It was ubiquitous. It creeped into everything. Instead of everybody and their mom releasing a Christmas album they were putting out disco albums, it sucked up all the attention from every other genre of music. It was unavoidable and mass media then wasn't as niche as it is now. If Old town Road last longer on the charts and others copy that success the backlash against trap beats is going to happen as well.SuburbanFarmer wrote: ↑Sun Aug 04, 2019 1:07 pmOk, walk me through the disco backlash. I get that it was intense, but I don’t know why - I was busy being born that year.Fife wrote: ↑Sat Jul 13, 2019 6:04 am40 years ago:
Disco Demolition at 40: 2 views of an explosive promotion that caught fire at Comiskey Park in 1979
https://pjmedia.com/instapundit/335873/
The Disco Demolition at Comiskey story was the hot topic of discussion among our Dixie Youth baseball league members for a couple of days. Our half-black, half-white league hated the damn Bee Gees and the torment that Casey Kasem put us through while waiting for the decent rock and soul tunes.
Us old bastards remember how campy and ubiquitous "Death to Disco" was in all of pop culture in '79.
Some would say it was a racial thing, attacking a black dominated genre of music, but there were plenty of white artists too and even gangster rap at its most violent never got the backlash that disco got. And blacks didn't stick with it either, they went back to R&B while the kids discovered hip hop.