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https://t.co/ho5FVivslh </div><div></div><div></div><div>Just as we thought Vibert's Kerrier District days were behind him, he announced a new record under the name. '4', due out via Hypercolour in May, is a great record that can only be described as classic Kerrier. Before its release, Vibert takes a look at some of his favourite weirdo disco tracks. "Disco" might seem like a loosely-fitting descriptor for some of these, but every track is loose, louche, and funky as hell.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Luke Vibert: "None of these tracks are conventional 'disco', and certainly not this one! Sounds a bit like Can, but possibly even more strange and funky. Tons of lush vocoder (one of my favourite things in life) all over the album. Geezer's still going strong today."</div><div></div><div></div><div>Using the mouse to move, the player controls Lifty of the twin raccoon brothers. The player must avoid the falling disco balls, which will hurt Lifty if he touches him, and collect large, blinking dots to gain points. If Lifty is hit five times by the disco balls, he will die and the game is over.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The song continues on into several repetitions of Bridge, Chorus, and variations of the lines "You can set yourself on fire / But you're never going to burn." These two lines stand as the challenge set by the woman against Urie. She thinks he's not interesting enough to even set himself on fire (even though he claims to be as crazy as an arsonist), and he argues that he's a "rocket scientist" of crazy. In the end, "Crazy = Genius" ends up being a competition between the two: which one of them is the crazier? The music supports this theme, and perhaps another song on the album will tell us the answer.</div><div></div><div></div><div>It was the summer of 1979, and disco was taking over the world. Donna Summer, Chic and Gloria Gaynor were at the top of the charts. Just a few months earlier, the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack had been named Album of the Year at the Grammy Awards. Radio stations were switching to all-disco formats.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Steve Dahl, then a 24-year-old disc jockey, was mad. He had been fired from a Chicago radio station when it, too, went all-disco. In his new job at a rival rock station, he took out his frustration by destroying disco records on the air.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Pretty soon, station reps and Chicago White Sox promoters had the crazy idea of actually blowing up disco records. The team was averaging just 16,000 fans a game and would have done anything to fill Comiskey Park. So, on a muggy Thursday night doubleheader with the Detroit Tigers, fans could bring a disco record and get in for less than $1. What transpired came to be known as "Disco Demolition" and is the subject of Dahl's new book Disco Demolition: The Night Disco Died, co-written with Dave Hoekstra.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Also at the game was a teenaged usher named Vince Lawrence, who says he'd hoped to snag a few disco records to take home. Then an aspiring musician who was saving up money for a synthesizer, he says he was one of the few African Americans there that night. Soon, he began to notice something about the records some people were bringing.</div><div></div><div></div><div>After the Sox lost the first game, a giant crate full of records was placed in the outfield. Dahl, the disgruntled disc jockey, donned a combat helmet and military jacket and led chants of "disco sucks." Then they blew up the crate. The explosion scattered records high into the air and left a crater in center field.</div><div></div><div></div><div>"I was faced with some guy rushing up to me, snapping a record in half in in my face and going, 'Disco sucks! Ya see that?'" Lawrence says. "Like an overt statement to me like I was inherently disco."</div><div></div><div></div><div>Over the years, Disco Demolition came to be seen as a not-so-subtle attack against disco's early adopters: blacks, Latinos and gay people. Dahl, who helped write the new book, calls this revisionist history.</div><div></div><div></div><div>With a decades-deep record collection and an amalgam of modern styles, Dam Swindle keeps your toes twinkling on the D-flo as they move fluidly through time, space and sound. Calling on classic house, obscure disco, African funk, soulful techno and plenty in between, their eclectic flare connects the dots between past and present and tells stories that will take us on a fantastic voyage.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Bash godmother Abby Normal has graced the Bash's dancefloor with her all-vinyl, all-genre, all-time turntable set for six years running, and she's back to do it again. The real-life fairy godmother of Bash, Abby's one-of-a-kind style blurs the lines between funk, disco, hip hop and rock, improvising her set around one simple premise: play what feels right. Heed Abby's steeze and be forever funkified.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Modern music has no classification for Discotoshi, a funk-loving SF local and perennial Bash DJ whose sound is inspired by artists ranging from the Beatles to Prince to Flume. This towering disco dilly has been Bashin' since the beginning, and his musical mystique has evolved in lockstep with the Bash. Your new favorite DJ and a rising force in the Bay Area dance scene, this might be the first you hear of Discotoshi, but we guarantee it won't be the last.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Mix the funky styles of two OG Bash DJs into one kaleidoscopic concoction, and disco dynamite ignites. This duo of disco dynamos was born at the Bash in 2016, and they've been honing their Bash-focused set over the years to create a performance tailor-made for the funkiest disco party on earth.</div><div></div><div></div><div>A funky underground phenom hailing from The Bay up north, this disco-endowed music producer draws inspiration from his groovy granddad's record collection. A smooth operator behind the wheels of steel, Combover earthquaking amalgam of funk, disco, house and breaks laces up a vibe so funky, it'll make you wanna slap yo mama!</div><div></div><div></div><div>Cool Sexy DJ is an up-and-coming selector hailing from the Bay Area. A longtime dance floor regular, she has found her way behind the decks of San Francisco's club scene. Influenced by disco, soul and R&B, she aims to please with elevated, groovy sets laced with nostalgia.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Jeff Bezos and his girlfriend Lauren Sanchez welcomed 2022 in style. The Amazon founder took to Instagram on Sunday to share photos from their "crazy disco party" which was attended by close friends and family. According to the Daily Mail, the new year party took place aboard a luxury yacht at St Barts. For the celebration, Jeff Bezos, 57, stayed true to the theme of disco and wore a bright shirt with heart-shaped sunglasses, while Ms Sanchez opted for a sparkling black ensemble.</div><div></div><div> df19127ead</div>