Showing posts with label social stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social stuff. Show all posts

11/16/09

Disco overdose

Here's a little confession: I've been overdosing on music since I was 18 or something. I've never really kept the thing under control since, listening music nearly all the time I've been awake. Of course, for me, music genres have come and go. Last year or so, I've been drawn more and more to disco - which seems to be the trend in modern dance music in general, as well.

And what is really strange: suddenly this music, a music that is nowhere near to being recognized as something other than a funny fad that your parents went through before settling down, seems like an endless well of good tracks. Every week I discover a few amazingly constructed, rhythmically sound and incredibly humorous/touching songs. It was a weird era, all the amazing jazz and soul players coming together to make extremely functional and liberating music. Of course, a lot of campy watered down pop with a disco beat was produced too, but you really can't play crappy stuff like that to a dancefloor. Maybe a dancefloor didn't make the distinctions between where the music came from, but it certainly did regarding to how good and danceable it was - if you feel it then you dance, simple as that, no excuses, no reasoning how respectable the artist was. People think doing disco gave a free pass to do crappy stuff with a monotonous beat, but that's faaar from the truth.

Here's a little rundown of late disco-veries:





And this last I just had to include here, for all the haters:



Have a good and productive week everyone!

- P-Funk

10/26/09

The music is the message

It's always good to start a blog post about communication between a dj and audience with a referential post title only a handful will get.

I wonder this a lot: what do people get out of these songs I post here and what do they get when we play our records in a club? I mean, we really are playing some disco and house records that used to have really big significance back then for the dancers who were seeking to dance/jack away their worries and find some kind of safe haven in the socially mixed dancefloor. People tend to say disco/house records aren't saying anything, but they're taking them out of their context. On the dancefloor they meant a lot, a possibility to enjoy freely your body outside the restraints of oppressive and depressive world.

I'm by no means saying I would personally totally get what the songs we pump are seriously_really_about. And of course the times have changed, too. Still, quite an interesting question. Here's Greg Wilson telling about the old times.



These must be some of the themes the late night radio djs are also wondering. "Is there anybody listening? Are they getting something out of this music?"

- P-Funk