1980  

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* "[[Is It All Over My Face]]" - [[Loose Joints]] * "[[Is It All Over My Face]]" - [[Loose Joints]]
*"[[You've Got to Have Freedom]]" - [[Pharoah Sanders]] (started the whole [[acid jazz]] thing) *"[[You've Got to Have Freedom]]" - [[Pharoah Sanders]] (started the whole [[acid jazz]] thing)
-*[[Loleatta Holloway]] - Love Sensation +*[[Loleatta Holloway]] - [[Love Sensation]]
-*[[Sylvester]] - I Need You +*[[Sylvester]] - [[I Need You]]
-*[[Ramona Brooks]] - I Don't Want You Back +*[[Ramona Brooks]] - [[I Don't Want You Back]]
*[[Taana Gardner]] - Work That Body (Levan Remix) *[[Taana Gardner]] - Work That Body (Levan Remix)
-*[[More Bounce to the Ounce]] - Zapp+*[[More Bounce to the Ounce]] - [[Zapp]]
-*Kinky Foxx - So Different +*[[Kinky Foxx]] - So Different
-*[[Sylvia Striplin]] - Give Me Your Love +*[[Sylvia Striplin]] - [[Give Me Your Love]]
-*[[First Choice]] - Breakaway +*[[First Choice]] - [[Breakaway]]
*[[La Colegiala]] - *[[La Colegiala]] -
-*Gayle Adams - Stretchin' Out +*[[Gayle Adams]] - Stretchin' Out
*[[Geraldine Hunt]] - Can't Fake The Feeling *[[Geraldine Hunt]] - Can't Fake The Feeling
*Trussel - Love Injection *Trussel - Love Injection

Revision as of 19:20, 8 May 2009

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  • Disco is a Dirty Word
    • By 1980, disco had become a dirty word. The term was banished from the language as an added security measure [because remember, the disco that Ron and Frankie played was called 'house' even before house was], but the music was exported to England, where it was de-gayed and re-exported to the States under a new name: "new wave dance music." The rock majority was satisfied by the replacement of explicitly gay Sylvester with flamboyantly closeted Boy George. As the playlist segued from "I'm Coming Out" into "Do You Really Want To Hurt Me," the pulverization of the liberal imagination became a political fact. Ronald Reagan was elected president, and the following June, a mysterious new "gay cancer" appeared. - by Peter Braunstein
  • Adrian Sherwood
    • In 1980, Adrian Sherwood launches On U Sound records.
  • Grace Jones
    • With the dawn of the '80s came a massive anti-disco movement across the U.S., leading to Grace Jones focusing on more new wave and experimental-based work produced by the noted reggae team of Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare.

Singles

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