Eurodisco  

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 +"While less-discerning critics have regarded [[European]] [[disco]] and [[Euro disco]] as two different musical genres: the first being [[European art]]ists and producers who emulated [[American disco]] in the mid and late [[1970s]], the latter being a more electronically 1980s genre, the differentiation is entirely arbitrary. Along their lines of classifications "[[Space Woman]]" (1977), by Herman's Rocket is European disco, whereas "[[Just an Illusion]]" (1982) by [[Imagination (band)|Imagination]] is Euro disco. Both are in fact common varieties of [[European popular music]]." --[[Sholem Stein]]
 +<hr>
 +"But it wasn't just [[American music]] laying the groundwork for [[house music]]. [[European music]], spanning English electronic pop like [[Gary Numan]] and [[Soft Cell]], sparse German proto-techno by [[Kraftwerk]], the more disco based sounds of [[Giorgio Moroder]] and [[Klein & MBO]] and Belgium's [[Telex (band)|Telex]] were immensely popular in urban areas like New York and Chicago."--Sholem Stein
 +<hr>
 +"Although I like to make the difference between ''[[European disco]]'' and ''[[Euro disco]]'' as two different musical genres: the first being [[European art]]ists and producers who emulated [[American disco]] in the mid and late [[1970s music|1970s]], the latter being a more electronically [[1980s in music|1980s]] genre: the differentiation can be argued to be entirely arbitrary, since musical genres are but linguistic placeholders in the first place and semantic rather than real. Besides, the truth about disco is far more complex. New York, where the style originated and was coined, saw the birth of [[proto-disco]] with records such as [[Manu Dibango]]'s ''[[Soul Makossa]]'' and "[[Woman]]" and "[[Wild Safari]]", by [[Barrabás]]. The first recording hailed from Africa, the second and third from Spain.
 +
 +[missing part]
 +
 +Nevertheless, the fact remains that [[European popular music]] has been understudied in comparison to [[American popular music]]. See "[[J'attendrai]]." " --[[Sholem Stein]]
 +
 +|}
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-:On a European level, the pop star [[Dalida]] was the first to make disco music in France with 1975's "J'attendrai" which was a big hit there as well as in Canada and Japan in [[1976]]. She also released many other disco hits between [[1975]] and [[1981]], including "Monday, Tuesday... Laissez-moi danser" in [[1979]], translated the same year as "Let Me Dance Tonight" for the USA, where she was their "French diva" since her late-[[1978]] performance at the [[Carnegie Hall]]. Soon after [[Dalida]]'s pioneering French disco work, other French artists recorded disco: [[Claude François]], in [[1976]] with his song "Cette année-là" (a cover of [[The Four Seasons]]' disco hit "[[December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)]]"), then the famous "yé-yé" French pop singer [[Sheila]], with her group [[B. Devotion]], who even had a hit in the USA (a rarity for French artists) with the song "Spacer" in [[1979]]. Many other European artists also recorded disco music; in Germany, [[Frank Farian]] formed a disco band by the name [[Boney M]] around [[1975]]. They had a string of number one hits in a few European countries which continued into the early [[1980s]], with songs such as ''Daddy Cool'', ''Brown Girl in the Ring'' and ''By the Rivers of Babylon''. Still today, the trademark sound of Boney M is seen as emblematic for late 70's German disco music.+'''Eurodisco''' (also spelled as '''Euro disco''') is the variety of European forms of [[electronic dance music]] that evolved from [[disco]] in the late 1970s, incorporating elements of [[pop music|pop]] and [[rock music|rock]] into a disco-like continuous dance atmosphere. Many Eurodisco compositions feature lyrics sung in English, although the singers often share a different [[First language|mother tongue]].
-The term "Euro-Disco" first used during the [[1970s]], to describe the non [[Anglo-American]] [[disco]] productions and artists. It has some of it's roots on the 50s and 60s French/Italian pop music and sounded very [[eurovision]] - like. Typical examples of that era, are [[Abba]], [[Boney M]], [[Eruption]], [[Cerrone]], [[Amanda Lear]], [[Dschinghis Khan]], [[Teach-In]], [[Snoopy]], etc. By the late 70s, a "Latin"-like sound added to the genre. Artists like Italy's [[Raffaella Carrà]] and France's [[Gibson Brothers]] are typical examples of this 70s euro-disco style.+Eurodisco derivatives generally include [[Europop]] and [[Eurodance]], with the most prominent sub-genres being [[space disco]] of the late 1970s and [[Italo disco]] of the early 1980s. The genre declined in popularity after 1986 in preference to [[electronic rock]] and [[hi-NRG]], with a small revival of Italo disco in at least the late 1990s.
-After the [[Disco Demolition Night]] promotional event that took place on [[July 12]], [[1979]], at Comiskey Park in Chicago USA, the term "Euro-Disco" also disappeared from the mainstream in Europe. "Disco" took over to describe those productions for a while and then the very wide term of "italo-disco".+==History==
 +Eurodisco is largely an offshoot of contemporary American music trends going far back to the early times of [[jazz]], rock, [[soul music|soul]], [[funk]] and disco. In the 1950s and 1960s, besides the big American influence, the French/Italian-created pop music offshoots with a dance-oriented sound, became prevalent in Europe. 1950s and 1960s Europop hits spread around France, Italy and Germany, because of the French [[Scopitone]] and the Italian Cinebox/Coilorama Video-jukebox machines. Another root is the [[Eurovision Song Contest]], especially in the 1970s.
-The "eurodisco" term returned mutant many years later, to refer to the collection of the styles and genres of [[Electronic music|electronic]] [[dance music]] that had emerged from Europe by the early 1980s, incorporating elements of [[electropop]] and [[disco]] into new hybrids such as Euro - [[Hi-NRG]] (Power), [[Italo disco]], [[Eurobeat]]. The term is also commonly written as Eurodisco and Euro-disco and some call this same genre as "80s European dance". The main reason of the term's comeback, is based on the fact that the Italian fans of Italo-Disco, don't like today the use of the term [[italo-disco]] to be used by the rest Europeans for their productions. During the 80s, the term "italo-disco" was used for the 80s Eurodisco. There was also some [[Canadian Disco]] productions ([[Trans X]], [[Lime]]) that at the time used the same term.+The song "[[Waterloo (ABBA song)|Waterloo]]" by Swedish pop group [[ABBA]], which won the 1974 Eurovision song contest, is a typical example of a 1970s European pop/disco song ([[Europop]]), with a dance manner. The success was huge and many European producers instantly produced many pop hits that did not necessary sound the same, but kept that dance manner. With that created, in a very short period of time, a whole new commercial music industry in Europe was met in the demand for [[social dancing]] music. The [[discofox]] dancing style was a result of this.
-A typical 80s Euro disco song has a [[verse-chorus form|contrasting verse-chorus form]], a synthesizer-based accompaniment, and lyrics sung in English. At the time such music was considered pop, italo disco, new wave or even disco music.+The American music journalist [[Robert Christgau]] used the term "Eurodisco" in his late 1970s articles for ''[[The Village Voice]]'' newspaper.
-One of the early representors of the 80s genre was a [[United Kingdom|British]] group [[Imagination (band)|Imagination]], with their series of hits throughout 1981 and 1982. In 1982 a variation of Euro disco began to develop in [[Italy]] by groups like [[Paul Mazzolini|Gazebo]], [[Kano (band)|Kano]] and Lectric Workers. The new variation is known as [[italo-disco]]. Euro disco variations appeared later in France, Germany, Spain and Greece. The Italian and German Eurodisco productions were the most popular.+The term "disco" in Europe existed long before the Eurodisco and U.S. [[disco]] music scene. It was used in Europe during the 1960s as a short alternative to "[[discotheque]]". The first dance music venues called discotheques emerged in Occupied France in the 1940s. Starting in Germany, the first discotheques featuring disc jockeys spread around Europe in the early 1960s. In the UK, "discotheques" and "discos" were called "clubs" like any other nightclub, and in Germany both variants were common. Even today, the term disco exists as an alternative name for the mainstream clubs in some European countries. In Italy and Spain, the term "discoteca" or "discotheque" means mainstream clubs. In Greece, "discotheque" describes the retro-clubs. In Poland and Romania, the term "disco" is still used to refer to "dance clubs".
-During the mid 80's, German Disco artists [[Modern Talking]] and [[Bad Boys Blue]], became very popular in Central, southern and eastern Europe. Then, at the late 80's, Italian disco artists [[Spagna]] and [[Sabrina Salerno|Sabrina]] became popular in Europe with euro-disco songs entering top charts in every major European country, combining [[Italo-disco]] and [[Eurobeat]] elements.+
-The influence of Euro disco had infiltrated dance and pop in the [[United States|U.S.]] by 1983, as European producers and songwriters inspired a new generation of American performer eager to breathe new life into dance music otherwise abandoned by US radio. While disco had been declared "dead" due to a backlash there in 1979, subsequent Euro-flavored successes crossing the boundaries of rock, pop, and dance, such as "[[Call Me (Blondie song)|Call Me]]" by [[Blondie (band)|Blondie]] and "[[Gloria (Laura Branigan song)|Gloria]]" by [[Laura Branigan]], ushered in a new era of American-fronted dance music often forgotten in favor of, or considered a subgenre within the "Second British Invasion" happening concurrently. Branigan (produced by German producer [[Jack White (producer)|Jack White]]) moved deeper into the Euro disco style for further hits, alongside Giorgio Moroder-produced US acts [[Berlin]] and [[Irene Cara]].+An example of the term "disco" with no relation to a specific music style (and dance music in general), is the ''[[Disco (TV series)|Disco]]'' series that aired in Germany on the [[ZDF]] network from 1971 to 1982. This show proved that the term "disco" was widespread enough at the time, and that the second national TV network of Germany used it for a general music TV show in 1971. Another later example is the show ''[[Discoring]]'' on Italy's RAI channel (first aired in February 1977).
-By 1984, musicians from many countries had begun to produce Euro disco songs. In [[Germany]], notable practitioners of the sound included [[Modern Talking]], [[Sandra (group)|Sandra]], and [[Alphaville]]. [[Austria]] had [[Falco (musician)|Falco]], although he was also heavily influenced by rap and rock music. Britain's most famous contributors to disco music in the mid-80's were the [[Pet Shop Boys]] until [[Stock/Aitken/Waterman]]-produced singers such as [[Rick Astley]] and [[Kylie Minogue]] conquered the airwaves (UK's [[Eurobeat]]). Euro disco hits produced also on Spain and Greece and much later on Poland and Russia.+===1970s===
 +The term "Euro-disco" was first used during the mid-1970s to describe the non-UK based disco productions and artists such as [[DD Sound]], Swedish group [[ABBA]], German groups [[Arabesque (group)|Arabesque]], [[Boney M.]], [[Dschinghis Khan]] and [[Silver Convention]], the Munich-based production trio [[Giorgio Moroder]], [[Donna Summer]] and [[Pete Bellotte]], the Italian singer [[Gino Soccio]], French artists [[Amanda Lear]], [[Dalida]], [[Cerrone]], Hot Blood, Banzai (single "Viva America") and [[Ottawan]], Dutch groups [[Luv']] and Eurovision song contest winners [[Teach-In (band)|Teach-In]]. In Spain, disco took off after the death of [[Francisco Franco Bahamonde|Francisco Franco]] in 1975, with [[Baccara]] duo.
-Some note that the same elements which were later embraced in greater measure as Euro disco had already come together cohesively as early as the mid- to late-1970s in certain tracks by artists such as the [[Swedish music|Swedish]] group [[ABBA]], and the American singer [[Donna Summer]].+1970s Eurodisco soon had spinoffs and variations. The most notable spinoff is [[space disco]], a crossover of Eurodisco and US [[hi-NRG]] disco. Another popular variation, with no specific name, appeared in the late 1970s: a "Latin"-like sound added to the genre, which can be heard in Italy's [[Raffaella Carrà]], [[Loretta Goggi|Hermanas Goggi]], [[La Bionda]], D. D. Sound, Easy Going and France's [[Gibson Brothers]].
-By the early 1990s, its mainstream popularity having waned in Europe, Euro disco developed into [[Eurodance]].+===1980s===
 +One of the early representatives of the 1980s genre was the British group [[Imagination (band)|Imagination]] and with their series of hits throughout 1981 and 1982. The term "Eurodisco" quickly faded in the 1980s and was replaced by the very wide term of "[[Italo disco]]" for more than a decade. Notably, there was also some Canadian disco productions ([[Trans X]], [[Lime (band)|Lime]]), that at the time was called "Italo disco" in Europe, but not in America (the term [[hi-NRG]] disco was used there instead).
-The last addition on the Euro disco genre, is Disco House (a.k.a. [[French house]]). It is more of a "back to the roots" music style, with 70s euro disco influences far before the Italo Disco explosion (more specific [[Space Disco]], [[Hi-NRG]] disco, [[Canadian Disco]] and [[P-Funk]]).+Italo disco was the first successful 1980s Eurodisco variation. Probably because of this, all the later 1980s Eurodisco variations were called "Italo disco" by the Europeans (with the exception of [[Eurobeat]]). Italo disco began to develop in Italy in the late 1970s and early 1980s, by groups like [[Paul Mazzolini|Gazebo]], [[Kano (band)|Kano]] and 'Lectric Workers. 1980s Eurodisco variations soon appeared later in France, Germany, Spain and Greece. The Italian and German Eurodisco productions were the most popular. German pop duo [[Modern Talking]] was an icon of Eurodisco between 1985–1987 and became the most successful Eurodisco project ever. [[Bad Boys Blue]] was another very successful project.
 + 
 +That style became very popular in Eastern Europe and remained popular until the early 1990s. In Poland, [[disco polo]], a local music genre relying heavily on Eurodisco was developed at the verge of the '80s and '90s.
 + 
 +===1990s===
 +During the late 1980s, Eurodisco hits were produced in Spain and Greece and much later in Poland and Russia. Meanwhile, a sped-up version of Eurodisco with dance-pop elements became successful in the US, under the term "[[hi-NRG]]". Even today for many Americans, "hi-NRG" means [[Paul Lekakis]] and the [[London Boys]]. Those hits (and a few others, like [[Londonbeat]]'s "[[I've Been Thinking About You]]" from 1991) were the last hits called "Eurodisco" in Europe.
 + 
 +By the early 1990s, Eurodisco was influenced by the emergence of genres such as [[house music|house]], [[acid house]] and the electro (pop/dance/synth) music styles, and replaced (or evolved) by other music styles. [[Eurohouse]] and Italo-NRG are the most notable and connected directly with the Italo disco music scene. In America, especially for the Eurohouse style, they use the earlier term of "[[Eurodance]]" to describe this 1990s evolution of Eurodisco.
 + 
 +Technically speaking, the last form of Eurodisco is [[French house]], a music style that appeared in France during the mid-1990s and slowly became widespread in Europe. French house is more of a "back to the roots" music style with 1970s Eurodisco influences far before the Italo disco explosion (more specifically [[space disco]], hi-NRG disco, Canadian disco and [[P-funk]]).
 + 
 +===2000s===
 +By the mid to late 2000s, Eurodisco saw renewed interest. Artists such as [[Irene Cara]], [[Berlin (band)|Berlin]] and the late [[Laura Branigan]] saw a surge in popularity, especially in places where it was not commercially successful after 1984, such as North America and South America. A notable Eurodisco artist to rise during this decade is Mark Ashley. His single "Give Me a Chance" became his most successful single yet, making the top 40 of the Austrian chart.
 + 
 +==Influence in the United States==
 +The influence of Eurodisco had infiltrated dance and pop in the U.S. by 1983, as European producers and songwriters inspired a new generation of American performers. While disco had been declared "dead" due to a backlash there in 1979, subsequent Euro-flavored successes crossing the boundaries of rock, pop and dance, such as "[[Call Me (Blondie song)|Call Me]]" by [[Blondie (band)|Blondie]] and "[[Gloria (Laura Branigan song)|Gloria]]" by [[Laura Branigan]], ushered in a new era of American-fronted dance music.
 + 
 +Branigan (produced by German producer [[Jack White (producer)|Jack White]]) moved deeper into the Eurodisco style for further hits, alongside [[Giorgio Moroder]]-produced U.S. acts [[Berlin (band)|Berlin]] and [[Irene Cara]]. By 1984, musicians from many countries had begun to produce Eurodisco songs. In Germany, notable practitioners of the sound included [[Modern Talking]], [[Arabesque (group)|Arabesque]], [[Sandra (group)|Sandra]], [[Alphaville (band)|Alphaville]], [[C.C. Catch]] and Austrian [[Falco (musician)|Falco]], although he was also heavily influenced by [[hip hop music|rap]] and rock music.
 + 
 +A Eurodisco revival was also contributed by northern European record labels such as Iventi D'azzurro (The Netherlands) and Flashback Records (Finland), with rearranged releases of the old hits and unreleased demos resung by the original Italo singers, also including new songs. Recording artists like Joey Mauro, Karl Otto, Diva, Mark Fruttero, Fred Ventura and George Aaron have recently been releasing new albums. Joey Mauro was able to recreate the sound of 1980s Italo disco with his synthesizers and keyboard collections, and a special place within the scene is occupied by Peter Aresti, formerly known as Peter Arcade, who officially started his career in the '90s, and is one of the most popular Italo artists in South America (Mexico among all), where a huge, growing Italo disco and hi-NRG community dwells.
 + 
 +==Mixtape==
 +*"[[Wild Safari]]" (1971) by Barrabás
 +*"[[Fly, Robin, Fly]]" (1975) by Silver Convention
 +*"[[Que Tal America]]" (1977) by Lou Deprijck
 +*"[[I Feel Love]]" (1977) by Donna Summer
 +*"[[Moon Boots]]" (1977) by Orlando Riva Sound
 +*"[[Moskow Diskow]]" (1978) by Telex
 +*"[[Standing in the Rain]]" (1978) by Don Ray
 +*"[[Enigma (Give a Bit of Mmh to Me)]]" (1978) by Amanda Lear
 +*"[[Gotta Go Home]]" (1979) by Boney M.
 +*"[[Dirty Talk]]" (1982) by Klein and MBO
==See also== ==See also==
 +* [[List of Eurodisco artists]]
 +* [[Eurodance]]
* [[Europop]] * [[Europop]]
-* [[Hi-NRG]] 
* [[Italo disco]] * [[Italo disco]]
-* [[Space Disco]]+* [[Disco polo]]
-* [[Spacesynth]]+* [[Blue (Da Ba Dee)]]
-* [[List of Euro disco artists]]+* [[Corné De Rijck]]
- +
- +
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Current revision

"While less-discerning critics have regarded European disco and Euro disco as two different musical genres: the first being European artists and producers who emulated American disco in the mid and late 1970s, the latter being a more electronically 1980s genre, the differentiation is entirely arbitrary. Along their lines of classifications "Space Woman" (1977), by Herman's Rocket is European disco, whereas "Just an Illusion" (1982) by Imagination is Euro disco. Both are in fact common varieties of European popular music." --Sholem Stein


"But it wasn't just American music laying the groundwork for house music. European music, spanning English electronic pop like Gary Numan and Soft Cell, sparse German proto-techno by Kraftwerk, the more disco based sounds of Giorgio Moroder and Klein & MBO and Belgium's Telex were immensely popular in urban areas like New York and Chicago."--Sholem Stein


"Although I like to make the difference between European disco and Euro disco as two different musical genres: the first being European artists and producers who emulated American disco in the mid and late 1970s, the latter being a more electronically 1980s genre: the differentiation can be argued to be entirely arbitrary, since musical genres are but linguistic placeholders in the first place and semantic rather than real. Besides, the truth about disco is far more complex. New York, where the style originated and was coined, saw the birth of proto-disco with records such as Manu Dibango's Soul Makossa and "Woman" and "Wild Safari", by Barrabás. The first recording hailed from Africa, the second and third from Spain.

[missing part]

Nevertheless, the fact remains that European popular music has been understudied in comparison to American popular music. See "J'attendrai." " --Sholem Stein

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Eurodisco (also spelled as Euro disco) is the variety of European forms of electronic dance music that evolved from disco in the late 1970s, incorporating elements of pop and rock into a disco-like continuous dance atmosphere. Many Eurodisco compositions feature lyrics sung in English, although the singers often share a different mother tongue.

Eurodisco derivatives generally include Europop and Eurodance, with the most prominent sub-genres being space disco of the late 1970s and Italo disco of the early 1980s. The genre declined in popularity after 1986 in preference to electronic rock and hi-NRG, with a small revival of Italo disco in at least the late 1990s.

Contents

History

Eurodisco is largely an offshoot of contemporary American music trends going far back to the early times of jazz, rock, soul, funk and disco. In the 1950s and 1960s, besides the big American influence, the French/Italian-created pop music offshoots with a dance-oriented sound, became prevalent in Europe. 1950s and 1960s Europop hits spread around France, Italy and Germany, because of the French Scopitone and the Italian Cinebox/Coilorama Video-jukebox machines. Another root is the Eurovision Song Contest, especially in the 1970s.

The song "Waterloo" by Swedish pop group ABBA, which won the 1974 Eurovision song contest, is a typical example of a 1970s European pop/disco song (Europop), with a dance manner. The success was huge and many European producers instantly produced many pop hits that did not necessary sound the same, but kept that dance manner. With that created, in a very short period of time, a whole new commercial music industry in Europe was met in the demand for social dancing music. The discofox dancing style was a result of this.

The American music journalist Robert Christgau used the term "Eurodisco" in his late 1970s articles for The Village Voice newspaper.

The term "disco" in Europe existed long before the Eurodisco and U.S. disco music scene. It was used in Europe during the 1960s as a short alternative to "discotheque". The first dance music venues called discotheques emerged in Occupied France in the 1940s. Starting in Germany, the first discotheques featuring disc jockeys spread around Europe in the early 1960s. In the UK, "discotheques" and "discos" were called "clubs" like any other nightclub, and in Germany both variants were common. Even today, the term disco exists as an alternative name for the mainstream clubs in some European countries. In Italy and Spain, the term "discoteca" or "discotheque" means mainstream clubs. In Greece, "discotheque" describes the retro-clubs. In Poland and Romania, the term "disco" is still used to refer to "dance clubs".

An example of the term "disco" with no relation to a specific music style (and dance music in general), is the Disco series that aired in Germany on the ZDF network from 1971 to 1982. This show proved that the term "disco" was widespread enough at the time, and that the second national TV network of Germany used it for a general music TV show in 1971. Another later example is the show Discoring on Italy's RAI channel (first aired in February 1977).

1970s

The term "Euro-disco" was first used during the mid-1970s to describe the non-UK based disco productions and artists such as DD Sound, Swedish group ABBA, German groups Arabesque, Boney M., Dschinghis Khan and Silver Convention, the Munich-based production trio Giorgio Moroder, Donna Summer and Pete Bellotte, the Italian singer Gino Soccio, French artists Amanda Lear, Dalida, Cerrone, Hot Blood, Banzai (single "Viva America") and Ottawan, Dutch groups Luv' and Eurovision song contest winners Teach-In. In Spain, disco took off after the death of Francisco Franco in 1975, with Baccara duo.

1970s Eurodisco soon had spinoffs and variations. The most notable spinoff is space disco, a crossover of Eurodisco and US hi-NRG disco. Another popular variation, with no specific name, appeared in the late 1970s: a "Latin"-like sound added to the genre, which can be heard in Italy's Raffaella Carrà, Hermanas Goggi, La Bionda, D. D. Sound, Easy Going and France's Gibson Brothers.

1980s

One of the early representatives of the 1980s genre was the British group Imagination and with their series of hits throughout 1981 and 1982. The term "Eurodisco" quickly faded in the 1980s and was replaced by the very wide term of "Italo disco" for more than a decade. Notably, there was also some Canadian disco productions (Trans X, Lime), that at the time was called "Italo disco" in Europe, but not in America (the term hi-NRG disco was used there instead).

Italo disco was the first successful 1980s Eurodisco variation. Probably because of this, all the later 1980s Eurodisco variations were called "Italo disco" by the Europeans (with the exception of Eurobeat). Italo disco began to develop in Italy in the late 1970s and early 1980s, by groups like Gazebo, Kano and 'Lectric Workers. 1980s Eurodisco variations soon appeared later in France, Germany, Spain and Greece. The Italian and German Eurodisco productions were the most popular. German pop duo Modern Talking was an icon of Eurodisco between 1985–1987 and became the most successful Eurodisco project ever. Bad Boys Blue was another very successful project.

That style became very popular in Eastern Europe and remained popular until the early 1990s. In Poland, disco polo, a local music genre relying heavily on Eurodisco was developed at the verge of the '80s and '90s.

1990s

During the late 1980s, Eurodisco hits were produced in Spain and Greece and much later in Poland and Russia. Meanwhile, a sped-up version of Eurodisco with dance-pop elements became successful in the US, under the term "hi-NRG". Even today for many Americans, "hi-NRG" means Paul Lekakis and the London Boys. Those hits (and a few others, like Londonbeat's "I've Been Thinking About You" from 1991) were the last hits called "Eurodisco" in Europe.

By the early 1990s, Eurodisco was influenced by the emergence of genres such as house, acid house and the electro (pop/dance/synth) music styles, and replaced (or evolved) by other music styles. Eurohouse and Italo-NRG are the most notable and connected directly with the Italo disco music scene. In America, especially for the Eurohouse style, they use the earlier term of "Eurodance" to describe this 1990s evolution of Eurodisco.

Technically speaking, the last form of Eurodisco is French house, a music style that appeared in France during the mid-1990s and slowly became widespread in Europe. French house is more of a "back to the roots" music style with 1970s Eurodisco influences far before the Italo disco explosion (more specifically space disco, hi-NRG disco, Canadian disco and P-funk).

2000s

By the mid to late 2000s, Eurodisco saw renewed interest. Artists such as Irene Cara, Berlin and the late Laura Branigan saw a surge in popularity, especially in places where it was not commercially successful after 1984, such as North America and South America. A notable Eurodisco artist to rise during this decade is Mark Ashley. His single "Give Me a Chance" became his most successful single yet, making the top 40 of the Austrian chart.

Influence in the United States

The influence of Eurodisco had infiltrated dance and pop in the U.S. by 1983, as European producers and songwriters inspired a new generation of American performers. While disco had been declared "dead" due to a backlash there in 1979, subsequent Euro-flavored successes crossing the boundaries of rock, pop and dance, such as "Call Me" by Blondie and "Gloria" by Laura Branigan, ushered in a new era of American-fronted dance music.

Branigan (produced by German producer Jack White) moved deeper into the Eurodisco style for further hits, alongside Giorgio Moroder-produced U.S. acts Berlin and Irene Cara. By 1984, musicians from many countries had begun to produce Eurodisco songs. In Germany, notable practitioners of the sound included Modern Talking, Arabesque, Sandra, Alphaville, C.C. Catch and Austrian Falco, although he was also heavily influenced by rap and rock music.

A Eurodisco revival was also contributed by northern European record labels such as Iventi D'azzurro (The Netherlands) and Flashback Records (Finland), with rearranged releases of the old hits and unreleased demos resung by the original Italo singers, also including new songs. Recording artists like Joey Mauro, Karl Otto, Diva, Mark Fruttero, Fred Ventura and George Aaron have recently been releasing new albums. Joey Mauro was able to recreate the sound of 1980s Italo disco with his synthesizers and keyboard collections, and a special place within the scene is occupied by Peter Aresti, formerly known as Peter Arcade, who officially started his career in the '90s, and is one of the most popular Italo artists in South America (Mexico among all), where a huge, growing Italo disco and hi-NRG community dwells.

Mixtape

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Eurodisco" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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