Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture

Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture

by Alice Echols (Author)

Synopsis

In the 1970s, as the disco tsunami engulfed America, the once-innocent question, Do you wanna dance? became divisive, even explosive. What was it about this much-maligned music that made it such hot stuff? In this incisive history, Alice Echols captures the felt experience of the Disco Years-on dance floors both fabulous and tacky, at the movies, in the streets, and beneath the sheets.

Disco may have presented itself as shallow and disposable-the platforms, polyester, and plastic vibe of it all-but Echols shows that it was inseparable from the emergence of gay macho, a rising black middle class, and a growing, if equivocal, openness about female sexuality. The disco scene carved out a haven for gay men who reclaimed their sexuality on dance floors where they had once been surveilled and harassed; it thrust black women onto center stage as some of the genre's most prominent stars; and it paved the way for the opening of Studio 54 and the viral popularity of the shoestring-budget Saturday Night Fever, a movie that challenged traditional notions of masculinity, even for heterosexuals.

As it provides a window onto the cultural milieu of the times, Hot Stuff never loses sight of the era's defining soundtrack, which propelled popular music into new sonic territory, influencing everything from rap and rock to techno and trance. Throughout, Echols spotlights the work of precursors James Brown and Isaac Hayes, dazzling divas Donna Summer and the women of Labelle, and some of disco's lesser known but no less illustrious performers such as Sylvester. After turning the final page of this fascinating account of the music you thought you hated but can't stop dancing to, you can rest assured that you'll never say disco sucks again.

$27.28

Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 338
Edition: 1
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Co.
Published: 01 Aug 2010

ISBN 10: 0393066754
ISBN 13: 9780393066753

Media Reviews
Engrossing...Hot Stuff is not just about disco; it re-examines the `70s as a decade of revolution. -- James Gavin - The New York Times Book Review
Echols aims for-and thoroughly achieves-a range of higher cultural insights. . . . Using encyclopedic knowledge of the eras' biggest stars, she shows how all sorts of musical disco styles played a `central role' in broadening the contours of `blackness, femininity, and male homosexuality' in America. . . . Revelatory. -- Publishers Weekly
In this expertly rendered, wide-ranging history of one of pop's most exciting social and musical movements, Alice Echols thoroughly recovers the moment in which disco was born and flowered-a moment of liberation for women, gay men, and not a few straight boys; of rich experimentation in the studio and behind the DJ decks; and of joyful dancing that broke down all kinds of boundaries. Echols, one of our best chroniclers of how pop creates social change (and is, in turn, inspired by it), gets its vibe because she lived it-and because she can step back from it now and see it whole. -- Ann Powers - The Los Angeles Times
A clear-eyed encapsulation of what made this seemingly facile music so complex, compelling, and prescient... It all adds up to a thumping good read. -- Atlantic Monthly
Thoroughly researched, scholarly credible and fiercely entertaining... [Hot Stuff] pulsates with a style as relentless as the music it analyzes and the personalities who brought that sound to the airwaves, clubs, boardrooms and bedrooms. -- Warren Pederson - San Francisco Chronicle
Exhilarating, perceptive... an important work of cultural and musical resuscitation, written with a scholar's acumen but a fan's ardor. -- Melissa Anderson - Newsday
Quietly dazzling. -- Peter Terzian - Los Angeles Times
[Hot Stuff] reveals several unturned stones in the disco discourse, and presents an alternate account of those hazy-crazy yesteryears that's ultimately indispensable. -- Smith Galtney - Time Out New York
Persuasively argued... [a] stimulating rethinking of well-trod terrain. -- Bookforum - Michaelangelo Matos
Thoroughly entertaining. -- Thomas Rogers - Salon
Echols' love of music, her acumen about popular culture, and her gifts as a leading cultural historian come together in this remarkable book. The book is fascinating, carried along by prose that is as sleek and slinky as its subject. -- Christine Stansell, Stein-Freiler Distinguished Service Professor, The University of Chicago
[A]n intriguing critical study of the complex relationships and the nontraditional development of the genre. A definite purchase for...pop-music enthusiasts. -- Library Journal
Author Bio
Alice Echols is a professor of American studies and history at Rutgers University. A former disco deejay, she is the author of the acclaimed biography of Janis Joplin, Scars of Sweet Paradise. She lives in Highland Park, New Jersey.