web analytics

Tag: Mikey Hersh

  • Out There!- “Spacer” by Sheila / “Crying At The Discoteque” by Alcazar

    I will admit I am a sucker for a song with a great dance beat.  Back in 2001 during my clubbing days, I was a real big fan of dance music and spent a few days a week listening to KTU radio or buying dance compilation albums.  I used to think One More Time from Daft Punk was the greatest dance song of all time.  Okay, I’ll admit I was wrong.  The best song was an obscure tune from a Swedish pop group called Alcazar with the title of Crying At The Discoteque.  The song was the group’s biggest hit in America, peaking at #44 on the U.S. mainstream dance chart in 2000.  I first got wind of the song from a dance compilation CD I bought so I could proudfully acclaim that I owned Lady by Modjo for my music collection. I ended up almost crying at the discoteque because I never heard this great song played while I was doing my disco disco!  The song has a distinctive melody and some of the cheesiest lyrics of all time.  Check these out: The golden years, The silver tears,You wore a tie like Richard Gere!   Back in those days, my brother and I would ride down the highway blasting this tune as we bopped our heads  like the Night At The Roxbury guys played by Chris Kattan and Will Ferrell.  It wouldn’t be until a few years later that I realized that Alcazar had actually sampled the track from an obscure Swedish pop star of the 70’s.  Considering most great dance and hip hop melodies are stolen, how can I have been so blind?

    The original melody actually was from a super hot 70’s disco queen from France known as Sheila.  The song’s title was Spacer, and the tune was as or if not more cheezy than Alcazar’s tune.  Sheila oddly enough got her stage name from the title of her first release which was a cover of Tommy Roe’s classic tune.  Sheila was actually a folk singer until she changed her music style to disco in 1977.    You know what, she was kind of hot and ranks up there with Agnetha from ABBA as my favorite blondes from overseas.  Spacer was actually written and produced by the team of Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards of Chic.  The song never charted in the US, although it was a big hit overseas and peaked at #18 on the British charts.  I’m sure most people don’t even know what this song is.   You probably won’t find it on any disco box sets or compilation albums.  Just like Crying At The Discoteque, I’ve never heard Spacer at a 70’s night or club which is an outrage.  Listen to the song below, and I’m sure you’ll have that melody in your head for the rest of the day.  If not, at last you’ll never forget the images from the video.  “Because he’s a spacer, a starchaser!”  Yah!

    And here’s the Alcazar tune for you to make the comparison which song is more funky for ya!

  • Out There!- “Shake For The Sheik”, “Walking Through Walls”, & “I’ll Be There” (The Escape Club’s Lesser-Known Hits)

    We all remember the Escape Club, right?  Back in 1988, none of us could escape The Escape Club and their smash hit, Wild Wild West.  Wild Wild West hit the top of the charts, and was supposed to lift the band to further acclaim.  Sorry, but it didn’t happen! Yet, the Escape Club would be known for another song, but I’ll get to that in a little bit.  Wild Wild West was on pop radio every fifteen minutes, and the video was in heavy rotation on MTV.  One of MTV’s legendary and best-known videos, it featured these strange combo arms and legs (without a crotch) getting down to the beat.   Twenty years later, and I still haven’t gotten those flopping arms out of my head!   The Escape Club consisted of a singer who could pass as Bono’s younger brother (Trevor Steel),  “Booger Presley” on the lead guitar (John Holliday- doesn’t he look like Booger from Revenge Of The Nerds?  If not, how about Eric Bogosian?), the rasta-haired bassist (Johnni Christo) and the quiet Steven Seagal inspired pony-tailed drummer with no personality (Milan Zekavica).  You know what? Even twenty years later, the song still hasn’t aged one bit.

    (more…)

  • Out There!- Dario (Can You Get Me Into Studio 54) by Dana & Gene

    I’ve always said that if I could ever go back in time, I’d love to experience  New York City during the Summer Of Sam.  The mean streets, the peep shows, the filth.  But most of all I would want to turn the beat around at Studio 54.  I’ve talked to a few people who have been there back in 1977 and they refuse to discuss because either they were too coked up to remember or choose not to remember what they did there.

    Studio 54 was known for the drugs, the mix of random celebrities, the tunes, and of course the debauchery.  Open sex on the dance floor, cross dancers, and owner Steve Rubell being obnoxious as all hell.  This place wasn’t just a dance club, it was the buzz of the pop culture world, and the place you had to be if you lived in the metropolitan area.  So much so that a band recorded a song about how difficult it was to get in.   We all have heard the story of Chic’s classic 1978 song Le Freak being a reaction to not getting into the club.  Nile Rodgers is adamant that the song was originally called “Fuck off!  Who knows?  The song that really defines Studio 54 to me was a little-known novelty tune by Dana And Gene called Dario (Can You Get Me Into Studio 54) in 1979 which was a tribute to the guy at the velvet rope who gave access to the club.

    This probably may be the obscurest of the obscure songs I’m going to feature in this article.  Good luck finding this one.  It’s not on any music sites, compilation albums, Yadda yadda.  It took us a few months for us to track it down. It’s so rare to find, that not even Youtube has any clip using the song.  It was released as a 12” single, but didn’t chart on the Top 100 Single chart, although it may have hit the Dance Charts.  It’s your typical cheesy disco tune with the catchy bass groove, electric drum beat, and strings.

    Dario is a fun little song that pays tribute to one of the most influential dance clubs in our nations’s history.  Is it one of the most influential disco songs of the 70s’?  No way!  Is it one of the best novelty tunes?  Maybe.  Is it one of the rarest songs to find from the 70’s?  Absolutely!  Youtube doesn’t even have a video for it.  The closest I got was what you see below: A cover version by Kid Creole which doesn’t do the original tune much justice.

    I wonder if Dario would grant access to me and my brother?  Probably not!