Great job! I love ...( 10 months ago by cikacikita)
Great job! I love the 70's and 80's. Great memories.
Keonepax, I watch ...( 9 months ago by tjuvar)
Keonepax, I watch them all, together with reading the Billboard book from Fred Bronson, I finally understand what happened then. Big compliment for your editing, you manage to take the most important elements of the songs ! Keep on doing this !
1978 and 1979 the ...( 9 months ago by lokismig)
1978 and 1979 the best years of the Disco Music
Remember Denni ...( 9 months ago by ellysannio)
Remember Denni Terio of Dance Fever? James at 16? Those were the days. I got a big crush on Melissa Gilbert.
sorry...I'm not ...( 9 months ago by lokismig)
sorry...I'm not remember
I love disco but I ...( 8 months ago by gurmitsinghfan)
I love disco but I think America really missed out on the punk explosion in the '70s. It's very sad that Blondie and the Knack were then the closest things the US charts got to punk. (Though Blondie and Knack were more New Wave.) The UK charts were much much more interesting in the late '70s. Hence the British Invasion of the '80s.
Array( 8 months ago by Yesimustbestupid2)
I was a sophomore & junior in high school during this time sweep & I don't think us Americans were that deprived. I know punk was considered GREAT & later on I admit I have learned to love punk music, I have learned as well to appreciate sound of disco era (especially during this time sweep). Besides Donna Summer's tunes & M (Robin Scott) were also pointing the way towards the New Wave era to come. I also want to point out the so-called '80's mini-British Invasion was top heavy w/ synthpop.
Great work on these ...( 8 months ago by Yesimustbestupid2)
Great work on these time sweeps. First #1 from Blondie. The Eagles, the Bee Gees (does anyone else think that's an awful last #1 for Bee Gees?) & Herb Alpert have final #1's. Anita Ward, The Knack, M (Robin Scott) & Amii Stewart have only #1 (I thought the Knack always capitalized the "T" in the, being a group that truly had the word as part of their name?).
True Disco was on ...( 8 months ago by Yesimustbestupid2)
True Disco was on the decline, but it would last until the summer of 1980 w/ the #1 tune "Funkytown" by Lipps, Inc. But boy was it going out in style. But obviously at this point America is starting it's nostalgia for the 1960's w/ M (Robin Scott)'s only #1 being the first true New Wave #1 & the Eagles' having a hard-rocking #1 ("Heartache Tonight") as their final #1.
I admire your ...( 8 months ago by keonepax)
I admire your encyclopedic knowledge of music!
Well, I've been ...( 8 months ago by Yesimustbestupid2)
Well, I've been studying the charts myself since about 1973 or so, when two of my older siblings were in high school. I've had a fondness for much of pop music since the mid-1960's when another older than sibling was in college.
Sumser of '79. Not ...( 8 months ago by oranger2525)
Sumser of '79. Not good for everyone, but great for me.
Ring My Bell!
Dance Fever was the ...( 7 months ago by Kimmell1)
Dance Fever was the show!
While there have ...( 6 months ago by sfldd)
While there have been a lot of good songs since this time, I really think that popular music lost its "soul" after 1979.
That's the vision ...( 6 months ago by sfldd)
That's the vision that people get, but Abba and Queen were infinitely more popular in Britain than any of those punk groups.
There's no denying ...( 6 months ago by gurmitsinghfan)
There's no denying that the UK charts had its share of pop hits by Abba, Queen, Bee Gees et al. But punk bands like Sex Pistols, Stranglers, Boomtown Rats also had songs that made the top 3 in Britain, but not America. (I would've loved to have heard the Ramones on American Top 40 with Casey Kasem then.) My point is that the UK pop charts were more eclectic than the US charts then, just as they are now.
There's no denying ...( 6 months ago by gurmitsinghfan)
There's no denying that the UK charts had its share of pop hits by Abba, Queen, Bee Gees et al. But punk bands like Sex Pistols, Stranglers, Boomtown Rats also had songs that made the top 3 in Britain, but not America. (I would've loved to have heard the Ramones on American Top 40 with Casey Kasem then.) My point is that the UK pop charts were more eclectic than the US charts then, just as they are now.
From August 1978 to ...( 4 months ago by spacecat1958)
From August 1978 to November 1979 so many events ,so many wonderful memories thank you Keonepax.
LOVED each and ...( 4 months ago by Nitro1970)
LOVED each and every one!! I was suprized though that "Rise" by Herb Alpert and "Heartache Tonight" by The Eagles were released so late in the 70's, I was thinking they both came out more mid 70's. Guess you learn something new everyday :-)
Denny Terio? Wow! I ...( 4 months ago by Nitro1970)
Denny Terio? Wow! I could swear that I had an album years ago of his that taught the latest Disco dances,complete with booklet and pictures on how to do the dances Haha....
Thank 'u KEONEPAX( 4 months ago by larrikauka2)
Thank 'u KEONEPAX
gracias! keonepax( 3 months ago by colmac88)
gracias! keonepax
PLS UPLOAD MORE ...( 2 months ago by kenclyde15)
PLS UPLOAD MORE OLDIES MUSIC KEONEPAX
Disco went ...( 1 week ago by MooBoo1979)
Disco went mainstream in 1979, and then tended to predominate the charts for some time after.
Ring My Bell!