On Oct 4, 10:12 pm, "Just Walkin'" <
kensh...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
> Donna Summer's biggest accomplishment is selling lots of records.
Apparently you know little about Donna Summer and the evolution of
dance music, Her record "I Fell Love" is one of the most influential
records in history.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Feel_Love
"I Feel Love" is a song by Donna Summer, taken from her 1977 concept
album I Remember Yesterday.
The song constituted the "future" segment of the album, which
represented a stylistic progress through time. The title track of the
I Remember Yesterday album represented the 1940s, "Love's Unkind" the
1950s, "Back in Love Again" the 1960s and the album concluded with the
futuristic "I Feel Love". The song reached number one in the UK
Singles Chart, number six on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US and
number nine on the Hot Soul Chart. It quickly became popular in gay
dance clubs and was adopted as a gay anthem. "I Feel Love" is ranked
#418 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All
Time. "I Feel Love" was added to the National Recording Registry in
2012.
Before "I Feel Love", most disco recordings had been backed by
acoustic orchestras although all-electronic music had been produced
for decades. Giorgio Moroder's innovative production of this disco-
style song, recorded with an entirely synthesized backing track,
spawned imitators in the disco genre, and was influential in the
development of techno.
According to David Bowie, then in the middle of recording of his
Berlin Trilogy with Brian Eno, its impact on the genre's direction was
recognized early on:
"One day in Berlin ... Eno came running in and said, 'I have heard the
sound of the future.' ... he puts on 'I Feel Love', by Donna
Summer ... He said, 'This is it, look no further. This single is going
to change the sound of club music for the next fifteen years.' Which
was more or less right."
The album version lasts for almost six minutes. It was extended for
release as a 12" maxi-single, the eight-minute version included on the
1989 compilation The Dance Collection: A Compilation of Twelve Inch
Singles. The song was slightly edited on the 7" format, the fade-in
opening sound reaching maximum volume sooner. A version which fades
out at 3:45, before the third verse and final choruses, has been
included on a large number of greatest hits packages and other
compilations issued by PolyGram, Mercury Records, Universal Music and
others, such as 1994's Endless Summer: Greatest Hits and 2003's The
Journey: The Very Best of Donna Summer.
In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked "I Feel Love" #418 on their list of the
500 Greatest Songs of All Time. The review for the song stated that
Moroder and Summer "claimed tomorrow in the name of disco."
Following the track's success, within months Summer and Moroder
produced the 11-minute "Now I Need You"/"Working the Midnight Shift"
sequence on Summer's 1977 double album Once Upon a Time, which
successfully builds on "I Feel Love"'s pioneering ethereal vocals,
mechanised beats, sequenced arpeggios and ostinato basslines.