1975, 10cc and Queen reigned supreme with I'm Not In Love and that also happened to be the Christmas No 1. But how did both Bohemian Rhapsody. The former was the chart-topping sound of the game-changing singles happen that year, and which, wonders Paul summer and a production landmark, the latter a multi-part song-suite McNulty, remains the most revolutionary example of 70s songcraft?

time to read

24 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

'WE'D JUST WALLOW IN HOW FUCKING BRILLIANT WE WERE'

Graham Gouldman on I'm Not In Love, The Original Soundtrack and 10cc's next-level pop.

time to read

8 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

The Collector

Warren Kurtz began collecting records in the 60s and has written about music since the 70s.

time to read

6 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

Heaven From Hell

An exhilarating masterpiece wrung from a period of turmoil and unease, all done up for its 50th birthday.

time to read

5 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

33½ minutes with...Brinsley Schwarz

It's 60 years since Brinsley Schwarz made his recording bow, a handful of singles with the semi-psychedelic pop band Kippington Lodge, but he became a more visible presence later in the decade when he lent his name to the pub rock figureheads who also included Nick Lowe in their number.

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Record Collector

Record Collector

TEEN SPIRIT

Of all the first-wave punk bands, Eater were arguably the truest to form.

time to read

9 mins

Christmas 2025 - Issue 578

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size

Holiday offer front
Holiday offer back