Disco
In
1976, there were an estimated 10,000 discos open in the US, as
opposed to only 1,500 in 1974. Before Saturday Night Fever,
disco was very underground, and particularly big in both the black
and the gay scenes.
Disco began to develop its own music and style, incorporating
lots of funk (and a little bit of glitter). Most (if not all) of the
big disco songs were about sex.
The Hustle, a combination of Mabo and Jitterbug steps, was the favoured
dance of the day, although The Bump was almost as popular.
Cheaper than going to a rock concert, and less hassle than a
singles bar, the disco was a combination of both - one which also
allowed gays, straights, blacks and whites to party together as one
under the mirror ball.
Lots of after-hours drug-drenched discos were filled with drag
queens, fags, chic hairdressers, straight men, superfly black men,
drug dealers, pimps and hookers.
The late 70s disco scene ushered in a whole new aesthetic that
was all about trying very hard to be chic (not the band). Dress
codes at discos insisted you dress to impress - shimmer and shine
from head to toe.
The sheen of unbuttoned satin shirts, gold shirts and sweaty
chest hair; the glimmer of little sequined disco bags and spandex
dresses or tight pants; the sparkle of glitter eye shadow, metallic
Lurex-threaded scarves, and gold glittered high-heeled sandals
transformed you into the shining star you were born to be.
For a while it seemed every dodgy disco was called Xanadu with a
coke-sniffing owner who thought he was Warren Beatty (but actually
bore more resemblance to Warren Mitchell).
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