Watch videos with session musicians and Rock & Pop examiners JJ Wheeler and Tom Fleming and session musician Harry the Piano for tips and ideas on how to improvise in a disco style:Īfter singing with jazz/soul band Soul Satisfiers in the 1960s, Gloria Gaynor went on to have a successful solo career spanning several decades. Disco music is specifically for dancing and having a good time, so it’s wise to reflect this in the feel of your playing. Whatever your instrument, try to make sure your improvisation has forward momentum and a positive energy. These are often jagged, syncopated lines or ‘hits’, punctuating the music to good effect. An alternative would be to recreate the horn accompaniments often found in disco music using synth horn sounds. These can either be used as lead textures or chordal accompaniment and padding. One feature of the style keyboard players could incorporate into their improvisation is use of synthesised keyboard sounds. Lyrics should be typical of the style – disco lyrics often feature content about going out dancing, having a good time, being in love, and other happy or positive subjects. You may wish to experiment with spoken or rapped phrases, (such as on Average White Band’s ‘Pick Up the Pieces’, and Chic’s ‘Good Times’. Melodies should be clear and move with the music, and phrasing should take the form or length of each section into account. Experimenting with using the tip or the stick on top of the hats, rather than the shoulder of the stick can also enhance this further. Be careful when doing this to keep closed hi-hats firmly shut to find the tight, produced sound of many disco records. Another option on the hi-hats would be to play a semiquaver feel. This is commonly played alongside a four-to-the-floor feel bass drum pattern (bass drums on all 4 beats of the bar) and simple 2 and 4 snare drum back-beats. Many disco songs feature repeated quaver or semiquaver patterns in the guitar parts, which can be replicated to good effect when creating an accompaniment to a disco track.ĭrummers should think about opening the hi-hat on off-beat quavers, giving an authentic disco feel. This could also be applicable to guitarists, who may wish to play chords in upper registers or higher hand positions to create an authentic disco sound. For example, bassists should think about how many disco bass-lines feature tight, funky ‘riffs’, often syncopated to create an upward lift to the music.
We can incorporate these into our improvisation to become more idiomatically correct. When thinking about how to improvise in a disco style it is worth listening to and thinking about the characteristics of the style. Artist collaborations such as that between Daft Punk, Pharrell Williams and Nile Rogers have also revisited the disco feel and resulted in massive hits such as ‘Get Lucky’.
More recently, solo artists such as Madonna and Justin Timberlake have used disco sensibilities to create a retro feel in their music, for instance Madonna’s ‘Hung Up’ samples ABBA’s ‘Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)’. Their songs featured simple four-to-the-floor beats, funky bass-lines, soaring vocal melodies and horn/string arrangements, padding out the tightly produced orchestrations featured in many of them. Groups and artists such as ABBA, The Bee Gees and Gloria Gaynor helped to define an unmistakable disco sound, incorporating elements of funk, soul, pop, salsa and psychedelic music. The accompanying fashions reflected the musical influences of disco, with a mixture of African-American and psychedelic sensibilities.
Having grown out of the New York club scene in the late-1960s/early-1970s, disco cemented its place in western popular culture after being featured in box-office hit films such as Saturday Night Fever and Thank God It’s Friday. Disco music was at its most popular during the 1970s, although it has had several revivals in popularity and has had an influence on popular music and culture ever since. The word ‘disco’ comes from the French ‘discotheque’, initially meaning library of phonograph records, but later becoming the word for nightclubs and bars which play music for dancing.
By JJ Wheeler – musician, teacher and record producer