#1 I Will Survive v #4 I'm Your Boogie Man
#7 We Are Family v #6 Stayin Alive
FYI KC's Boogieman tied with Lipps Inc's Funky Town but moved on because of being the higher seed (my rules and yes, making them up as I go)
Hon mentionfadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
fadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
Hip Hop detractors used to deride it as simplistic because all you had to do, in their eyes, was rhyme to a beat. There's a lot not quite true about that, since hip hop at that time required mechanical skill to (re)mix hooks from previous music in a creative way, and most of the higher caliber (!) stuff had lyrics borne from street reality. Harsh, violent, vulgar, degrading - it had a vision and a point.Keyser Soze said:
Old man yelling out cloud notes:
Give me this music over most (yes some good stuff) modern day rap any day. Sure there was Push Push in the Bush and plenty of suggestive lyrics, but no one had cuss like a drunk sailor and degrade women constantly.
End rant
This is why we need Stranger on music threadsStranger said:fadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
Eddie Floyd version?
Keyser Soze said:This is why we need Stranger on music threadsStranger said:fadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
Eddie Floyd version?
NoBSU said:
I will survive
Stayin Alive
fubar said:
Boogie Man. Stayin' Alive.
About 20 years ago I was in my office on the 27th floor on a Friday afternoon and started hearing KC & The Sunshine Band songs. I figured someone in an office close by was being too silly, but then I saw the stream of ants on the street below heading for Barney Allis Plaza. Yep, a Friday afternoon concert. Followed up by Kool and the Gang.
Best Friday afternoon I'd had in awhile.
Stranger said:Keyser Soze said:This is why we need Stranger on music threadsStranger said:fadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
Eddie Floyd version?
Thanks for acknowledging that. Here is the original version by Eddie Floyd.
The video is from an afternoon tv show called "Where the Action Is" later shortened to "Action ". The guys clowning around are members of the group, Paul Revere & the Raiders where they acted as co-hosts.
The back-up band on the record is Booker T & the MGs which featured the great Steve Cropper on guitar and Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass. This group was featured as the Blues Brothers Band in the movie of the same name.
In those days you had Motown soul (Supremes, Temptations, Marvin Gaye, etc) and the Memphis sound that these guys laid down backing Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Eddie Floyd et al.
The song was written by Eddie Floyd and Steve Cropper
Good stuff!
quash said:Stranger said:Keyser Soze said:This is why we need Stranger on music threadsStranger said:fadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
Eddie Floyd version?
Thanks for acknowledging that. Here is the original version by Eddie Floyd.
The video is from an afternoon tv show called "Where the Action Is" later shortened to "Action ". The guys clowning around are members of the group, Paul Revere & the Raiders where they acted as co-hosts.
The back-up band on the record is Booker T & the MGs which featured the great Steve Cropper on guitar and Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass. This group was featured as the Blues Brothers Band in the movie of the same name.
In those days you had Motown soul (Supremes, Temptations, Marvin Gaye, etc) and the Memphis sound that these guys laid down backing Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Eddie Floyd et al.
The song was written by Eddie Floyd and Steve Cropper
Good stuff!
And Gordy!
Stranger said:quash said:Stranger said:Keyser Soze said:This is why we need Stranger on music threadsStranger said:fadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
Eddie Floyd version?
Thanks for acknowledging that. Here is the original version by Eddie Floyd.
The video is from an afternoon tv show called "Where the Action Is" later shortened to "Action ". The guys clowning around are members of the group, Paul Revere & the Raiders where they acted as co-hosts.
The back-up band on the record is Booker T & the MGs which featured the great Steve Cropper on guitar and Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass. This group was featured as the Blues Brothers Band in the movie of the same name.
In those days you had Motown soul (Supremes, Temptations, Marvin Gaye, etc) and the Memphis sound that these guys laid down backing Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Eddie Floyd et al.
The song was written by Eddie Floyd and Steve Cropper
Good stuff!
And Gordy!
Ok. I give up. Who's Gordy?
quash said:Stranger said:quash said:Stranger said:Keyser Soze said:This is why we need Stranger on music threadsStranger said:fadskier said:
Where was Knock on Wood? Best disco song ever!
Eddie Floyd version?
Thanks for acknowledging that. Here is the original version by Eddie Floyd.
The video is from an afternoon tv show called "Where the Action Is" later shortened to "Action ". The guys clowning around are members of the group, Paul Revere & the Raiders where they acted as co-hosts.
The back-up band on the record is Booker T & the MGs which featured the great Steve Cropper on guitar and Donald "Duck" Dunn on bass. This group was featured as the Blues Brothers Band in the movie of the same name.
In those days you had Motown soul (Supremes, Temptations, Marvin Gaye, etc) and the Memphis sound that these guys laid down backing Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Eddie Floyd et al.
The song was written by Eddie Floyd and Steve Cropper
Good stuff!
And Gordy!
Ok. I give up. Who's Gordy?
Berry Gordy, Motown founder, writer, producer but mainly an eye for talent.