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Reply #30 posted 02/23/13 2:25pm

whitechocolate
brotha

avatar

KemiVA said:

Timmy84 said:

That's pretty much why I didn't watch. I don't like those types of specials. I like them when it focuses on individuals. It's easy to get lost when they try covering a genre or a year concerning music. Which is why I wasn't a fan of those decade Behind the Music documentaries.

While this wasn't an all-encompassing disco documentary, I really enjoyed it. It reminded me less of "Behind The Music" and more of British dance music documentaries. Nice mixture of interviews with well-known stars, lesser known acts and behind-the-scenes players. They provided a nice musical & social history lesson. This episode's argument is 70s' disco is unsung because it hasn't been given the respect it truly deserves.

Favorite Parts:

-Candi Staton and Nile Rodgers' interviews and Earl Young's drumming demos.

-Established acts like Gloria Gaynor & Harry Casey admitting they initially resented The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever success. BGs were viewed as late-comers that hitched on the bandwagon.

-Victor Willis admitting he was ignorant of The Village People's gay overtunes, until the third album. Nevermind that he was the lead singer and co-wrote the songs. lol

-Janice-Marie Johnson of "Taste of Honey" revealing she became a limo driver after the disco backlash. The SOS Band were great tippers, apparenty.

-Despite the disco backlash in '79, the last big hit of the era, "Good Times" laid the foundation for the first hip-hop movement's first hit "Rapper's Delight".

LOVE Miss Candi! Speaking of, there's an Ashford & Simspon song as the "B" side of "When You Wake Up Tomorrow" called "Rough Times" and it's never appeared ANYWHERE in her anthologies, remaster of "Chance," etc...Anyone ever heard it and/or question why this is beside myself? It's a great little song. A forgotten one though. sad

Hungry? Just look in the mirror and get fed up.
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Reply #31 posted 02/23/13 6:44pm

phunkdaddy

avatar

KemiVA said:



Timmy84 said:




daPrettyman said:


I thought it was a good episode, too, but I think that it glossed over a lot of things and acts. It seemed to me that they created this episode to cover the acts of the era instead of focusing on individual acts. I think a KC and the Sunshine Band one would have been much better.





That's pretty much why I didn't watch. I don't like those types of specials. I like them when it focuses on individuals. It's easy to get lost when they try covering a genre or a year concerning music. Which is why I wasn't a fan of those decade Behind the Music documentaries.




While this wasn't an all-encompassing disco documentary, I really enjoyed it. It reminded me less of "Behind The Music" and more of British dance music documentaries. Nice mixture of interviews with well-known stars, lesser known acts and behind-the-scenes players. They provided a nice musical & social history lesson. This episode's argument is 70s' disco is unsung because it hasn't been given the respect it truly deserves.



Favorite Parts:



-Candi Staton and Nile Rodgers' interviews and Earl Young's drumming demos.



-Established acts like Gloria Gaynor & Harry Casey admitting they initially resented The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever success. BGs were viewed as late-comers that hitched on the bandwagon.



-Victor Willis admitting he was ignorant of The Village People's gay overtunes, until the third album. Nevermind that he was the lead singer and co-wrote the songs. lol



-Janice-Marie Johnson of "Taste of Honey" revealing she became a limo driver after the disco backlash. The SOS Band were great tippers, apparenty.



-Despite the disco backlash in '79, the last big hit of the era, "Good Times" laid the foundation for the first hip-hop movement's first hit "Rapper's Delight".






Good summary. I thought it was good. I thought the show captured the essence
of disco unlike the episode they did a few years ago on Sylvester.
Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint
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Reply #32 posted 02/24/13 4:20am

uncleb

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Is there a way to watch full episodes of UNSUNG? I lost TVOne when my cable system restructured its channel lineup about a year ago, and have been missing these episodes ever since...
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Reply #33 posted 02/24/13 4:24am

SoulAlive

uncleb said:

Is there a way to watch full episodes of UNSUNG? I lost TVOne when my cable system restructured its channel lineup about a year ago, and have been missing these episodes ever since...

You watch UNSUNG episodes by going here.....

http://www.soultracks.com/unsung

and yes,they have this week's new episode (the disco artists)

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Reply #34 posted 02/24/13 5:48am

SoulAlive

KemiVA said:

Favorite Parts:

-Candi Staton and Nile Rodgers' interviews and Earl Young's drumming demos.

-Established acts like Gloria Gaynor & Harry Casey admitting they initially resented The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever success. BGs were viewed as late-comers that hitched on the bandwagon.

-Victor Willis admitting he was ignorant of The Village People's gay overtunes, until the third album. Nevermind that he was the lead singer and co-wrote the songs. lol

-Janice-Marie Johnson of "Taste of Honey" revealing she became a limo driver after the disco backlash. The SOS Band were great tippers, apparenty.

-Despite the disco backlash in '79, the last big hit of the era, "Good Times" laid the foundation for the first hip-hop movement's first hit "Rapper's Delight".

I thought it was interesting when Niles Rodgers mentioned that Dolly Parton and Frank Sinatra (!!) approached him to produce disco records for them lol it's amazing how so many non-disco artists wanted to jump on the disco bandwagon back then.

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Reply #35 posted 02/24/13 5:55am

uncleb

avatar

SoulAlive said:



uncleb said:


Is there a way to watch full episodes of UNSUNG? I lost TVOne when my cable system restructured its channel lineup about a year ago, and have been missing these episodes ever since...



You watch UNSUNG episodes by going here.....



http://www.soultracks.com/unsung




and yes,they have this week's new episode (the disco artists)






Thanks so much!
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Reply #36 posted 02/24/13 6:00am

UnderMySun

For those who missed it the first time last week or would like to see it again, Unsung will have a repeat of the Disco ep tonight at 6pm eastern time.

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Reply #37 posted 02/24/13 8:24am

KemiVA

avatar

SoulAlive said:

KemiVA said:

Favorite Parts:

-Candi Staton and Nile Rodgers' interviews and Earl Young's drumming demos.

-Established acts like Gloria Gaynor & Harry Casey admitting they initially resented The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever success. BGs were viewed as late-comers that hitched on the bandwagon.

-Victor Willis admitting he was ignorant of The Village People's gay overtunes, until the third album. Nevermind that he was the lead singer and co-wrote the songs. lol

-Janice-Marie Johnson of "Taste of Honey" revealing she became a limo driver after the disco backlash. The SOS Band were great tippers, apparenty.

-Despite the disco backlash in '79, the last big hit of the era, "Good Times" laid the foundation for the first hip-hop movement's first hit "Rapper's Delight".

I thought it was interesting when Niles Rodgers mentioned that Dolly Parton and Frank Sinatra (!!) approached him to produce disco records for them lol it's amazing how so many non-disco artists wanted to jump on the disco bandwagon back then.

I'm so glad Nile had the foresight to know that wouldn't have worked. lol

Hey...
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Reply #38 posted 02/24/13 9:16am

MadamGoodnight

KemiVA said:

Timmy84 said:

That's pretty much why I didn't watch. I don't like those types of specials. I like them when it focuses on individuals. It's easy to get lost when they try covering a genre or a year concerning music. Which is why I wasn't a fan of those decade Behind the Music documentaries.

While this wasn't an all-encompassing disco documentary, I really enjoyed it. It reminded me less of "Behind The Music" and more of British dance music documentaries. Nice mixture of interviews with well-known stars, lesser known acts and behind-the-scenes players. They provided a nice musical & social history lesson. This episode's argument is 70s' disco is unsung because it hasn't been given the respect it truly deserves.

Favorite Parts:

-Candi Staton and Nile Rodgers' interviews and Earl Young's drumming demos.

-Established acts like Gloria Gaynor & Harry Casey admitting they initially resented The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever success. BGs were viewed as late-comers that hitched on the bandwagon.

-Victor Willis admitting he was ignorant of The Village People's gay overtunes, until the third album. Nevermind that he was the lead singer and co-wrote the songs. lol

-Janice-Marie Johnson of "Taste of Honey" revealing she became a limo driver after the disco backlash. The SOS Band were great tippers, apparenty.

-Despite the disco backlash in '79, the last big hit of the era, "Good Times" laid the foundation for the first hip-hop movement's first hit "Rapper's Delight".

It was good seeing Candi Staton, Janice-Marie Johnson, Thelma Houston, Gloria Gaynor, KC and Nile Rodgers. They played some good music on the show.

Gloria Gaynor and Janice-Marie Johnson looked great. Janice-Marie was too cool gettin' down on her bass! She almost looked the same as she did then.

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Reply #39 posted 02/24/13 10:10am

Trickology

daPrettyman said:

Nile Rogers will be featured on this episode. He was on the Tom Joyner Morning Show today and said that TV-One has already contacted him about expanding this Disco feature into another episode for next season.

I'm excited about this episode.

You know what TV One should consider? All of these stories turned into a Disco tv series. The nostalgia is pretty strong & you could have a really addictive show about something similar to Studio 54 life. You could have some really despicable & likeable characters in that world. Who wouldn't sign up for that to act in if you were a girl or a guy? lol

As far as KC not having a full episode, that would be a waste of time. VH1's Behind the Music KC & The Sunshine band covered pretty much everything you want to know about KC.

[Edited 2/24/13 10:12am]

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Reply #40 posted 02/24/13 10:16am

Timmy84

Thanks Kemi. I might check this out on TV One on Demand. I like the intros and the section leading to the story. The online portions always cut them out. Maybe to just get to the real meat of the story? lol

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Reply #41 posted 02/24/13 10:16am

CynicKill

I saw it.

It was enjoyable even if it was "Disco; The Abridged History".

I enjoyed hearing about Diana Ross, who they showed excitedly getting out of a limo waving to the crowd, dancing on speakers and partying in the DJ booth. THAT I would've loved to see.

But it was never meant to be. I would NEVER stand in a mob all night for the slight chance of getting picked to go inside anywhere. I guess I'm no fun.

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Reply #42 posted 02/24/13 3:21pm

SoulAlive

MadamGoodnight said:

It was good seeing Candi Staton, Janice-Marie Johnson, Thelma Houston, Gloria Gaynor, KC and Nile Rodgers. They played some good music on the show.

Gloria Gaynor and Janice-Marie Johnson looked great. Janice-Marie was too cool gettin' down on her bass! She almost looked the same as she did then.

She looks great for her age,and she can still play a mean bass nod I would love to see a Taste Of Honey reunion!

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Reply #43 posted 02/24/13 3:25pm

SoulAlive

KemiVA said:

SoulAlive said:

I thought it was interesting when Niles Rodgers mentioned that Dolly Parton and Frank Sinatra (!!) approached him to produce disco records for them lol it's amazing how so many non-disco artists wanted to jump on the disco bandwagon back then.

I'm so glad Nile had the foresight to know that wouldn't have worked. lol

nod and he even turned down Aretha (rightfully so).Disco was an amazing thing,but not just anybody could do it.Aretha got pissed and went to Van McCoy instead,but her disco album flopped.

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Reply #44 posted 02/24/13 3:28pm

MadamGoodnight

SoulAlive said:

MadamGoodnight said:

It was good seeing Candi Staton, Janice-Marie Johnson, Thelma Houston, Gloria Gaynor, KC and Nile Rodgers. They played some good music on the show.

Gloria Gaynor and Janice-Marie Johnson looked great. Janice-Marie was too cool gettin' down on her bass! She almost looked the same as she did then.

She looks great for her age,and she can still play a mean bass nod I would love to see a Taste Of Honey reunion!

worship Janice-Marie was gettin' it! She's still got it.

pray beg Dear Lawd, please let me age like this Janice-Marie, Grace Jones, and Sheila E. lol razz

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Reply #45 posted 02/24/13 6:06pm

G3000

SoulAlive said:

KemiVA said:

I'm so glad Nile had the foresight to know that wouldn't have worked. lol

nod and he even turned down Aretha (rightfully so).Disco was an amazing thing,but not just anybody could do it.Aretha got pissed and went to Van McCoy instead,but her disco album flopped.

They didn't turn down Johnny Mathis!! eek

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Reply #46 posted 02/24/13 9:54pm

phunkdaddy

avatar

SoulAlive said:

MadamGoodnight said:

It was good seeing Candi Staton, Janice-Marie Johnson, Thelma Houston, Gloria Gaynor, KC and Nile Rodgers. They played some good music on the show.

Gloria Gaynor and Janice-Marie Johnson looked great. Janice-Marie was too cool gettin' down on her bass! She almost looked the same as she did then.

She looks great for her age,and she can still play a mean bass nod I would love to see a Taste Of Honey reunion!

nod

Saw them on PBS a few years ago during a 70's special and ConFunkShun's Felton

Pilate was their musical director. They tore it up.

Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint
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Reply #47 posted 02/25/13 9:36am

Timmy84

G3000 said:

SoulAlive said:

nod and he even turned down Aretha (rightfully so).Disco was an amazing thing,but not just anybody could do it.Aretha got pissed and went to Van McCoy instead,but her disco album flopped.

They didn't turn down Johnny Mathis!! eek

lol

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Reply #48 posted 02/25/13 9:41am

Graycap23

Interesting.

Black movies.............killed in 1970's.

Black Music (disco).....killed in the 1970's.

hmmm

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Reply #49 posted 02/25/13 9:44am

Timmy84

Graycap23 said:

Interesting.

Black movies.............killed in 1970's.

Black Music (disco).....killed in the 1970's.

hmmm

lol it didn't die in the '70s but it's not as dominant and disco was music for everybody actually. smile Blacks, Latinos and Europeans play equal parts in creating it. smile Black films at least to the magnitude of its releases in the '70s were gonna have a shorter shelf life anyway.

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Reply #50 posted 02/25/13 2:21pm

daPrettyman

avatar

Trickology said:

daPrettyman said:

Nile Rogers will be featured on this episode. He was on the Tom Joyner Morning Show today and said that TV-One has already contacted him about expanding this Disco feature into another episode for next season.

I'm excited about this episode.

You know what TV One should consider? All of these stories turned into a Disco tv series. The nostalgia is pretty strong & you could have a really addictive show about something similar to Studio 54 life. You could have some really despicable & likeable characters in that world. Who wouldn't sign up for that to act in if you were a girl or a guy? lol

As far as KC not having a full episode, that would be a waste of time. VH1's Behind the Music KC & The Sunshine band covered pretty much everything you want to know about KC.

[Edited 2/24/13 10:12am]

OMG that would be good!!! n lol

**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••--**--••**--••-
U 'gon make me shake my doo loose!
http://www.twitter.com/nivlekbrad
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Reply #51 posted 02/25/13 3:27pm

HuMpThAnG

yeah, but that would have to be on HBO

TV One won't go raw lol

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Reply #52 posted 02/27/13 10:56am

Timmy84

HuMpThAnG said:

yeah, but that would have to be on HBO

TV One won't go raw lol

OK! lol

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Reply #53 posted 02/27/13 1:05pm

Ottensen

MickyDolenz said:

NaughtyKitty said:

I'm wondering why they consider Disco unsung?

Because it'll get more viewers than one about zydeco. razz lol

lol lol lol

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Reply #54 posted 02/27/13 1:14pm

Ottensen

SoulAlive said:

uncleb said:

Is there a way to watch full episodes of UNSUNG? I lost TVOne when my cable system restructured its channel lineup about a year ago, and have been missing these episodes ever since...

You watch UNSUNG episodes by going here.....

http://www.soultracks.com/unsung

and yes,they have this week's new episode (the disco artists)

and you can watch directly on the network's website too nod

.

[Edited 2/27/13 13:17pm]

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Reply #55 posted 02/27/13 6:42pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Ottensen said:

MickyDolenz said:

Because it'll get more viewers than one about zydeco. razz lol

lol lol lol

From what I've seen, 98 percent of the acts on this show were popular, and not "unsung". So obviously they're going to pick disco, and not zydeco, jazz, or a folky type singer like Odessa, which won't get the ratings.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #56 posted 02/27/13 6:52pm

MickyDolenz

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Also, Unsung seems to be geared towards an audience more interested in gossip and dirt, and less on the music. It's just Sister 2 Sister magazine on TV. lol The music documentaries on the PBS show Independent Lens are more interesting to me.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #57 posted 02/27/13 7:28pm

728huey

avatar

It was a pretty good episode. I liked that they focused on the early history of disco and on some of the lesser known acts of the era. It was as good as VH1's Behind The Music episode on Studio 54, but a really amazing documentary of the disco era would need a Ken Burns-type treatment over several nights. Even though some of the tackier elements of disco surfaced in the late 1970's (the Ethel Merman disco album - really?), it reached its pinnacle in 1979, with the Bee Gees, Village People, Donna Summer, KC and the Sunshine Band, Sister Sledge, Chic, and even rock acts like Blondie and Rod Stewart having huge disco songs on the Billboard Hot 100. And even after the whole Disco Demolition debacle, it really wasn't until 1980 that disco suddenly became a musical plague to be avoided. In fact, the last huge disco song of that era was Lipps, Inc's "Funkytown," which reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in the late spring of that year. But after that the pop charts were ruled by lite FM and country acts, and the new wave acts were bubbling underneath, pushing disco underground only to resurface later on as eurodance and house music.

music typing

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Reply #58 posted 02/27/13 9:25pm

NaughtyKitty

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I thoroughly enjoyed this episode of Unsung. It was very well done! nod

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Reply #59 posted 02/28/13 7:57am

TonyVanDam

avatar

KemiVA said:

Timmy84 said:

That's pretty much why I didn't watch. I don't like those types of specials. I like them when it focuses on individuals. It's easy to get lost when they try covering a genre or a year concerning music. Which is why I wasn't a fan of those decade Behind the Music documentaries.

While this wasn't an all-encompassing disco documentary, I really enjoyed it. It reminded me less of "Behind The Music" and more of British dance music documentaries. Nice mixture of interviews with well-known stars, lesser known acts and behind-the-scenes players. They provided a nice musical & social history lesson. This episode's argument is 70s' disco is unsung because it hasn't been given the respect it truly deserves.

Favorite Parts:

-Candi Staton and Nile Rodgers' interviews and Earl Young's drumming demos.

-Established acts like Gloria Gaynor & Harry Casey admitting they initially resented The Bee Gees' Saturday Night Fever success. BGs were viewed as late-comers that hitched on the bandwagon.

-Victor Willis admitting he was ignorant of The Village People's gay overtunes, until the third album. Nevermind that he was the lead singer and co-wrote the songs. lol

-Janice-Marie Johnson of "Taste of Honey" revealing she became a limo driver after the disco backlash. The SOS Band were great tippers, apparenty.

-Despite the disco backlash in '79, the last big hit of the era, "Good Times" laid the foundation for the first hip-hop movement's first hit "Rapper's Delight".

But THAT^ shouldn't surprise you. Victor was the first and only ever heterosexual in The Village People. At least he was very comfortable lead vocalist, given THIS video and all:

Excuse me, but those short shorts from the late 1970's to early 1980's should NEVER come back in style! lol

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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > 2Hr. Unsung Tonight - "Disco" Who's watching...