Hi,
everyone! Are you read for another SUNDAY
JUKEBOX
entry? I hope you are.
Now,
you might be wondering why I've chosen the colour pink to use for the highlight
text this week. Well, pink happens to
be the colour that represents breast cancer awareness, and since October is
breast cancer awareness month, I thought that I would show my support towards
this and other cancers. Maybe one day,
we will find a way to eliminate all cancer from this world. It's certainly a dream that many of us are
wanting.
In
the meantime, how about we bring out another #1 smash single from the past?
Now,
I have to admit that finding scary, spooky Halloween songs for this blog has
not been an easy task. Many of the
Halloween songs I know never even charted, let alone hit the top of the charts,
and those that have, I've either reviewed before, or hit the top of the charts
in a month other than October.
So,
I decided for this month that I would go with novelty songs. After all, they could be played during
Halloween parties, and they very well could have inspired several Halloween
costumes as well for all I know.
Well,
before we get to today's novelty song - that somehow made it to the top of the
Billboard charts - I want to tell you a story about my childhood, if you're interested.
Now,
it's no secret that when I used to work on my homework on weekends, I would
always have the radio on. After all, I
am definitely not the type of person who can really concentrate on work in
absolute silence. Many people are, and
good for you if you do. I have to have
some background noise or else I'm completely lost. As I type this entry right now, I'm watching television.
Well,
okay, I'm not EXACTLY watching television.
I just have it on because I can't stand complete peace and quiet. Besides, it's Sunday morning anyway. Nothing's on television except religious
programming, infomercials, and that omnibus of "Coronation Street"
that airs on CBC.
Anyway,
on with the story.
I
always liked to do my homework on weekends because that was the time in which
they did those Top 40 countdowns. And
back in the 1990s, the countdown shows were actually worth listening to.
Of
course, I had my favourite countdown show.
I always liked "American Top 40" with Casey Kasem at the helm,
as well as when he did "Casey's Top 40" in the 1990s after he left
"AT40" in the late 1980s. I
still can't believe that it's only been a few months since his passing.
But
of course, there was a time in which I couldn't listen to Casey Kasem. There was a period between 1991 and 1995
which I call the "non-Casey" years.
At that point in time, Shadoe Stevens had taken over AT40, and none of
the radio stations in my neck of the woods had syndicated Casey's Top 40. So, I had to find another countdown show to
listen to during those four years.
Thank
goodness for Rick Dees.
Yes,
in the early 1990s, "Rick Dees and the Weekly Top 40" was my go to
radio show on weekends. And to be
honest, it was a fairly decent show. He
often inserted song parodies in his show every so often (which as you may well
know, I dig a good parody every now and again), and his show certainly offered
up a lot of wacky humour. But he also
knew a lot about music, and he did have some rather awesome contest giveaways
back in the day.
His
show has been on radio since 1983, and at the age of sixty-four, I don't see
Rick Dees slowing down any time soon.
It's been a while since I tuned into one of his countdown shows (mainly
because my appetite for current pop music started to sour circa 2002), but I should
probably tune in once more for old times sake.
Bring back some old memories.
Actually, if you go on his website www.rick.com, you can listen to his
radio show online.
But
I should also note while Rick Dees has been in the radio business for a long time,
he also worked as a television talk-show host (though that endeavour barely
lasted one year), and he also had a brief career as a recording artist.
In
fact, he had the #1 song in America thirty-eight years ago this week. And, well...I'm just going to just post it
below. Believe me, we're going to have
a lot to say about this one.
ARTIST: Rick Dees and His Cast of Idiots
SONG: Disco Duck
ALBUM: The Original Disco Duck
DATE
RELEASED: September 4, 1976
PEAK
POSITION ON THE BILLBOARD CHARTS: #1 for 1
week
Um...wow. It's like Huey, Dewey, and Louie from
DuckTales all got together and released a song! And, the fact that it went to the top of the charts could be
partly because of the fact that 1976 was a year in which disco dominated the
music scene. Try releasing this single
in 2014 and see if it goes anywhere!
The
song itself was written by Dees himself and he was inspired to come up with the
song after hearing another novelty song from the 1960s entitled "The
Duck". It only took Dees one day to
pen the lyrics to the song and come up with a basic melody for the single, but
as far as recording the song went, it took much longer for him to get enough
musicians together to record the single.
Apparently
nobody wanted to have their name and talent attached to a song about a disco
dancer that quacked.
Nevertheless,
once a team of people were assembled, the song was recorded and released in
early September of 1976. As far as the
meaning of the song goes...well...there isn't much of one. A guy goes to a discotheque and suddenly
gets the urge to dance like a duck. He
then inspires everyone else in the club to dance like a duck as well. Before you know it, you have an entire flock
of duck dancers flapping their arms in the air as if they were wings.
Now,
before I go ahead with further discussion about this song, I should probably
clear up one major misconception.
The
duck voices that you hear during the chorus of "Disco Duck" were not
performed by Dees himself. They also
weren't performed by Clarence Nash, who provided the voice of Donald Duck for
Disney cartoons before his death in 1985.
And, the duck voices also weren't performed by current Donald Duck voice
artist Tony Anselmo. He was only
sixteen when the song was released.
No,
in all actuality, the duck voices came courtesy of Rick Dees' acquaintance Ken
Pruitt. During live performances of the
song, the duck voices were then provided by Michael Chesney, another
acquaintance of Dees.
And
yes, I know what you're thinking. They
actually performed this live?
Now,
"Disco Duck" wasn't without its share of controversy. Did you know that this song actually got
Dees fired from a job? It's true.
While
Dees recorded "Disco Duck", he was working as a disc jockey in
Memphis, Tennessee, and while the song was topping the charts all over the
nation, in the state of Tennessee, the song was largely ignored (especially in
Memphis), and rarely received any airplay on radio stations in the Memphis
area.
Now,
it wasn't because of the fact that Tennessee was one of those states that
focused more on country music stations that caused "Disco Duck" to be
left off of playlists at many major Memphis stations. It was the fact that because Dees worked at a Memphis radio
station, the station he worked at felt that it would be a conflict of interest
if they played the song. And rival
stations wouldn't play the record either because if they did, they would
essentially be promoting a disc jockey from a rival radio station. It was a no-win situation for Dees.
And
Dees found out the hard way that even so much as talking about "Disco
Duck" on his radio program had hard consequences. He mentioned the song title during his
morning show, and because he did, his boss terminated him on the spot, citing
conflict of interest! Fortunately, Rick
Dees found employment at another radio station, and all was right in the
world. I have to wonder if that radio
station began to start playing "Disco Duck" in retaliation against
the station that let Dees get away.
"Disco
Duck" even made an appearance in the film "Saturday Night
Fever", but because of Dees' manager at the time of the film's release
denying the record company that put out the soundtrack for "Saturday Night
Fever" to include the single on the soundtrack, it cost Dees in a big
way. You see, "Saturday Night
Fever" became the second best-selling soundtrack of all time, selling
approximately 40 million copies and counting.
Had "Disco Duck" been included on the soundtrack, Dees would
still be raking in royalty payments today.
Though,
given how successful Dees has gotten over the last thirty-eight years, I don't
think he's crying too much about it.
After all, he's probably the only man in the world who could write a
song about a disco dancer who thinks he's a duck and make it a chart-topper!
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