For this week's ROY article, it looks like we've got our second "Family Guy" reference for the day following the article on "Bond Street" earlier this afternoon. Years ago, I bought a box set of the first seven seasons of the long-running Fox show and for the Season 5 "Hell Comes to Quahog", the beginning of the episode has Peter, Cleveland, Quagmire and Joe give a brief but tour de force performance of their roller skating skills, and all to the nostalgic disco sounds of "A Fifth of Beethoven" by Walter Murphy.
I'm sure that there was a bit of delightful laughter in production on the episode since Seth MacFarlane didn't need to sort out too much of the difficulties in getting permission to use "A Fifth of Beethoven", simply because the fellow who created the disco ode to ol' Ludwig all the way back then was the same guy who has been creating the music for "Family Guy"...Walter Murphy! I'd forgotten the name of the person behind "Fifth" so it was quite the surprise to find out that Murphy who had been providing some very jazzy and snazzy tunes for the show's characters was arguably the guy who started out all those disco versions of tunes in the 1970s.
Beethoven's "Symphony No. 5" of the very early 19th century is absolutely unforgettable due to those opening notes, and the first time that I had ever heard it was through a commercial for some medicine and Lucy Van Pelt's demonstration of Beethoven spray on one of the "Peanuts" specials. However, it was with Murphy's disco version that brought the song from the concert hall onto the dance floor when it was released on May 29 1976 (according to the Wikipedia article for Murphy), and from my memories, it spread like wildfire all over the radio.
Never saw "Soul Train" or "Saturday Night Fever" at the time and obviously at the time, I couldn't get into any discos in Toronto, but I could imagine folks making like John Travolta from that latter movie. Certainly the weekly charts in Canada and the United States reflected the success of "Fifth" with the song hitting No. 1 on RPM and Billboard. Also, as with anything becoming a winner, other musicians decided to see if they could replicate success by putting the disco touch on the themes for "Star Wars", "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" and even "I Love Lucy" among other tunes. In fact, I have to say that the first time I heard "Star Wars", it wasn't the John Williams original but the disco version by Meco!
So, with that May 29 1976 release date, what kayo was released during that month? Well once again, thanks to the wonders of Showa Pops' charts, here are three singles.
Minako Yoshida -- Yume de Aetara (夢で逢えたら)
Hi-Fi Set -- Tsumetai Ame (冷たい雨)
Mieko Nishijima -- Ikegami Sen (池上線)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Feel free to provide any comments (pro or con). Just be civil about it.