Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - Disco Jams: Toronto Mike'd #786
Episode Date: January 15, 2021This 44th Pandemic Friday, Mike kicks out disco jams with Cam Gordon and Stu Stone....
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Now, folks, nothing spells fun like rhinestones on a dungaree jacket.
Stu, you should buy that.
Hey, Disco Stu doesn't advertise.
It's time now for Pandemic Fridays.
Starring Toronto Mike, Stu Stone, and Cam Gordon. Toronto I'm in Toronto where you wanna get the city love
I'm from Toronto where you wanna get the city love
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I'm Mike from torontomike.com
and joining me for this 44th Pandemic Friday episode of Toronto Miked is Stu Stone.
And Cam Gordon.
Hello. Hello, Mike.
Welcome.
Welcome.
Hello, Airhorn.
To you, fellow.
I was going to say my two fellow Thorne Lee graduates because I know.
Hello, Mike.
Toronto Michael.
Hello, Camberley.
Good to see you both.
I now feel like I went to Thorne Lee Secondary School.
You were practically there, man.
Listen, you were as much there as you know who was there when you know when.
So, I mean, mean firstly how are you is
everybody okay yeah yeah all good so okay i can cross that off my list of things to do a lot could
be good a lot could be worse a lot could be better i appreciate the attempted topical conversation
uh the how are you usually uh get some sort of, but I don't have much to give you this week.
Other than my impressive impressedness of impressiveness of the Noah Mintz finally appears on the Toronto Mike show, which was, you know,
really. Yeah, that's right. Yeah.
So to Ian who just hit the air horn, I appreciate that.
I would have to say that that was a pretty epic episode for Cam and myself.
You know, we're, you know, the vice president and senior vice president of the head Thorne Lee chapter fan club.
So to have, you know, he sounded like a guy that would be our buddy.
He sounds like a guy that could fill in a couple of weeks on Pandemic Friday, fill the stories.
You barely scratched the surface of head stories.
So there's a lot more for guys like us to go an even deeper dive with him on
that. And I was impressed that although my name didn't necessarily ring a bell
with him, he did name drop Harv Glazer,
who was the co-star of Jack of all trades. So obviously he's aware,
he doesn't realize how aware he is. And of course his brother, Billy,
who you didn't ask him about it, or he didn't address that question.
Of course, Billy is a huge Stu fan you know i'm practically invited over to the
mince household for passover dinner uh you know it's just the invitations in the mail so stew
why would noah know harv like i they're closer to the same age i would imagine okay how old is
harv is he like a couple years he's about three years older than us. Okay. Wow, he looks great.
No, he's probably about five years older than us.
Oh, at least, I think. Yeah, actually, five sounds about right.
But yeah, we saw them play so many times.
Just hearing him sort of tell the stories about Hayden,
and it was a really good listen.
Very, very cool stuff, man.
And I didn't, you know, the new stuff that you had played,
like that was my first introduction to some newer things
that he's sort of working on and working with.
But yeah, don't let him fool you, man.
When we get out of this pandemic and we do Can-Con-Cella
or we do Can-Con-a-Palooza or whatever we're going to call it,
we got to get Noah Mintz to perform some head jams.
Well, at least now he's an FOTM.
That was the first step here.
I was listening as a guy who did not.
And for the record, I hope I was clear about this.
I did not attend Thorne Lee,
so I hope I didn't pretend to pass myself off as a Thorne Lear.
But I thought it was amazing and compelling.
And I kept wondering, what are Cam and Stu going to think?
Because there's so much inside baseball from the high school they went to.
Well, really, the Gian Gomeshi stuff was the cool stuff to hear his pronunciation obviously
he really knows gian gomeshi he's like gian gomeshi like he says his name like someone that
really knows him um and the stories of like painting gomeshi as like sort of the bad guy
in like uh noah's like late 80s early 90s uh wonder years i i would love to know what park
they uh performed in where they asked for your park thornhill park that's like there's there's
actual park called thornhill yeah it's like uh at uh it's a young street just north of steeles
you turn into this you know where it is there's a public swimming pool and then there's two
baseball oh yeah yeah oh my god i used to play baseball there yeah like or home of thorn hill day camp which was you ever heard of a class action park you know that movie yeah i watched it
yeah i watched part of like an unauthorized day camp called thorn hill day camp that ran
they didn't have a license and they had like 2 000 campers in this park with no permits and
they just ran this camp simpler time i don't know if you remember stew
there also used to be a store there that was a bird store i'm sure paul judson spent a lot of
time there but they would sell all different varieties of bird seed and like books about
birds and bird feeders and and of course cam's father is an avid bird watcher so cam probably
found himself in there on a saturday yeah he's a big grackle guy.
Yeah, I remember.
I remember.
So, I mean, I guess you heard I did shout out DJ Farbsy.
You did, and I mean, it's a matter of time
before he becomes a guest on your show.
Right, yeah, it's only a matter of time.
So, I'm glad to hear you guys enjoyed the Noah Mintz.
Oh, we don't know if Cam heard it, but I definitely listened to it.
No, I listened to it.
One thing, Mike, I wish I did ask,
and I alluded to this in a tweet I sent this morning.
Bill Walichka, of much music fame, also went to Thornley.
I get the sense Bill is probably even a generation prior to Noah and John.
It's just amazing how much talent passed through that school. His name didn't come up
but another one, Jose Contreras
from
By Divine Right.
Jose Tornley, a graduate.
And Feist was also in his band as was Brendan Canning.
So, you know, it's all
talk about a broken social scene.
Let's not leave out
Anakin Skywalker himself. Hayden Christensen
was probably at the school around that time.
It's amazing that there were two Haydens there.
Both would go on to great fame and fortune.
And I think one half of Prozac went down.
Oh, you got a bad disease.
Of course, of course.
Now, okay, so I thoroughly enjoyed it.
He will return because I know for a fact he enjoyed it.
Like Noah Mintz thoroughly enjoyed his experience.
So he'll be back.
He'll be back.
What else?
Okay, so I want to just let the listeners know
that we're kicking out disco jams.
So we've each brought five of our favorite disco jams to the table.
I want to preface that actually.
Yeah, go ahead, Stuart.
You know, I don't know that these are necessarily
my five disco favorite songs that
I brought to the table here this week I just what are they Stu what are they these are just uh you
know interesting picks that I that I come to the table with because I do feel that there is a
quality that does exist in and I hope that you guys made some selections and I saw some banter
back and forth on Twitter there are some A-list legendary heavy hitting acts that delved into the disco realm
that I could have easily gone with, but I figured it was such, you know, that could be a whole other
episode. You know, rockers who disco. Oh, you're talking about like the Rolling Stones.
Like the Rolling Stones, Miss You, for example. Yes, good example.
Rod Stewart, Do You Think I'm Sexy? These types of things.
Right. I focused on actually more a couple of disco hits,
and then I'm also bringing a lot of unique disco to the table.
Okay, great to hear.
Now, just a yes or no to this, and I know the answer,
but I'm going to give you a chance to reiterate it.
These are not your favorite.
No, these are not my favorite.
Okay, and that, and Stu.
But they're not my favorite.
And that's why this is not a real kick out the jams.
Oh.
These are my favorite unique jams.
Sorry, not a true kick out the jams.
These are my favorite unique jams, yes.
I'm kicking out my favorite unique jams.
Because your name is Al Grego, as I see on the Zoom.
Alan, that's Alan's U government name, please.
You don't know me like that, bro.
I'm thoroughly disappointed, though,
because you had an opportunity to be called Disco Stew.
Well, I dropped the ball there,
and obviously you buried the lead regardless with your cold open.
But Disco Stew loves disco music.
Ah, Disco Stew.
Right this way.
But hey, St. Peter, you said like you was full.
Oh, yeah.
Ah, jeez.
Whoa, Frank Sinatra.
For me, this is hell.
You dig, Pally?
Oh, oh, oh, ah, oh, oh, ah.
Oh, oh, ah, oh.
Disco Stu loves disco music.
What were you going to say, Cam,
before I rudely interrupted you with that Disco Stu?
No, that's okay.
It's a stupid question that I think I answered.
It's like a Simpsons character.
Oh, you know, I forget.
I forget you're anti-comedy.
I always forget that.
He's more like Uncle Comedy.
What is your real feelings on comedies for the record cam like are you anti-comedy motion and cam does not emote you know he uh that's how
he has these long-term relationships well who was it i believe it was our mutual friend 1236 said
this is a guy who said he's not really into comedy on a podcast about Spinal Tap. Well, he said you're the only
person he's heard admit that in public.
So let me ask you this, because Spinal Tap, of course,
I just assumed we'd all seen Spinal Tap,
but have you seen the movie Airplane
by Zucker Zucker and Abrams?
I've definitely seen Airplane, yes.
Surely you can't be serious.
I'm sort of aware, like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's
in it. Yes, yes.
I'm kind of shocked.
So you don't gravitate I'm sort of aware, like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's Yes, yes. I'm kind of shocked. I'm kind of shocked.
So you don't gravitate
towards funny.
He doesn't like to laugh. He doesn't like to cry.
He just is a very by-the-books guy.
He's sort of like a robot
that does have a heart.
Kind of German.
Like the Iron Giant. Is he the Iron Giant?
He's sort of the Iron Giant.
He is seven feet tall. He's made of metal. Is he the Iron Giant? He's sort of the Iron Giant. He is seven feet tall.
He's made of metal.
And he rocks hard.
So disco's the theme.
And I had a fun idea that I thought we'd all love,
which was I was actually going to open this episode by playing U2's Disco Tech
because David Alter, who's an FOTM...
That's an awful idea.
That is an awful idea.
Hear me out.
Hold on.
Hear me out.
David Alter was going to join us
to defend his choice of Disco Tech idea. That is an awful idea. Hear me out. David Alter was going to join us to
defend his choice
of discotheque as his favorite song
of all time. So just soak that
in. David Alter thinks U2's
discotheque is his favorite song of all time. But
David got a new job where he covers
hockey and he had to go to Ottawa to cover
a Sens game or something. So he's going to do this
next week. So off the top of next week's
show, David Alter is going to tell us why
he thinks discotheque
is the best song of all time.
Well, I guess in advance, I'll have to tell him that
if he can convince me that discotheque
is the greatest song of all time,
I also am happy to buy some
Lakeshore property from him
as well.
Well, is he a real estate agent?
No, but there's an old
expression that I just got wrong there, but
I'm sure 1236 was right.
Swampland in Florida.
Actually, I'll be curious
to shame David Alter,
who I know somewhat well, so that's
okay. He'll be somewhat...
Yeah, you worked with him, right?
Briefly. I know, he's a good man.
But also, I would like to know,
just sort of the stipulations with the NHL,
why is he going to Ottawa from Toronto?
And he wasn't sure.
You're right.
He had to find out last night
if he was allowed to with the new restrictions
because we're all in this new lockdown.
Does it change any of your worlds at all?
Is there anything you were doing prior to this lockdown
that you no longer are doing because of the lockdown?
I'm just naturally here.
Hugging, shaking hands, seeing people.
No, that's different.
That's before.
Going outside.
The new restriction that came into play like at midnight.
It's pretty much, I don't think it really affects me or Cam any differently.
Speaking on behalf of Cam, I know he's not out partying in meat lockers in Toledo.
Is he right?
Cam, is he right?
Does it affect you at all?
Yeah, no, I think Stu nailed it.
Yeah, it's pretty much par for the course.
Sorry, my lights are flickering here.
Oh, yeah, it just adds to the ambiance.
The crackdown is really on people that are just being blatantly disrespectful.
If you don't respect the pandemic, the pandemic won't respect you type of gimmick.
But listen, if you're out there and you're going out for reasons to go to the store, they're not looking for you.
They're looking for the people who are who are having parties.
And by looking at the demographics of the cases that I've you know, I'm not Dr. Fauci, but I did look at the cases and I could see that it's like young people that are that are getting the infection. Now it's like sort of flipped, like the older people are sort of playing
by the rules and the young people are invincible. And they're the ones that are sort of spreading
it to each other and their families. My aunt is in a long-term care facility, Auntie Sandy,
Instagram sensation. She's she's in a very scary situation. She contracted COVID.
Oh no.
She's in a very scary situation.
She contracted COVID.
Oh, no.
There's 50 cases in her building.
Five people have died.
It's a fucking crazy mess over there.
And it's all because, you know, somebody brought it in. Now, I want to know, Mike, why aren't they testing the health care workers before coming in there?
It seems like an avoidable thing.
Just do a rapid test and don't let anybody in who's, you know, they're not testing the people coming in.
So why?
It just, it's.
Well, Stu, if they can test.
We might need a lawyer.
If they can test.
I have a lawyer view.
If they can test hockey players every single day, I think the whole NHL.
I think it's like healthcare workers should be tested before they go into work.
So a healthcare worker brought COVID into this facility where Aunt Sandy is and Aunt Sandy got COVID.
Yes. Auntie Sandy's and aunt Sandy got COVID.
Yes. Auntie Sandy's building was fucking Fort Knox.
I have not been able to go near her in six months. Right. You know,
we're dropping off stuff for her. They, they've run it so properly, except for the healthcare workers coming in and out of there are not being
tested before they go to work. And it's look what happened and uh you know at some point you
have to kind of think that's avoidable uh but to the young people who are listening because i know
your demographic reaches all ages mike uh so i'm probably talking to the young people the only young
people i'm speaking to is that lady who has the van that drives her kids around so maybe they're
overhearing this but they gotta fucking step up you know it's your turn young people uh if you're in the back of mom's van
you know mask up you know it's too i've case too firstly firstly first and foremost i'm very sorry
to hear this about ann sandy a beloved like next thing you know what i'll be hearing bojana got
covid like i can't handle this i need to even put that in the atmosphere i mean that's strike two
my first time with my boy tim and now you're fucking with bojana that's strike two buddy
is have you talked do we have anana. That's strike two, buddy.
Do we have an update about Sandy's health today, like how she's feeling?
She's not doing great.
I mean, I got to be honest.
She's doing great, all things considered.
I mean, she's had COVID.
She contracted these last week, so she's probably been through the worst of the onset stuff,
like fever and stuff. But, you's it's an it's a it's
it's caused complications obviously she's an older person she's living in a a a place that requires
care and you know things are not looking you know she's lethargic she has no taste still she's not
eating properly like she's not really getting out of bed god forbid god forbid that's all i can say
it's like someone like that deserves to, you know,
you live 94 years, you deserve to have a proper sendoff and not,
and not, uh, uh, uh, you know, I don't want to go there,
so I'm not going to, but just everybody needs to fucking, uh,
do their part. And if you're acting irresponsibly, stop it.
I would like to think 99% of the people listening to the show are not barbecue
eaters and they are doing what they got to do and they're you know if you do have to bend the rules
for whatever reason hopefully you're doing it carefully and you're not like bending the rules
to go to some wedding or a meat locker party in etobicoke well well said get well and sandy yes
keep us posted.
Next week, I'll be asking you how she's doing.
And here's hoping I get a...
Appreciate that. That's my rant.
No, you know, when your beloved aunt...
I was going to say, we'll turn the table here.
When your beloved aunt contracts COVID
in a facility...
She's a big disco gal.
I got the sense, like when I watched those Instagram videos,
I got the sense she was on the dance, like the Studio 54 scene.
Big time.
Big, big, big time.
Okay, so let's –
Go ahead.
I got nothing.
Okay, let's get to it.
So one quick sentence to say that I got a lot of people telling me
I was right with the Kermit choice last week.
No, you were not right about that.
Because Kermit –
A lot of people say the earth is flat mike that doesn't
make it flat that's correct it's not flat but uh kermit was first famous for being on sesame street
where he wasn't singing and dancing he was like a newscaster guy so he was already that's what
made him famous before the muppet show him and i already brought up the argument about him being a
news frog and that but he was first sesame street predates muppet show i mean that was part of his skill set and like
aussie whoever shared like here's the early kermit the frog irrelevant right not relevant well it's
i think it's relevant but okay so i got i did get a lot of support and then finally because
if it's not you know we're not depressed enough of the sandy news before i get into the disco
we did lose kind of a baseball icon,
especially for us growing up.
Uh,
Tommy Lasorda,
Stu,
you're the,
you and Cam are the big,
uh,
memorabilia guys and everything.
But like,
I just remember Tommy was like just omnipresent as this,
like famous manager of the LA Dodgers.
And he was there when Kirk Gibson,
uh,
you know,
walked off on the one leg or whatever,
but man,
quite a giant to lose.
Uh,
last week.
I learned two things.
I was actually listening to,
uh,
writer's block on,
uh,
five 90 with,
uh,
Jeff Blair and Richard Deitch.
I think Blair's an FOTM.
No,
he's actually,
he blocked me on Twitter.
Uh,
he's not an FOTM. So he's the opposite blocked me on Twitter. He's not an FOTM.
So he's the opposite.
But I did learn two very interesting things listening to that.
One, Tommy Lasorda has apparently claimed that he invented the goalie mask.
Have we heard this?
Because he, I guess, did he coach in Montreal?
Like he's a manager of Montreal the Royals
and was apparently pretty friendly with Jacques Plante.
Right.
And there's apparently,
they were talking about a story floating around,
Tommy Lursor having a hand in the designing of a goalie mask,
sort of in the, oh, you know, Bert Campanella,
or Roy, who's that, fuck that catcher for the Brooklyn Dogs?
Campanella.
Roy Campanella wears a mask and Yogi Berra wears a mask.
You guys should wear a mask. yogi bear wears a mask you guys
should wear a mask so there's that and a story i'd never heard and this is pretty awful do you
guys know like about him and his son who like passed away oh his son died of aids right yeah
like he was sort of in denial the whole time and he would never sort of acknowledge he said he died
of cancer like just really oh that's too bad i don't know i just it was interesting to see these
stories come out that i'd actually never heard because he was such a big personality and there
was so much there with tommy lasorda but uh yeah good bad or otherwise larger than life i would
say that tommy lasorda came around at the perfect time for baseball uh you know you had guys like
john madden who were like these over-the-top personalities in football. In wrestling, you had Bobby the Brain Heenan.
In hockey, you had Mike Keenan types.
Don Cherry.
Don Cherry, even better example.
Pat Riley.
But yeah, Pat Riley.
And then you got Tommy Lasorda, larger than life,
transcended the game of baseball.
And this is a guy, like I alluded to on my post,
that got cut from the Dodgers to make way for Sandy Koufax.
His career should have been over that day.
But he, you know, he stuck with it
and ended up becoming one of the most beloved characters,
guys in the game.
And I remember him from the Slim Fast commercials.
Yes.
As a kid, you know, he had a timeless sort of baseball video game.
You know, he was famously offered to send a limousine to pick up Kurt Bavacqua to come take at bats.
There's a lot of a lot of fun Tommy Lasorda baseball and pop culture stories from that like 1984 to 1994 sort of time period.
And I believe his nephew, I don't know if that was ever proven or not, but his alleged nephew,
Mike Piazza,
you know, Tommy pushed for
Mike Piazza to get signed by the Dodgers. And of course
Mike Piazza ended up becoming a Hall of Famer
himself. So there you go.
Tommy Lasorda, rest my man. Rest peacefully.
Do you remember, you mentioned Slim Fast. Do you remember how
when they first aired that commercial, and it aired all the
time, at least the channels I was watching,
it would say, he said, if I can do it,
you can do it. So this was his big thing.
I think his words were maybe.
No, no. This is my...
This is my point, Cameron.
If I can do it, you can do it.
And then it was a voice,
obviously, what's it called? ADR?
Whatever you do it in post. Yes.
I'm learning these terms there, Stu.
They changed it to, if I can do it, maybe you can do it.
No, you say I can do it, maybe.
You say, if I can do it, you can do it.
And I'll be the maybe.
If I can do it, you...
You got to do like a timeless sort of impression.
I can't.
Okay.
If I can do it, you can...
Maybe.
Okay.
You get the idea.
It's hard on Zoom, but...
If I can do it, maybe.
You can do it.
That's my memory of those commercials is the adding that maybe in there for legal reasons, I guess.
Iconic.
Uncommittal.
It definitely worked for guys like Cam and I who were very weight conscious at the time.
And we chowed down on sleep.
I was a big fat fuck.
I can't even imagine that.
But okay, Cam, we're going to kick out your first jam
I know Stu likes to say
a speech before I kick out his jam but you
don't so just to make sure
is there anything you want to say before I kick out your first jam
no
I'm cracking open a Great Lakes beer, everybody,
because I'm going to be doing some dancing tonight.
That's why.
I mean, you can totally hear, like,
elements of disco are in, like, popular, like,
indie hipster rock now, like, so much.
All over the place.
You're totally right.
Even a band like Jamiroquai
got disco vibes.
Oh, yeah.
Did you guys hear that people thought
that was Jamiroquai in the
Capitol building?
The guy with the
headwear and all that. They said, oh, that's Jamiroquai.
And he had to make a statement. Anyway, here we go.
Everybody dance.
Clap your hands. I mean, remember when life was just easy, guys?
This will be a good escape episode,
like a chance to just escape for a couple of hours.
There's a lot of crap
going on in the world.
I would like to see
Leva Famke and Juan
get up and sort of like
show us their fucking moves.
Juan does the hustle.
All right, Cam,
talk to us about this selection.
What are we listening to?
So I thought it would be
a good place to start.
Everybody dance.
You know, an iconic disco anthem from Chic.
I would say as probably top five most well-known, quote unquote, disco bands of all time.
I would, oh, bands.
I'll give you that.
I'll give you that.
Kyle Rogers.
Obviously, we've talked about him, but ad nauseum, is that the expression? Yeah. We've talked about him ad at at naz ad nauseum is that the expression yeah we've
talked about him ad nauseum and his contributions to music absolutely and i i don't think we need
to go too much into his story because i we have talked about him on past episodes and all the
artists he ended up working with moberg no he didn't work on moberg actually no the spoons Brigham Old Brig, actually. No. The Spoons. No Amintz, Tall Buildings with John Comesci.
All the greats.
This song, April 1978.
Stu and I were both sort of in diapers while everyone was getting down.
I wasn't born yet, so I don't know what you're talking about.
You weren't born yet.
Well, you know.
You know.
Maybe you were conceived of this song.
Is that possible, Stu?
No.
It doesn't work that way.
This song of the five songs that I brought to the table
is actually the lowest charting hit.
This song actually only went to number 38 in the US,
number 45 in Canada.
I'm not surprised, Cam.
It's not that big a hit.
I'm not a big disco guy
and I miss the era and I never really dive into
this era, but when I think of
Chic, I think of other jams. I don't
think of Everybody Dance.
Freak Out. That's like my first
one and then we might even hear more Chic
in this episode, a teaser.
Again, this is as always a bit
of a Scattergories
exercise. Now, this song, as always, a bit of a categories exercise.
Now, this song, which features a couple of people on backing vocals, namely Luther Vandross, is on this track.
Sorry, I was going to set that up.
I totally botched that.
But that's great.
Fun fact, man.
That's amazing.
Yeah, so it's Luther Vandross and Robin Clark are two of the background
vocals. Now, they, a few
years earlier, also appeared doing
background vocals on
a track by David Bowie, namely
Young Americans. Love that jam.
Yeah, which I don't think I knew that Luther
Vandross was on that album, but it seemed like
that was widely known. There was many articles about
this.
Yeah, I mean, there's, again,
I don't think we need to go into the Nile Rodgers story.
One fun fact from Nile.
Isn't it Nile, right?
Nile Rodgers.
Yes. Okay, not Niles?
Yeah, I think it's Nile.
He claims that this
song costs $10.
I don't know where he's getting
that from. That sounds like a bit of a
urban lesson but he said the the session the song was recorded during cost the band ten dollars
which went to bribing the elevator engineer not to tell the manager they were recording in there
so this one that when chic was recording their debut album uh self-titled thing called just chic
um i'm gonna try to tie this back into a couple of past episodes,
including the last one.
There's been a few covers of this song, namely by RuPaul,
who I sort of took a mulligan on last episode.
But RuPaul actually covered that on the same album as Supermodel.
You better work.
There you go um did you mention uh duran duran the reflex
and uh the nile rogers uh david bowie let's dance we've oh yeah all of it like in excess uh
even lady gaga and daft punk later yeah like it's again i just feel like we sort of did the deep
dive on all the artists he's worked with um somebody i'm not sure we've talked about a bit of can con here deborah cox has deborah cox ever
came up you know not really she had the one huge hit right nobody's supposed to be here that was
like a monster monster jam right that's deborah cox am i right that's right yeah so she actually
did a a this is not like a really remix or a cover.
She had a song called
Everybody Dance in Brackets Clap Your Hand
that had a sample of this song.
Right.
Came out in 2007,
so way after sort of the Deborah Cox heyday.
Pretty massive dance hit in the US.
Went to number 17 on the Billboard dance charts.
Yeah, okay. I just don't
hear it a lot these days. There are some
disco jams that you seem to kind of
pop up periodically. This isn't one of them.
And this is not one of them.
I feel like this is...
DJ Farbs, you would drop the needle on
like 11.58 on a Saturday night
at a hypothetical event.
I thought thematically this would be a good place
to start.
Everybody dance.
We're shitting all over
his first section.
I know.
This is like a fucking
light balloon.
This is brutal.
This is the pandemic flaw
is that we open with Cam.
We should be opening with Stu
because Cam always has
that one song
which isn't quite
the right big jam
to start us off.
You need that big monster
disco hit off the top. in a while once in a
while okay so i'm going to get oh any more fun facts okay i'm gonna move on to stew's first hit
i'm gonna let stew chat about it but uh and i'm just looking here it ian do you want to say hi
to everybody now or is this a good time no uh leave a fumka do you want to say hi to everybody
now are you eating over there
you eating chocolate what's going on over there yeah do you want to say hi
hi everyone i don't i don't even know what more you want me to say you know what it's a woman a
few words and when she uses the words that she uses they they're very impactful and uh how are
you leave a famka that's that's the most important thing. I'm very good.
That's good.
But I have a question for you.
For me.
Didn't Andy, yeah, I thought she got the vaccine.
The crazy timing is that she contracted the coronavirus the day before she got the vaccine.
So she was vaccinated having already contracted the disease, unfortunately.
She missed it by like a day.
It's quite crazy.
But maybe getting the vaccine helped her through it.
I'm not sure.
I know it's more of a preventative than a cure.
But who knows?
Hopefully, she'll be able to still get the second shot.
I don't know.
It's a really fucking terrible thing.
But thank you for your compassion.
Yeah.
And Stu, keep your mic open there because we want you to introduce your first jam.
Yeah, I'll introduce my
first jam.
Cam played
a very big
disco band, one of their lesser
known sort of underappreciated
jams and I'm going to maybe
do the same. There's a
band that I'm going to open up with that is
probably the quintessential disco act.
And this is maybe going to surprise you
of how important this song was
to the whole disco revolution
in this band in particular.
So go ahead and roll the tape. Thank you. My woman take me higher My woman keep me warm
What you doing in your bed?
What you doing in your bed?
You should be dancing, yeah
Dancing, yeah
Very similar to Kim's choice.
You know, the song encourages you to do what, Mike?
It encourages you to dance.
Dance.
Yeah, dance.
You should be dancing.
Stop your stressing, Leva Famke, and just dance.
You know, you should be dancing.
Not crying, not being upset, not worrying about the bullshit in the world.
You should be dancing.
And that's a great message
that still resonates very deeply with people like us today so uh this is a very interesting
fascinating song guys uh it's by a group called the bee gees if you've ever heard of them wow the
pgs is a very interesting act because as we've talked about them in the past quite a prolific
catalog uh they actually started out as sort of like a folk trio uh uh
ended up sort of evolving into this sort of like beatles-esque rockish act and then eventually sort
of found their groove uh as disco kings uh you know basically the flag bearers i'm sure maybe
they were influenced by walking to some club and heard something going on but listen they may have
not invented disco but they probably did it the most successfully.
And of course, synonymous with the film
Saturday Night Fever and Staying Alive.
Maybe we'll hear some other Bee Gees tracks later on.
There's a great documentary I haven't seen yet.
That's what I was going to ask you.
Have you seen the HBO Doug?
I haven't seen it yet,
but I've watched other Bee Gees documentaries in the past.
So I'm very familiar with the story.
I'm definitely planning on watching it.
But listen to this, man. Yeah. This song by the Bee Gees, past so i'm very familiar with the story uh i'm definitely planning on watching it um but listen
to this man yeah this uh song uh by the bgs hit number one for one week on the billboard hot 100
and that was number one for seven weeks on the dance chart uh and it is known as the song that
launched the bgs into disco how about that this is the song that launched the Bee Gees into disco. How about that?
This is the song that launched them into disco.
Wow.
Also, and this is going to blow your mind.
I'm going to be blowing minds all night long, folks.
This is also the only track that the group has ever had that went to number one on the dance chart.
Now think about all the classic Bee Gees dance songs you've heard.
This is the only one that topped the dance chart.
How about the fact that it was also included
on the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack?
And how about the fact that this is the first known chart topper
in which Barry Gibb uses his now trademark falsetto
in a lead vocal?
He'd previously only smattered it around in songs.
This time he sang it the whole way,
and this is groundbreaking
because that would become his signature vocal.
This was the song to do it.
Here's another mind blow for you.
Not only did Barry, Robin, and Maurice,
the Gibbs brothers, the Gibb brothers, I should say,
are on the track, the Gibbs brothers, the Gibb brothers, I should say, are on the track.
But a percussion on the track done by fellow folkster
Stephen Stills of Crosby Stills National.
Wow.
Friend of Neil Young, of course.
Yes.
From Buffalo Springfield.
So there you have it.
That's my first entry.
You should be dancing by the Bee Gees.
Stu, you really have to see this doc because they do a great job of explaining you know how he discovers he has this falsetto
and that transition because you're right everything before that but you don't hear the falsetto and
then everything i'm wondering i'm not sorry about that boy uh i gotta turn over my ham. I will say that it's possible.
Now, I don't know my timelines here,
but I know Mick Jagger may have been an influence on that.
I haven't seen the movie,
but I know that Mick Jagger was kind of singing in that falsetto thing,
and I don't know if that came after the movies or before,
so I'd love to sort of get to the bottom of that.
For sure.
Good choice.
In fact, it's so good,
I'm just going to roll right into mine here.
We're kind of cruising along here.
Is that song on Saturday Night Fever?
It is.
Yes, that is.
And Saturday Night Fever, of course,
is the biggest selling soundtrack
and one of the top five selling albums of all time.
Okay, more on that in a moment.
Well, there you go.
Is this the
Wyclef version or...
Hold your fire, Stu.
I'm not sure what the famous
disco song there is.
I think so.
My fam would never pick this.
Now, again, I was off the top.
I mentioned I'm too young to have lived this disco era.
I was in diapers, too.
I was a toddler.
I didn't know what was going on.
I did see Airplane,
but that's, yeah,
I revisited BJ's as well.
Is this in Airplane or Airplane 2?
Was there Airplane 2?
Yeah, like he has a flashback
and it's like
a Saturday Night Fever
disco dancing.
That is,
I think that's two.
I think that's two
where he has that.
Yeah, I think that's two
where they do this spoof
on Saturday Night Fever.
So, okay,
so many things to say.
When I think of disco, this is the first song I think of.
This is my, oh, that's the big disco song, Stayin' Alive.
And so when it came time to kick out our jams,
like I come up with my five first.
I see what you guys picked,
and then I usually have to give one or two away
because we have some dupes or whatever.
But I was pleased that I got to keep this one
because I think it's the definitive disco jam.
I think that's fair.
There was like a 90s remix of this.
I feel like it was like Entrance was the name of the artist.
Possibly.
Do you remember this?
I do remember.
It was like another rapper, not Wyclef,
like a different rapper that had like a rap take on this.
Yeah, like sort of a one-hit-wondery version of it.
Yes, yes.
It was like a CD single that you could buy at LA Music.
Stu mentioned that the soundtrack to this,
again, well-covered in this HBO doc on the VGs,
which everybody should source out and watch.
But the soundtrack included this jam as well.
There's a bunch of big hits on it.
And this song went to number one on the Billboard Hot 100,
and I think it spent four weeks at the number one spot.
This is just a monster, like, peak disco.
You know, you got that, you mentioned Saturday Night Fever is a big movie.
Bee Gees are top of the charts with these disco jams,
and everybody's having a good time and enjoying disco.
So it was a big time.
The cocaine is everywhere.
I'm sure it was.
I'm sure it was.
Good times for everybody because Bee Gees were Miami scene.
That was their scene.
There was a lot of coke in the Miami scene and elsewhere.
But I just want to segue quickly before this song ends,
before I do a quick, not fun fact,
what do we call them?
Mind blow.
I got to learn that term.
But in the doc, they do a great job of covering the Chicago DJ,
Steve Dahl, I believe his name was,
had this Disco Sucks promotion
between Doubleheader Games at Comiskey Park.
Yeah, Disco is dead. There was like a riot.
Right, so you bring your...
They set fire, they tried to stop the steal.
Disco Demolition Night.
Right, and the second game was postponed or forfeited or whatever they ended up doing because they couldn't play game two because of this riot after they had the fire.
doing because they couldn't play game two because of this riot after they had the fire now the problematic aspect of this of course was that disco was very popular with uh our singer uh black
artists and uh homosexual artists and it be this whole i almost think of that group that was storming
the capitol building a couple of weeks back this, this angry white mob kind of burning these disco albums into some of the
albums.
I don't know.
Hold on,
hold on,
hold on.
Let the man finish.
I'll mute you.
A lot of the albums that they were waving and burning weren't even disco.
They were just black artists.
Like it was just a catch all for non white guy music.
Yeah.
I go ahead, Kim. I was just going to say it wasn't until last summer where I think it was just a catch-all for non-white guy music yeah i i go ahead cam i was just gonna say
it wasn't until last summer where i think it was an anniversary of this that i i had never really
seen that take on this because obviously disco demolition night is sort of one of those very
sort of like you know you see like kind of like the sports illustrated like shitty vhs cassette
of like wacky moments in sports right um and you know there would be that the big bonfire towards second base uh probably
like ozzy gijan probably had to flee although it's probably before ozzy's time um but yeah now
re-examine through the lens of was this an attack on sort of, you know, kind of a thinly veiled hatred.
Right.
Because it caught up a lot of R&B acts of the time
that weren't disco acts.
And it really did seem, it had a tinge,
in my humble opinion,
because I saw that doc you're talking about
and then they revisited it again
in this HBO doc that came out.
It definitely has a tinge of homophobia and racism,
this whole white guy bonfire of homophobia and racism. This whole white
guy bonfire of all the disco albums.
Just the way it feels
having seen these retrospectives,
too. Yeah, I haven't seen
those yet, so I hope maybe my mind will change.
I hope that I'm wrong, but that does seem like a bit of a reach
without knowing, I guess, that perspective of
the story and only having known the Bible
that I read.
They seem to be more of a
playful thing that got out of hand with drunken people in a baseball game and uh you know it's
kind of funny to shit on disco at that point because you know just like you know things
passed grunge has its moment in the sun and then it passes and you know the next thing happens and
then dubstep and you know there's things that come and go with their moment and disco had out its time
and it sort of run its course and people were sort of ready to shit on it.
So disco depreciation seems to me more of just like a promotion that went afoul due to people having too much fun.
But maybe I'm wrong, and I hope that I'm not wrong because that would be quite disappointing to learn that it was like a racist thing because I never once thought of it like that.
So thank you for the education, if that's true.
But to me, that's always been taught like, you know, it was more of just like a promotion that got out of hand.
And, you know, drunk people acting silly and stupid and hating disco is kind of a funny sort of thing that turned into a bigger deal.
Now, it did effectively, you know,
that was around the time that did help and the disco era.
So this disco fad, if you will, dissipates.
And as you'll learn in this doc,
the Bee Gees are the band that seemed to be suffered the most because even
though the Bee Gees were a successful hit laden band before they ever,
you know, recorded a disco song,
they were so big in the disco era
that they got labeled a disco band
and they really struggled
for years after
disco died because they were a disco band.
I mean, call it struggling, but these guys made so much fucking money
the word struggling is very interesting
to use when describing some of the wealthiest
people on planet Earth.
Well, struggled relative speaking. Now, a quick mind blow
which everybody knows, but I'm just going to play a little mind blow.
Looka, looka, looka, looka, looka, looka, looka.
We got the refugees, all stars,
rubber dubbing in the club.
Y-Club, John.
John Forte.
Roswell.
I mean, the fun's still for that.
No, I mean, the streets are getting a little crazy. Give it a little moment. Looka, looka, looka, looka, looka, looka here. Looka shorty got back. So we won't spend too much time on this mind blow,
but of course Wyclef John had a big hit.
Can I say one other comment about Disco
Demolition Night I know it's not the same thing
but I was wondering if people would
I don't know if you guys know the song
Disco Sucks
by DOA the great
Canadian punk rock band
I know of it
and I know of the band but I couldn't
I was just wondering if someone would sort of take
that band and their notably left're notably left-wing singer joey shithead who's like a a member of
parliament or member of provincial parliament in bc uh like burnaby or something it's just like
is that song a problem now i don't know i know it doesn't sort of have the connotations of people
throwing all these perhaps michael jackson records, you know, Luther Vandross records.
Or Marvin Gaye records.
Yeah, but I don't know.
Food for thought.
Not the same thing.
We're going to kick out your jam.
I'm going to just, after we kind of talk about this jam, I'm going to bring in Ian to talk about what's coming soon to the live streams.
Only because I look over my right shoulder.
about what's coming soon to the live streams, only because I look over my right shoulder.
And I think that Wyclef Jean song got us caught by the music police
that are policing Facebook Live.
So I think they caught us with that one,
which is something we're going to rectify.
But we'll talk to Ian Service about that in a moment.
Here is Cam Gordon's second disco jam. Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah Don't leave me this way
I can't survive
I can't stay alive
Without your love.
Oh, baby, don't leave me this way.
No, I can't exist.
I'll surely miss your tender kiss.
Don't leave me this way.
Oh, baby, my heart is full of love and desire for you. Don't leave me this way.
Baby, my heart is full of love and desire for you.
Now come on down and do what you gotta do.
You started this fire down in my soul.
Now can't you see it's burning out of control?
Now that's a jam, Cam.
Yeah, that was a good one.
Good build towards that.
Sort of iconic chorus.
I feel like this is one of those songs,
I bet a lot of people hear it,
they could hear the first minute and say,
I don't know what this is,
and then you hear the chorus,
I'm like, that fucking song.
I think you're right. I think that's a hard-to-name tune
for some of those youngins.
I also think, though,
that the song is so well-written
that it could play well,
not even just as a disco song.
That could be a ballad.
That could be a rock song.
It's got really good chords.
It's got really good melody.
It's got good lyrics.
It's not like a clap and dance song, Kim.
I'm going to hop ahead to fun fact number four because it's very related to that.
So this song, so this is, of course, Don't leave me this way. The Thelma Houston version.
That's who we're hearing here.
So yeah,
this song was actually originally released in 1975 by Harold Melvin and the
blue notes featuring a young,
young ish,
Teddy Pendergrass on vocals.
So yeah,
the,
the original version of the song that came out.
I'd love to hear that.
Yeah.
Well,
I'm sure that they'll easy to find, but this, then this song came out. I'd love to hear that. Yeah, well, I'm sure that's easy to find.
But then this song came out a year later in December of 1976.
Massive hit, went like through the stratosphere.
Number one hit in the U.S., number four in Canada,
number one in both Belgium and South Africa.
There's a lot of range here.
I could be a big Belgium gem.
Yeah, for sure.
Now, a bit about Thelma from
Leland, Mississippi.
Now, you know who else grew up in Leland,
Mississippi and might have been around the same age.
Maybe went to school at Thelma.
Waylon Jennings.
Actually, no. This guy was probably older.
But someone that was sort of vaguely
alluded to earlier, Jim Henson.
Wow.
So there you go. and the only other famous person
i could find from there was johnny winter not really him him too um so yeah massive hit massive
disco song also this i think this song is kind of unique because this had a pretty good run in the
1980s and 1990s although perhaps for some unfortunate reasons as this song became a real anthem with the aids uh crisis was a song you'd
often see at fundraisers um according to the page yes was that uh i guess tom lasorda was
wasn't acknowledging this song he was probably not a fan well i know you know songs like i know
my friend bob Ouellette,
who you guys might know, he's an FOTM.
On Basement, yeah, of course.
He used to be a program director for Proud FM.
And jams like...
That's a fun station. I've had it on my dime.
Yeah, like It's Raining Men, for example, is an anthem.
Hallelujah.
It's an anthem. It's a gay pride anthem.
It's just an anthem. Never mind gay.
Who doesn't like when it's raining men? Well, it's also a gay pride anthem. It's a gay pride anthem. It's just an anthem. Never mind gay. Who doesn't like when it's raining men?
Well, it's also a gay pride anthem.
You know, you
seem to have this weird view of everything, Mike.
I seem to live in this other world. I know.
I feel like you're living in some
dream worlds, too. A gay anthem.
It's raining men. Hallelujah. It was just
for everybody. That's not to disrespect the
song. It's a gay anthem.
And it's a great song. I don't know. Is it? Yeah. Well, Cam, you can, I mean, clearly it's song it's a gay anthem and it's a great song yeah well cam
you were ruling you can i mean clearly that's it's raining men is a gay anthem we don't argue
with that right i would say it's raining men if a woman goes outside and she's uh feeling a little
frisky leave a famka would you not like it if it was raining men yeah remember jerry hallowell did
a cover of that and like yep i do she was like literally in the rain. Now, okay, I'm going to do
a bit of retention of the past
episode here. Now, who
was it? I mentioned this in a past episode
where we talked about the fine young cannibals.
Somebody sang
back up on their cover of Suspicious
Minds. Who was that?
Oh, I love these trivia
questions.
Someone actually tweeted about this. It was like Cambrio said, I never knew that.. I forget. Someone actually tweeted about this.
It was like Cambrio said, I never knew that.
I learned it.
So it was Jimmy Somerville from Bronski B,
who after Bronski B broke up, formed the Communards,
who by far their biggest hit was a cover of this song.
Also went to number one in Belgium, Ireland.
Belgium love their fucking disco.
They do. They're all fucking disco. That was 1986,
the Communards version of the song.
Belgium is not neutral about disco.
No. Not at all.
Not at all.
Waffles and disco.
Thelma Houston was not someone who had a lot of
other charting hits.
Any relation to Whitney or Sam?
No, just let me finish here, please
Now, the most recent time
Thelma Houston surfaced was actually earlier
this year when she sang backup
on a song called Bobby
Do You Think They Know
by Morrissey
of all people
and this came out on an album that Morrissey released
right around a year ago on January 10, 2000
an album
I sort of lost track of Morrissey I right around a year ago on January 10, 2000. An album...
I've sort of lost track of Morrissey.
I'm Not the Dog on a Chain.
The most recent Morrissey album
featured a track with Thelma Houston
singing backup.
Interesting. I did not follow
Morrissey close enough.
Not as big a hit as...
That was worth telling me to stop talking for.
That's true.
That was a good fun fact.
I like it.
Stu's feisty tonight.
I like it.
I really like Morrissey's new album.
No, you don't.
You have no idea what album Morrissey has released most recently.
Ian Service, we need to talk just briefly here about live video streaming.
Ridley Funeral Home.
Ridley Funeral Home are pillars of this community and great friends of the program.
So Ian, playing Wyclef Jean,
what's the formal name of that cover,
that version?
I don't know that.
Looka, looka, looka.
It's got like a long name,
like I Be Chillin' Saturday Night.
We Try to Stay Alive?
Yes, We Be Trying to Stay Alive,
I think it's called.
Ian, that song got us blocked on Facebook Live.
So the only people...
Why don't you stop the stream and restart it again?
I don't know.
I guess if I cared more, I could.
But here's what I'm more interested in.
I'm more interested in like a long-term solution
because I can't play this.
This is like whack-a-mole.
It doesn't work.
We're breaking rules and they're punishing us.
Ian, what's the update?
Is Periscope down already or is Periscope still working?
No, once they said we're done in March, dead to me.
You could still be using it right now until March.
No, and I have no interest.
So my brain has no interest in investing any efforts to a platform that has told us.
But until you have a solution, why not stick with what works?
To me, this is all part of the finding what works.
So we have a,
you know,
there,
there was some of this program that survived and then it was killed or
whatever.
Meanwhile,
I've had conversations of Ian service as recently as this afternoon,
a very exciting,
a very exciting update in the mic is yours.
What's coming soon to live at,
sorry,
I gotta get this right. live.torontomic.com
so as soon as we need to do a little bit of testing we've got a minimum viable product
right now uh live.torontomic.com and uh we can broadcast whatever we want. We've got our own pirate radio stage. Pirate video streaming.
You know, come and get us.
I feel like the Pirate Bay here.
Like, we've got some Russian server or something.
I don't know.
Don't ask, don't tell is my rule with Ian's service here.
So, we're going to do some testing, Ian.
And if all goes according to plan, next Thursday, we going live at uh live.torontomic.com
and the they won't be able to shut us down right ian no i didn't write the code to shut us down so
we're good fucking love this guy do you guys is that good news or what guys that's fantastic
it's fairly good news so fuck periscopeope. Sorry, Cam, we'll edit this
out of the program. Don't worry. But fuck Periscope.
Just get that in post. If I can do it,
maybe you can do it.
I hope they choke on their fleets.
That's all I'm going to say on that.
Wow, that's kind of taking
it to another level. You might want to suspend his account.
That's...
Donnie and I will be...
Verification. Are you ready for a deep cut? out. That's Donnie and I. He loses that verification.
Are you ready for a deep cut?
You guys ready for a deep cut? Say yeah.
I don't want to be verified. It's more punk to not be verified.
Yeah. Are you ready for a deep cut?
Say yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Alright, this is a fucking deep cut.
I mean, if you know what this is, then you're going to thank me.
And if you don't know what this is, then I'm putting you
onto some shit right here.
Let's roll the tape. Oh, baby. One thing about disco songs is they have long intros because they want you dancing, right?
So they've got lots of instrumental openings. Staying alive, staying alive. The stars on 35 keep on turning in your mind.
Like we can work it out.
Remember, twist and shout.
You'll still not tell me why.
And no reply.
All right.
This is incredible.
Okay, so there's actually like,
usually it goes into like a Jive Bunny
and the Master Mixers type of like medley
of knockoff singers singing like Beatles songs and ABBA songs and whatnot.
But this is actually the single version that was just the song, the Stars on 45 song, which was like the original disco medley cassettes and records that came out back in the day.
Stars on 45.
You could put that on and you got yourself a party ready to go. You just hit
play and it'll fucking just rock your
world. You should go out of your way to seek
out the Stars on 45.
Such a cool story behind
how the Stars
on 45 came to be,
Mike. It's really interesting.
So basically
it's a Dutch
act. Oh, like Liebe Funke.
Yes.
Let's start that.
They had like a nice little run where they were very popular in Europe, the United States, Australia, Canada.
Stars on 45.
This is kind of interesting, guys.
Basically, this guy went into the – I want to make sure I'm getting his name right.
Hold on here.
Stand by.
I just want to make sure I'm getting his name correctly.
Yeah, basically it's Jody Piper Hans Vermeulen and Albert West.
Basically, this guy named Jap Eggermont.
This guy named Jap Eggermont.
Basically, this came to be after William Van Kooten,
the managing director of the Dutch publishing company,
Red Bullet Productions.
Are you ready for this?
He visited a record store in Canada, Quebec, Canada.
You heard of Quebec?
I have.
He went into a record store and happened to hear a disco medley being played there.
The medley contained original recordings of songs by the Beatles, the Buggles, the Archies, and Madness,
as well as Funky Town and Heat Waves, Boogie Nights, etc., etc., etc.
The interesting thing was this guy was blown away by it and recognized that it was a bootleg that was being played. Right. Right.
Here's the cincher was that, you know, Venus,
which was originally a number one hit by a Dutch band called shocking blue.
Right. He himself held the worldwide copyright for that song.
He himself held the worldwide copyright for that song.
So knowing that neither he nor Red Bull Productions had ever given permission for the song to be used in this medley that he was hearing in the record shop in Quebec, Canada, he decided to bootleg the bootleg.
He bought himself a copy. He went back home, hired session musicians to re-record the other songs
and just copied the medley that he heard.
It's like a photocopy of a photocopy of a photocopy.
Like sound-alike musicians basically reproducing the song.
Yes, but sort of ripping off the other person
who had put out a very successful bootleg.
He just produced his own version of that exact same thing
using session players and sound
alikes to record the music.
And of course, he owned the rights for the Shocking Blues song, so he was able to use
that one.
And it became a huge, a huge mega success.
They did several versions of Stars on 45.
You know, like I said, there's a Beatles one.
There's definitely an ABBA one.
There's a disco one.
There's a pop rock, a rock and roll one.
And I would like to think the Jive Bunny and the Master Mixers is sort of like a, you know, what do you call it?
An homage?
The aftermath of something like this being successful.
An imitator?
One, two, three, four, five, six.
One, two, three, four, five, six. They put out six total records and they put out a ton of singles in one of them, the Beatles one that reached number one in like 25 countries. So how about that? Stars on 45. I feel like primarily you and I have talked about our mutual love of girl talk.
Yes.
And how, you know, that was sort of for a lot of folks very relevatory
when that came out, the idea of like a mashup,
which, you know, sort of the internet expression.
When really, I mean, it wasn't really a new thing.
There was this song, there was the aforementioned Jive Bunny.
I mean, sort of mushing songs together was not a new concept at all.
Right. No, you're right. Not a new concept. I was a big Jive Bunny fan, too. I've always dug this.
Come on, everybody! Come on, everybody!
Huge fan. Huge fan. I own the CD and I loved it very much. And absolutely. And again, Girl Talk. And again, I think Greg Gillis, that's his real name. He's got, I think, four albums, I think.
But the third and fourth particularly were
on high rotation for years in fact even here as we speak in 2021 it's it's what some of the rare
common ground monica and i have when it comes to music is uh girl talk so it finds a lot of time
here fantastic it's i always wonder i was meant to read if he just stopped making these because
of all the copyright i believe i mean that has to be the
reason right because he could never sell it obviously so he would give it away yeah i actually
have a i actually have a hard copy girl talk cd i think uh night ripper that's one of the right
yeah like that one actually have a cd of okay that's yeah so i thought they were just like
pirate downloads uh like here's the link and fill your boots.
I didn't even know there were any tangible physical media there,
but fantastic.
And feed the animals might be my favorite,
but there's just,
oh my God,
girl talk.
I could do a whole episode on it.
And fun to identify what songs you're hearing.
Cause it's so dense and layered.
Like it's not just like,
let's string together 10 songs.
There's like multi layers where you're like
okay there's like 50 songs there like let's try it's a great way to discover new songs oh yeah
cam as a fellow fan have you had this experience now because i have it where i might be hearing
something like salt and pepper push it i'll hear it in the wilderness and i will then add on like
smells like teen spirit to it like i will all those songs in my head belong together now,
even though they're songs I loved well before I heard Girl Talk.
So yeah, like I just will complete the Girl Talk part,
even though it's a different song.
Like Tiny Dancer and Notorious B.I.G. Juicy.
Good example.
But those, they just belong together.
So shout out to Greg Gillis of Girl Talk.
Great pick, Stars on 45.
That is kind of a little phenomenon, all those mashups.
Do you remember those?
You guys, am I the only one that was a Stars on 45 guy?
We never had them.
I was definitely aware.
I feel like this was something you'd buy at a gas station.
No, I don't think that's more.
Are you sure?
Because I thought that I-
Eventually, I'm talking about years after it would have been at the gas station.
I heard a podcast.
It was a very popular on-vote type thing.
Totally. I heard a podcast on this, which very popular on-vote type thing. Totally.
I heard a podcast on this,
which educated me to this,
because I didn't know anything about this,
but they kind of explained.
In fact, the legal name of these songs,
because they had to credit these artists,
is like apparently like the legal name of the song.
The world record for the longest song title
is the Stars on 45 single,
which included all of the titles of the songs
in the title of the song.
Right.
So there's some lawyer made that decision,
but a good choice there.
Great choice.
And I'm going to follow up my Bee Gees pick with another band.
I think belongs on the,
the Mount Rushmore of disco.
Here we go.
I feel like Nile Rodgers also did this.
Yeah, this is Sheep.
Oh, okay, yeah.
Two BGs, sorry, and two Sheep songs in the same.
We're only doing two rounds now.
So here, let's, because we already heard.
So it's funny that I, to me, it's funny that I played BGs right after you played BGs, Stu.
Stop stealing my mind blows.
Stop stealing my mind blows.
But then this chic, I'm playing this on the heels of Cam Gordon kicking out a chic jam.
So, so far, I haven't had any original material, but that will change. Iron Sheik.
Right.
So, good times.
Now, what you hear is not a test. I'm rapping. Okay, let's
get to that then. Fine, whatever. I want
to give the people what they want. Woo!
Woo! Thank you. What you hear is not a test. I'm rapping to the beat. And me, the groove, and my friends are going to try to move your feet.
You see, I am Wonder Mike, and I like to say hello.
Hello.
I'm to the black, to the white, the red, and the brown,
and the purple, and yellow.
But first, I got to bang, bang the boogie to the boogie.
Say, I'll jump the boogie to the bang, bang, bang.
Wow, okay.
This is Shabba Doof, who passed away, I think, last week.
I think he used to dance to this song.
For sure, for sure.
Sugar Hill Gang, this is Rapper's Delight,
built on the backbone of Sheik's Good Times.
The two now, just like those Girl Talk mashups,
I can't separate these jams anymore.
Like, if I hear Good Time somewhere,
I'm rapping Rapper's Delight
and I'm sure
I'm not alone
with that one here.
But I'm not kicking
out Rapper's Delight.
That's actually the mind blow,
but it's worth mentioning
that Rapper's Delight
peaked at,
and I'll give you guys
a chance to guess,
on the Billboard Hot 100,
the US Billboard Hot 100,
where do you think
Rapper's Delight peaked?
It should be number one, but I'm going to guess number 11.
What about you, Cameron?
Yeah, I'm going to go with Stu. He's always right.
Is he gone? I'm on a different screen.
No, no, I'm right here. Stu is usually right about these things.
Okay, Levi Fumka, do you have a guess?
Where do you think Rapper's Delight?
Five.
All right.
Unbelievable.
That was a pretty good answer, five.
But Stu's usually right on these things.
You do a good Cam Gordon impression there.
36.
I was going to say 36 as well. But remember, this was an early charting rap song.
So I think the charts.
I would imagine, though, that the lifespan of the song expands its
chart placement and in the year that it came out because it's sort of a timeless song that's still
sort of part of the everyday vernacular of pop culture you hear i mean this is a song that aged
very well all things considered maybe not lyrically but it's definitely still a slapper
you know juan hears it and he starts, you know,
there's a little bit of a tingle in his trousers.
Yeah, and again, early days of rap.
So it's one of those things where, yeah, of course,
I think it was suppressed because of this being a fendangled new genre
and people trying to figure out what to do with it.
And if I remember correctly, that chart, I'm trying to think,
that chart at the time was a combination of radio airplay
and sales of the physical sales of the single.
I believe, Wisebot will correct me later,
I did try to go live on Facebook again, as per your suggestion, Stu,
and I got booted again.
So it's a lost cause.
These episodes of Pandemic Friday episodes.
Why don't you just go on Periscope and just, like, bite the bullet?
You have until March.
It's like, what the hell, man?
You won't get kicked off.
Don't be a wimp.
Yeah, it's like you have fucking Twitter's head of comms here.
I'm okay with it.
Where did you go, Cam? You missed out your trivia
question there.
I missed snack.
Here, okay. So, Cam, do you want anything?
Do you want anything? Do you want anything?
Do you want anything?
I'm going to the store.
Can I get you anything?
I'm going to McDonald's.
What would you like?
I could go for some nachos.
Okay, I'm going to kick out your third jam, Mr. Gordon.
Do you have anything to say before I press play?
I'm curious how this will go over.
I'll just say that.
Certainly an interesting uh artist
stew's already like yeah no go go ahead mike
she's crazy like a fool
what about daddy Cool. She's crazy like a fool
What about daddy cool?
I'm crazy like a fool
What about Daddy Cool?
Daddy, Daddy Cool
Daddy, Daddy Cool
Okay, so what we're listening to is the track Daddy Cool by Boney M.
Now, what do you guys know about Boney M. Now,
what do you guys know about Boney M?
I feel like this is a band that
kind of everyone knows and nobody
knows anything about. Or is that
just me?
The big hit, of course, is Rasputin.
Sure.
Actually, just before you guys showed up on Zoom,
I was chatting with Lieve Fumpke about
this band, and I reminded her that at on Zoom, I was chatting with Lieve Fumpke about this band,
and I reminded her that at Christmas time,
you hear Mary's Boy Child all over the place.
It's a big Christmas jam from this band.
Yeah, and the Rivers of Babylon was another one of their big hits.
For years, I thought Rasputin was ABBA.
Again, am I the only one?
I didn't think that, but I can see why you thought that.
Boney M was a
band on Wikipedia called
a Euro-Caribbean vocal group
created by German record producer
Frank
Berrien.
Sold more than 80
million albums worldwide, like a real
sort of sensation.
And one of those bands,
you'd probably not know where they're from.
Like you might just say they're European.
Well, you hear steel drums in a lot of the Boney M catalog,
which makes you think they're from the Caribbean.
Yeah, yeah, but like a very unique sound.
This song is interesting because this was a massive
hit and I feel like
it didn't really have the shelf life of a lot of
other disco, like I don't think this is
would be in anyone's like, you know, name five
disco songs. I don't think Daddy Cool
would be in there, even though this is a big hit.
Number one in the following countries.
You might want to get comfortable because there's a lot
of them. Belgium?
Belgium's in there. Austria, France, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, countries you might want to get comfortable because there's a lot of them belgium belgium's
in there uh austria france norway spain sweden switzerland went to number six in the u.s number
18 in canada wait six on the billboard hot 100 that's right yeah that's impressive for this song
yeah now one fun fact about this song specifically um this song was actually supposed to be a B-side originally,
with the A-side being Bonium's cover of Bob Marley's No Woman, No Cry.
Speaking of songs covered by the Fugees, I believe.
Or is that Wycliffe's solo?
I feel like Fugees did a cover of that.
I think it's Fugees.
I think it's Fugees.
Yeah, but Farianian seeing that his own
song was the clear winner when testing both tracks in his discotheque in saint ingber
in germany mansion persuade the record company to have it his way they flipped it and daddy cool
shot up the charts in belgium and a bunch of other places with kevin n Nash's favorite song. Wow. Big Daddy Cool. That's right.
Now,
if you really want to get
nerdy with Boney M, this is one
of those bands...
Do we have an option?
No, you don't.
Now, I have mentioned
this on a past Toronto Mike episode.
I'm not sure if there's a pandemic prior.
I was once on a bicycle
going past Yonge-Dundas Square in the
summertime, and Boney M was
playing in Yonge-Dundas
Square, and I'm like, that's kind of incredible
because I think it was like Rasputin or like
Rivers of Babylon, like one of their big hits. I'm like,
what the fuck?
The band was playing live
at Yonge-Dundas Square. Yeah, and I think it
might have been pride weekend.
So that's why they were playing there,
but I,
I didn't realize they,
they still existed.
And then when I was doing research for this,
this is one of those bands.
There's like three different versions of Boney M touring at any one time,
all like very litigious and tied up in different naming stuff.
Right.
You know,
sort of one version might have like one nephew of an original member,
like one of the 12 piece.
It's kind of a brand at this point that kind of tours the world
under different configurations.
Right.
A lot of this is detailed on the Wikipedia page.
It is so confusing.
I can't even explain it.
But if anyone wants to go deeper with that, go to Wikipedia
and you can read more about the modern day Boney M.
Because I thought the guy from Boney M died like 10 years ago, maybe.
I don't know.
It feels like.
Yeah.
But it sounds like if you're going to catch when we're all inoculated and able to go see live music again.
Buyer beware if you're going to go see this band.
You got to make sure you know what
version you're getting well it is an interesting thought about sort of bands as brands like you
know why couldn't kiss tour forever just with different people playing it i mean they would not
it's kind of just like a thing they are they are doing that they've had like 47 farewell tours
yeah no but i'm saying with just different members
just keep on replaying.
The Trans-Siberian Orchestra.
Or like the Four Tops will do this.
You'll see the Four Tops are playing
Casino Rama. It's like no original members.
And I know when Leva Famke
double books herself, she's got another
Leva Famke that shows up
in the other Zoom, the Bob's Basement.
Sound alike.
I think it's a good choice. I mean, it's
not top of mind when I think
of, in fact, I would think of other
music by that exact band maybe
first, but this is, it's
definitely a disco jam and
I don't know. I like
that you bring, sometimes you bring the less obvious
jams to this. Well, I'll be honest, the Kevin
Nash Association was probably part of it subconsciously.
Okay.
Well, thank you, Mr. Gordon.
I'm now looking over at you, Stu.
Yeah, let's talk here.
Let's talk turkey here, guys.
What would you say is the sort of peak disco era?
Whenever Saturday Night Live was in the theaters. i'm looking for like years specific years 77 78 is what i want to say 76 to 78
sure sure sure and it was so popular that like it was hard to find anything that wasn't disco
at that point correct that's correct would that be fair to say yeah and later there'll be mind
blows from you that kind of bang that home.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
But before we get to that, this is sort of a precursor to that.
You know, Cam, I know you're a big movie guy.
Can you think of like what would be, you know, if I gave you three guesses as to, you know, where I'm going with this.
But what is the sort of the pop culture film phenomenon that would have been sort of number one on everybody's
brain uh during that same time period oh uh that would be uh you know every which way but loose
with an orangutan sure sure clarity ensues all an answer not what i was looking for
uh leave a fam could do you have a guess? Saturday Night Live or whatever.
Saturday Fever, you mean?
Fever, yes.
For sure.
I think you're getting at Star Wars.
I am getting at Star Wars.
The epic space adventure that we all love.
Right.
Even Star Wars got the disco treatment.
Roll the tape. Thank you. Now. That's terrible.
That was a very bad camcorder impression.
The artist MECO.
I don't know whether it's pronounced MECO or MECO,
but for the purposes of this, I'll go with MECO,
and I'm sure 1236 will correct me.
Am I right? MECO, we'll go with miko and i'm sure 1236 will correct me uh am i right miko he has by the way he has referenced this song on a recent backyard episode of the uh he would know whether
i'm saying it wrong but for the sake of this moving forward i'm just gonna go with miko
could be meco and if i'm wrong i apologize to mr domineco uh domineco domineco uh monardo Mr. Domenico, Domenico, Domenico, Monardo, the man known as Nico.
That's a good that's a good Irish name. That's a good Irish name.
He is an American record producer. And this is really funny.
His specialty sort of became space disco.
He was a huge fan of the film Star Wars, saw it on opening night.
By the time Saturday rolled around, he'd already seen it four times.
He was obsessed.
He pitched around to the labels, finally landed on the desk of Neil Bogart over at Casablanca Records.
Wow.
Neil Bogart's son, Evan Bogart, would go on to write such songs as S.O.S. with Rihanna later on in life.
But that's Humphrey Bogart's relation, right?
Could be.
Barry Bogart, Neil's sister, was at one point my agent and manager when I was a child actor living in Los Angeles.
So I've got a little bit of a connection to the Bogarts.
But Casablanca Records actually, once Star Wars became a huge hit, they were like, let's do it.
They were like, let's do it.
He got permission from John Williams to use the Star Wars song and created this Star Wars record called Star Wars and Other Galactic Funk.
It did very, very well, so much so that he ended up turning into a career.
His second album was Encounters of Every Kind,
which he used in Close Encounters of a Third Kind songs.
Then The Wizard of Oz.
Then Superman, which I'd love to hear.
Then Star Trek, The Black Hole.
American Werewolf in London.
Ewok Celebration, which may have actually been
in Return of the Jedi when they have that celebration song.
Wait, these are all disco versions?
These are all like disco versions of music.
The Empire Strikes Back, he did.
He like really worked the gimmick. He really worked the gimmick.
He worked the fucking gimmick. Good for him.
But this is the Star Wars disco, which
eventually there was a Star Wars
Christmas disco special
that aired that is
synonymously one of the most
beautiful, awful things ever made.
With Bea Arthur.
And one of the songs in it was,
what can you get a Wookiee for Christmas
when he already owns a comb?
Okay, we're talking about two different things, though,
because the one that George Lucas said,
we have to burn all copies and never play this again.
That's the holiday special with Bea Arthur.
But the one that has that Wookiee,
what do you get a Wookiee for Christmas
when he already owns a comb?
That's actually from a slightly more recent Star Wars Christmas special.
It's from 1980.
So I don't know what you referred as.
There's the famous,
the holiday special is infamous,
I suppose is the word I'm looking for because George Lucas wanted like every
copy of that damn thing burned.
This is from that special because 1980 would have been that special,
right?
Okay.
Only,
okay.
I am not.
Yeah. You've done your homework.
I'm just going to check out – I thought it was – yeah,
because Christmas in the Stars in 1980 has
what can you get a Wookiee for Christmas when he already owns a comb,
and I did not think that was actually from the holiday special.
Well, maybe it's not.
I don't know.
I can tell you, though, that he also did – I mentioned Star Trek.
Also, Raiders of the Lost Ark got the disco treatment. not i don't know i can tell you though that uh he also did uh i mentioned star trek uh also raiders
of the lost ark got the disco treatment so this guy has really uh done it all uh when it comes
to popular music uh soundtracks and turning them into sort of disco acts cam referenced uh bony
goes on the road with uh various incarnations of musicians making up the act. Same thing here with Miko or Meco.
I guess we'll find out.
At one point, it was a touring act where they
just put together three or four different
Miko's or Meco's and
did the planetary and world tour.
Everyone was none the wiser, I'm sure.
Everyone really knew what Miko looked like.
Yeah, so there you go.
The Star Wars disco.
I'm glad you chose this.
I'm glad because it's going to brilliantly segue into my jam when you're finished.
I bet this guy made like a shitload of money.
Like I bet this is like very, very lucrative.
He's got to share that writing credit with John Williams.
That's true.
Funny thing is that the Star Wars theme
and there was also a Creature Cantina band song
that was like the B-side.
That went to number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
Number one.
Wait, what went to number one on the Billboard Hot 100?
Star Wars.
The song we just played was number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
Number one.
That's crazy.
How about this?
We talk about this all the time, but I can't actually prove it at this moment.
What a buildup.
What a letdown.
That's a lunch bag letdown.
I had at one point in my notes how many albums it sold,
and I was going to do the old Sloan comparison,
but we'll save that for later.
Okay, you can come back to that,
because I'm going to kick out a jam that really is,
it's kind of perfectly timed to come after that Star Wars theme here.
But I am going to pause for a moment to just say that I'm drinking.
General Holmes? Well, I'm going to tell people what I'm just say that uh i'm drinking well i'm going to
tell people what i'm drinking first if that's okay i just want to let people know i'm drinking
burst it's now my go it's now my go-to great lakes uh fresh craft beers so more than hayes mama yeah
well the hayes mama i have two of those and i start to feel a little tipsy uh burst i have two
and i still feel fine so you know you gotta be very careful with those haze mamas.
It's the end of the world as we know it.
And I feel fine.
So shout out to Great Legs, wonderful sponsors.
Thank you, StickerU.com.
Noah Mintz loves StickerU.com.
I learned that on that episode.
So that was good.
I even had Andrew Witkin from StickerU listen
so we could hear that love from Noah Mintz.
I want to thank Ridley Funeral Home.
They actually just re-upped
for February, which I think is fantastic. They're very good people, Brad Jones especially. He's an
FOTM. And Barb Paluskiewicz, I just want people to know that she has a book she's going to give
you for free if you ask for it. Just email her, barb at cdntechnologies.com, and she'll send you a copy of her book it scams and i know uh i heard from at
least one fotm who took advantage of that offer and more should do it it helps the show and it's
and barb loves to share her wisdom with everybody okay i mentioned that the star wars theme uh stew
ran off a long list of songs i got the disco treatment. Here's my jam. I don not mistaken. Oh, maybe. Let me check
my notes. I don't know if it was on the soundtrack,
but it was in the film, I think.
I feel amateurish.
It was licensed.
It was on the soundtrack, I think.
Was it on the soundtrack?
I swear I remember
it in the movie. At the dance competition,
one of the acts danced to this.
What are we listening to?
Well, again, just like
John Williams got some writing credit
for those Star Wars disco jams
there. The great, you might
have heard of Ludwig von Beethoven?
Does that name ring a bell? Ludwig von...
Bit of a hack.
He gets a writing credit.
So, you know, I think
and I'm going to play my mind below later
as to what sort of led me to believe this,
but I believe this to be the greatest composition in Beethoven's lifetime
is his Symphony No. 5.
I mean, I'm more of a 4 guy, but I hear you.
4 is not bad, actually.
Coincidentally, I just heard, like,
apparently he's just celebrated his 250th birthday.
Yeah, I prefer the original trilogy.
But, you know, five's pretty good.
Yeah, it's like stuff on Matador Records.
So shout out.
Whatever.
IRS Records in shelf number six.
Right.
Oh, that was the Ashley Buchholz.
I noticed he was a little tougher on the record label than even Noah was.
But anyway, back to this.
Beethoven, hell of a composer.
Did you know, did you guys know he was, for most of his adult life, he was deaf?
Did you notice?
I mean, you can tell by the shitty music he composes.
No, just kidding.
Who's got the drum roll?
Okay.
So, yeah, imagine
not being able to hear your own compositions.
I think that's amazing.
Imagine not being able to hear your own podcast, Mike.
Would you be such a good podcaster?
Facebook won't let me see
our podcast.
Very Beethoven of them.
Shout out to Dale Cadeau, who was pissed off
that the man has shut down
our live stream. He was really
interested. You're like the Donald Trump of
podcasts. That's what he said.
He said, damn the man, affecting more
than even Trump.
He says more than Trump. By the way,
do you guys know what the first
Morrissey live album was called?
I do. What?
Morrissey live?
No, it was called Beethoven Was Deaf.
Wow, there you go.
Comes full circle.
But it was like D-E-F, like he was deaf.
Like deaf jam, yes.
So who made this Fifth Symphony,
who made the Fifth Symphony a disco jam
that went to number one
on the Billboard Hot 100 chart?
Went to number one.
I think that's incredible. this song went to number one.
It is a guy named Walter Murphy.
Yeah, of course.
Walter Murphy.
That is a good Irish name.
So Walter Murphy, and for people who have heard this recently,
I watched this series on, I don't even remember, FX I think it was on,
but it was called
mrs america this is a it was a big uh big mini series with high profile uh actors and actors
it was a big deal and this was the theme song to that mini series so i did hear quite a bit of this
song which is called by the way a fifth of beethoven that's the name of the song what was
that mini series about to have this song as the uh it was it was from the era movement and about a woman named uh patricia uh sheffley patricia was that
her first name but sheffley who uh was uh against era and how the republican party used her to
motivate your uh suburban moms throughout the country to get them to vote reagan in in 1980
and of course wow so it's quite the uh quite the interesting documentary actually yeah interesting suburban moms throughout the country to get them to vote Reagan in a 1980.
And of course,
wow.
So it's quite the,
uh, quite the interesting documentary actually.
Yeah.
Interesting choice of a theme song.
Yeah.
And I've also like,
like Saturday night fever.
I heard it pop up in other movies.
Whenever you need to have a disco moment,
this is a good jam to kind of throw in to give you the flavor of,
uh,
the 70s.
There was a rapper that actually sampled this,
a gentleman named A plus, did a rap over that.
Okay, well, here's what I think of
when I think of Beethoven's Fifth.
Yeah, well, that works too.
There you go.
Listen, buddy.
He's a bit of a... Let your back bone slide. The symphony is in
Let your backbone slide
Let your backbone slide
Let the rhythm rip while my lyrics leave your lips
I could just do that. Okay.
Go ahead.
Yeah. I know.
That's on Symphony in Effect.
The debut, the major debut of Maestro Fresh West.
Good FOTM.
Okay.
So there's another use of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony.
Kids, you got to source out Beethoven's Fifth.
It's a good one.
A little intermission here.
I'm just curious how I see Johnny Dovercourt's
coming on the show.
How did that come along?
I know he mentioned, I actually DM'd him after Noah gave him the shout out about his book.
He said, hey, you should listen to this, Johnny.
And then he tweeted it.
Good question.
I assume it all sort of snowballed out of that.
Yeah, definitely.
That was like a catalyst.
But he had been coming up in conversations with ben rainer all summer long
so ben made multiple visits to the backyard just like you two gentlemen and simpler times when you
were allowed i would say like multiple is uh not an accurate statement okay well how many visits
did you make to the tmds backyard studio about six countless countless sure you think we've only
been to your house six times in the backyard i feel
like it was am i wrong cam how many times did you come into that 15 20 or what do you mean um
i don't think i don't think so like i i'd say like between 9 and 12 okay that many okay so
i said about six it might be closer to 10 or so but okay you guys i loved seeing you in my backyard
it's not the same without you i my backyard. We'll be back soon.
Be back soon.
The minute Doug Ford says you're allowed to come back there,
I'm going to get you back there.
That's up to Dougie.
Again, one year anniversary of Pandemic Friday is coming up.
So maybe that will warrant a backyard visit.
March, as I recall, it was March 20th?
Actually, that's pretty sad, actually.
No, March.
March 13th, I think it was March 20th.
Am I right? Yeah, that sounds right, like 19th, 20th. Right after March. March 13th, I think it was March 20th. Am I right?
Yeah, that sounds right, like 19th,
20th, right after St. Patrick's.
Oh, yeah, because you know what? Funnily enough,
Pandemic Fridays used to be on Fridays.
Yeah, and also,
I would say that Rudy Gobert,
that was the same week.
That was the 12th, I think.
I know that was before. So the last day of school was the
13th, Friday the 13th, and I think Gobert was the 12th, I think. I have to go so the last day of school was the 13th Friday the 13th and I think Gobert
was the 12th
I think.
I have to go back
into the archives
but regardless
the great Ben Rayner
was in my backyard
this summer
a few times
and he would
reference Johnny Dovercourt
like they must be buds.
So it was a name
kind of in my head
as a guy I should
probably get on the show
I was thinking
it's time to get
this Johnny Dovercourt
on the show but he actually thinking it's time to get this Johnny Dover Kurt on the show.
But he actually reached out to me after
the episode with Noah Mintz.
So I'm like, let's just do
this, man. And I haven't
read his book yet. Have you read his book, Cam?
Yeah, I've got it upstairs.
It's on its way to me. He's
sending me a copy. Cam showing off with his
multi-level dwelling.
Wait, you have more than one floor, Cam?
That's pretty la-di-da.
I know.
It's very bougie.
I'm in a basement myself, so I know how you roll.
That's that CBC money.
Okay, stop it.
Now we won't go there, okay?
We won't go there.
They work hard for their money.
Public service.
Like Tina Turner says, work hard for the money.
Okay.
Is that Tina Turner or the Pointer Sisters?
That's the Pointer Sisters.
I'm confusing that with...
Careful, careful, mate.
I'm confusing that with Private Dancer.
I'm not touching that.
And Disco Queen, who's Levi Fumka's codename on here,
just wants to know why Stu's wearing a mask.
Stu, since people can't see us right now,
do you want to tell the people why you're wearing a mask?
Yeah, well, my mother is, I live currently with my mother,
and out of respect to her, she's now home.
So she's returned from her outing to get groceries.
And I'm being cautious towards her because I still am working during this pandemic.
And I'm leaving, I'm still working.
Okay, no, that's very courteous
because I would think you'd just become a pod
because you live together.
No, because, you know,
I am leaving quite regularly to work,
as you're aware.
So, you know, better to be safe, my friend,
especially with the news I shared at the top of the show.
Right.
You know, it's, you know, better to be safe.
Absolutely, Stu Stone. Couldn't have said that better myself. Let's be safe out safe. Absolutely, Stu Stone.
Couldn't have said that better myself.
Let's be safe out there.
Also, to answer her second question,
there's a pandemic,
so that's why we're wearing masks.
That's not for fashion purposes
or some Michael Jackson.
Speaking of Michael Jackson, though.
No, because it's Cam's turn.
But hold that thought. This better be an Ann Marie Disco song, Cam. It's a big turn. But hold that thought.
This better be an Anne-Marie Disco song, Cam.
It's a big one.
You ready to dance?
Yeah.
Oh, hell yeah.
Am I crazy?
Or is another now Roger's song?
Look up there in a second. We'll lay back and relax While I pull away the dishes
And you and me can walk about
You can ring my bell
You can ring my bell
ring my bell
you can ring my bell
okay ring my bell
by uh
I always thought I'd call her Anita Bell
but that's not her name
oh my god Anita Ward
Anita Ward massive hit from the year 1979 shout out to
the smashing pumpkins number one in many countries usa united states of america canada the united
kingdoms spain norway and new zealand uh tbd if it went to number one in and not in belgium the top
five in belgium um when i wonder we never really heard much else from anita ward the only other
song she had that charted was the follow-up to this something called don't drop my love that
went sort of mid-range in the billboard hot 100 and then kind of fell off the face of the
earth with a surface periodically throughout the years wikipedia has a few uh instances of
anita ward surfacing namely uh she performed in new year's eve uh new york times square in 2002
uh also in years even to that someone's Someone's going through updating Wikipedia about all the places
the Neat Award is performed on New Year's Eve.
In
New Orleans on Beale Street
on New Year's Eve.
She could have a good career with this. If this one
song, she could have a pretty good career.
Totally. I feel like this song has been
in a lot of commercials too, so
probably a big publishing hit.
This sounds fun. i wish i was
at this event um you guys probably remember the the fis uh world cup slalom race in croatia back
in 2006 right of course i watched it yes i watched it live i actually was uh a big uh i lost money on
that a big slalom guy i'm a big slalom guy. You had action on it.
I had action on it, yeah.
As part of that great moment in sports history,
right up there with the Kawhi Leonard shot
and the Joe Carter walk-up home run,
there was a big disco concert as part of that ski race
that featured, amongst other artists,
a lot of people we've heard today,
Chic, the Village People, Thelma Houston,
Rose Royce, I don't know
who that is. Car Wash, the Car Wash
people. Come on, man. Oh, is that? Okay.
Sorry, I take it back.
Anyway, Anita Ward was
that, that was in 2006.
Yeah, sort of just
from what I can tell, largely a civilian,
if she's even with us anymore. Anita Ward,
but man, you're going to be a one-on-wonder.
Why not do a number one smash?
And she was very, very young
when she did this.
On that note,
I did read an article years ago
about the guy who wrote
Spirit in the Sky,
Noah Greenbaum or something like that.
Greenbaum, yes.
And the article is just about
how he had this one hit,
one big song,
and how he's managed
to basically live off that one song
for the rest of his life.
Like he lives off of Spirit in the Sky.
Anita Ward didn't need to be named Anita another hit.
Great.
Do you remember if there was a new one?
She's still alive, everyone.
We have breaking news.
Anita Ward is still with us as of this moment.
How old is she?
Let's guess.
64?
64.
I ruined it.
I didn't know you were going to guess.
81. 64.
I was going to say,
she was a mere child
when the song came out.
That's a Beatles song as well, right? 64?
Yes. Will You Still Need Me?
Will You Still... Yeah, whatever.
That's a big Beatles song. I can't remember how that goes,
but when I'm 64.
Great Choice. That's a popular... That one reminds me of sort of like it's Raining Men.
Like I don't, like it's just one of those iconic disco jams that have lasted through the years.
And one of those songs, nobody would ever misname what this song is called.
Like everyone knows, like it's literally the chorus is just ring my bell.
You can ring my bell.
You can ring my bell.
Also, do you guys know what ring my bell you can ring my bell you can ring my bell um also do you
guys know what ring my bell means i'm gonna guess this has something to do with sex according to the
urban dictionary it's to climax a woman to give a woman pleasure and that the little description
is there you recommend my bell ring my bell ring my bell ding dong ding ah wow it by baby baby babe on the urban dictionary it's a woman empowerment jam like
this to me is a an era jam like oh it's it's great and i also like the song because it gets
right in there you know yeah right in there right away you know what this song is and it just it
slaps it's a. It's a winner.
It's a bop.
It's a bop.
Now, Stu, before you realized it was Cam's turn,
you were going to tell us a story about MJ. I was.
I was.
This is going to be really cool, man.
But Michael Jackson, of course, the king of music videos.
We can agree on that, right?
I agree.
Of course.
Yeah.
Yeah. Leave a thumb cut. just cough once if you agree.
That black and white video was something when those faces morphed into each other.
Wow.
What if I was to tell you boys something very exciting, that Michael Jackson's very first musical video debut took place during the disco era.
Oh.
Yeah.
Would that blow your mind?
That's not, I mean, an actual video, because there's no MTV yet.
So where does it air?
Well, people made music videos back in the day,
and they just aired as short-form music videos.
I guess there was maybe video programs.
There was still a video countdown.
When does Toronto Rocks debut?
I'm just curious.
I'm not sure when that debut, but I think they still played music videos.
They're just watching the channel that played it 24 hours a day until MTV, right?
So there was still a place in the world for music videos, right?
Right.
Because there were videos that existed before MTV.
Right, like Bohemian Rhapsody, for example.
Sure.
And this would be another example of that.
Let's play it, shall we? My baby's always dancing, it wouldn't be a bad thing, but I don't get no loving, and that's no lie. We spent the night in Frisco, at every kind of disco, from that night I kissed our love goodbye.
Moonlight, don't blame it on the good times.
Blame it on the boogie.
Don't blame it on the sunshine.
Don't blame it on the moonlight.
Don't blame it on the good times.
Blame it on the boogie.
That's a jam.
What a great song.
Jackson's, you know, of course, they went heavy into the disco after the success of this song.
Sort of introduced them into the disco world and a lot of artists were and i think maybe one day we will do a you know a rockers who jumped
on the disco train uh but you know the jacksons were certainly an established act pre-disco
and sort of managed to surf the disco wave all the way through successfully made it out on the
other side michael at least anyway uh you know and this one had, you know, they had Dancing Machine.
They had a bunch of them.
But Blame It On The Boogie is, you know,
a really big song, a great song that's still to this day.
If there was not a pandemic and there was, you know,
celebrations, simchas, weddings,
Liva Famke had a house party.
You could hit play on this song
and the party would get going.
It's a timeless sort of track that sort of supersedes the death of disco,
the night where allegedly racism prevailed and disco died.
And homophobia, don't forget that.
Homophobia as well.
But apparently that did not affect this song because this song is still beloved
by all people.
I would argue that all of Michael Jackson is now problematic.
Well, yeah, you could say that allegedly, you know, never convicted.
I'm not taking that stand.
Don't worry.
I'm a reasonable person.
But listen, we don't have to hurt the other brothers.
They didn't do anything wrong.
So shout out to Tito, Randy, Jermaine, Tyler, Frank, Al,
the rest of the Jacksons who were involved in the song.
But are you ready to have your mind blown, guys?
Yes, but first, can we confirm something?
Because you keep talking about the Jackson 5.
But am I wrong?
Isn't this a Michael Jackson solo song?
No, this is the Jacksons.
This is like where all six of them came together
for a brief period of time.
Randy and Jermaine and Tito and Marlon.
See, today I learned.
I just thought this was a Michael Jackson solo effort.
No, no, no.
This is certainly a Jackson 5, Jackson 6 kind of song.
The Jacksons also had another album
after Michael had his Off the Wall.
They released it with Can You Feel It?
Can you feel it?
All the people in the
You know that song?
You don't know Can You Feel It?
I don't think so.
You know it.
Can you feel the love tonight?
No, no, no.
Mike, maybe while I'm playing my mind blow,
you can find Can You Feel It and just fast forward through it
just so these guys can know that they know it.
Are you ready to have your mind blown?
I actually put this up there with Shad Day was the name of the band
type of a mind blow.
And I'll tell you why in a second.
Spin this mind blow, Mike,
and then people are going to get their mind blown. bad thing but i don't get no loving that's no lie spent the night in frisco went to every kind of
disco from that night i kissed i love goodbye don't blame it on the sunshine don't blame it
on the moonlight don't blame it on the good time blame it on the boogie don't blame it on the
sunshine are you ready to have...
First of all, that blows my mind
because I didn't even know this existed.
But Blame It on the Boogie by the Jacksons
was in fact a cover
of a song that was released
a week or two prior.
A week or two prior.
Not a year.
A week or two prior.
And wait till I tell you the name of the artist.
Are you ready for this?
Yeah. Now, you guys know
this song famously sung by
Michael Jackson, right? Mike Jackson?
Mike Jackson, yeah. What if I was to
tell you that the original version
is recorded and successfully
at that it did chart?
Are you ready for this? The guy's
name is Mick Jackson.
Mick? The is Mick Jackson. Mick.
The great Mick Jackson.
Credited as Michael George Jackson.
That's an amazing coincidence, and that is a mind blow.
That's a mind blow.
The guy who wrote the song is Michael Jackson,
but a different Michael Jackson who went by Mick Jackson,
and it's a white guy.
That's a hell of a mind blow, but here's something else interesting.
Do you know who, because Mick Jackson wrote this this song right did mike did mick mick jacks mick
jackson wrote this song i believe so okay yes so mick jackson wrote the song do you know who he
wrote it for stevie wonder correct but stevie didn't take it so he just put it out right and
the label was like wow this is a pretty big banger. Michael heard it, and he was like, we could do that.
And so they made it more of a disco jam.
And even admittedly, you know, Mick Jackson himself said that Blame It on the Boogie,
his original version, had 100% of his heart and soul in it,
but the Jackson's version had that magic extra 2% that made it incredible.
That's a rare take where, like like the original is saying that the cover
is better than mine.
You know,
and obviously he made
a shitload of money
off Michael's success
with the song.
Pretty,
pretty crazy guys.
So Mick Jagger,
Mick,
I almost Mick Jagger.
It's almost like
a Saturday Night Live sketch.
Mick Jackson
is the original singer
and,
and let's face it. That sounds made up. It does, doesn't it? Let's face it. Saturday Night Live sketch. Mick Jackson is the original singer.
That sounds made up.
It does, doesn't it?
He's only going by Mick Jackson because his name is Michael Jackson.
He's had to change it.
You can't put out music as Michael Jackson.
There is a Michael Jackson.
He probably goes by Mick Jackson because
Mike and Michael and Mikey, that's all the guy
from the Jackson 5. ABC, 123, all that jazz.
So it's kind of wild that the hit is by the Jacksons, which I'm sorry, you're right.
Of course, it's the Jacksons.
I thought it was Michael Jackson's solo, but it's the Jacksons.
Thank you for educating me.
This is a mind blow.
Yeah, it is a big one.
And, you know, I invented the mind blow on this program.
And so I'm expected to continue to blow minds.
As I alluded to
earlier michael jackson in his 1993 biography uh it states uh that this video like i said marked
his video debut uh so the song has a lot of importance much like the bg song that i played
sort of helped sort of catapult them change their careers michael jackson was able to sort of see
the power of the music video and you know he made a lot of music videos after that.
And, you know, they were all pretty incredible.
Did you end up finding Can You Feel It by the Jacksons?
I would love to.
Well, I didn't look for it, but I'll do it now.
I would love for you to find that because I know that these guys have heard the song before.
And they just need to be reminded.
Right.
Okay.
I'm pulling it up right now.
Here we go.
Let's hear this.
Can you feel it?
Can you feel it?
Can you feel it?
Oh, the People's Court theme, of course. I don't know it.
I'm with Cam. I'm bringing her down. I don't know this song.
Well, maybe a little bit. That seems familiar to me. That whole, can you feel it part.
Yeah. You should look up the music video. It's like way ahead of its time. But we'll move on.
That's Michael Jackson or that's... That's the Jacksons.
Yeah, that's the Jacksons.
Michael does sing.
Yes, he's on the track.
That's Michael and Mick.
Nothing to do with Mick.
Randy's on there though.
Randy Jackson.
It would be the equivalent of like if Cam Gordon released this really great song
only to find out that it was actually originally performed by Kim Gordon.
Guys, it's been a lack of...
Which did happen.
Which did happen.
There's been a disappointing lack of controversy tonight.
It feels like we've all picked these
pretty great disco jams for Disco Night.
Oh, I have a feeling you're about to fuck that up.
Well, I'll say this.
Like, that track that Stu just picked,
I feel like that was the first track by an artist or a series
of artists who isn't primarily a disco
artist like Bee Gees would probably be the
next closest
but a lot of sort of when it wonders are strictly
disco artists
per se well let me
tell you just like
with the Yacht Rock episodes so I didn't you, I didn't know a lot of Yacht Rock.
So I had to kind of learn the difference between like Yacht Rock and just like a slow jam from like the late 70s or early 80s.
Like where is it a Yacht Rock song versus just like a slow rock song or whatever, soft rock.
Slow rock.
Yeah, right.
Doc Rock.
I love a good slow rock.
Slow rock.
I think like the difference between a disco song and a regular song is that a disco song makes one dance.
Well, okay.
So here's...
One dance is a disco song.
I agree with you.
But I was struggling all week with the difference between disco and funk.
Okay?
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
I really struggled with it.
There's a big difference.
Funk is like James Brown and disco is, is more like cocaine,
a nightclub.
Well,
it's like ABBA is ABBA disco.
Yes.
ABBA is a disco.
Okay.
Well,
let me play this jam because I would prior to this week,
I would just consider this like a funk song,
but I heard it again through my disco ears.
And I think it could be a disco song.
So I'm going to play it.
So you guys can shit on me
for picking a funk song and not disco,
and then we can talk about the differences.
Here's my penultimate jam.
Borderline, but we'll give it to you. Now, yeah, hey
Yeah, once I was a boogie singer
The heroine only did not go for only one song tonight, and that's one of Sam's.
So let's keep going.
I've never had no problems
Let's get him to the chorus here first.
I'm running down the one-night stands With everything around me Let's get him to the chorus here first.
He just said disco, bro. Yeah, they were dancing and singing
and moving to the moving.
And just when it hit me,
somebody turned around and shouted,
play that fucking music, white boy.
Play that fucking music right.
Play that fucking music Why boy
Play down the boogie
Okay talk to me Stu
Well it has the word boogie in it
And it has the word disco in it
So those are two sort of key sort of flags
That are good but I think like generally
Speaking the era of that
Period that we're speaking of there was like
Disco techs so to speak
Places where people would go to do drugs, dance,
and hook up with same-sex partners.
Discotheques.
A U2 song.
Yeah.
And if a song was popular in the discotheques, then it was disco,
I would say.
And I think any song that sort of gets the dance floor going
during that period could be arguably considered disco.
So this song would have been a song that, you know, arguably considered disco. So this song
would have been a song that, you know, when I
used to go to the discotheque in 76,
77, they would play this song
and I would be fucking boogieing, you know?
So it is from...
It's probably more of a funk
song or a soul song or a blue-eyed
soul, maybe you want to call it.
Go ahead, Cam.
Sorry, this is Casey and the Sunshine Band?
No. This is
Wild Cherry.
So Wild Cherry, they're...
Yeah, that's right.
This is Don Cherry's other son there.
This is a Cleveland-based band,
and this came out in April
1976, and...
Sort of before the disco era, maybe, but
right kind of in the sweet
spot of the overlap.
Like it sort of was a hit that stayed
throughout disco maybe. And it hit
I believe it hit number
four on the... Actually
you know what? Sorry. That's my mind blow
that hit number four.
My apologies. This actually hit
number one
on the Billboard Hot 100 in
1976.
Imagine Jimi Hendrix playing the guitar.
No, he's long gone by here.
But I'm going to play the Mind Blow now just to address the gorilla in the room here.
Obviously, there's a song we need to play now. Go Ninja, Go Ninja, Go!
Alright, Go Ninja, Go Ninja, Go!
All the way to Pizza Hut to get one of my picks.
Coming out of their shells.
Ringing a bell like Anita Ward.
Okay, I won't torture everybody too much here,
but here is a...
He performed this live at the Trump Mar-a-Lago New Year's party.
I believe that because this is his second biggest hit.
This is Vanilla Ice's second biggest hit biggest hit of course after a little song called
stop that train i want to get out okay well that album is called to the extreme rock a mic like a
vandal yeah uh ice ice baby of course we're talking about which is a whole yeah we he changed
he changed he changed it okay it was a little different from the David Bowie Queen.
Okay, so this version did peak at number four.
I find that amazing that this hit number four.
Robert Van Winkle.
He was hot in 1990.
He was sexy, man.
Never mind hot.
No one was hotter than Vanilla Ice in 1990.
So sexy.
He had the dance moves.
He had that cleft chin.
He was one of the first artists to
headline a concert at the Sky
Dome. Though technically
co-headlined. He did a joint tour
with MC Hammer. I remember this.
I remember watching
Arsenio Hall because I used to watch a lot of Arsenio
Hall back then and they came on.
I can't remember. They might have come on together to promote that
tour, I think. But Arsenio wasn't pleasant with Vanilla Ice.
He sort of called him out for being a fraud, right?
Possibly.
I can't remember now, but that wouldn't shock me.
Because he pretended he was from the mean streets of Dallas,
and then it was revealed, I believe,
that he had a pretty comfortable suburban upbringing.
And he was famously
dangled over the...
I'm going to try this.
I'm going to try not to...
That's right.
Sudge Knight.
No! Wow, you got it.
I don't think it's Sudge Knight.
It's definitely Sudge Knight. It's not Sooch.
I think it normally goes Sooch.
No, it is Sooch. You got it right again. It's not Suge. I think I normally go Suge. No, it is Suge. You got it right again.
It's not Sudge.
It's not Sudge.
But I thought you were going to like...
Definitely neither of those.
Suge.
Suge Knight.
Suge Knight.
That's right.
And it's K'Night.
Okay.
Everyone knows you pronounce the K in Knight.
K'Night.
That's right.
So, okay.
Suge Knight.
Big cover...
It's actually pronounced Suge.
Like Sade.
That's exactly
right
anyway
this was also
a big hit
as I mentioned
hitting number
four
number four
which is
pretty big
fucking deal
and yeah
I thought it was
about time
we kicked out
some Vanilla Ice
I will say
that if we ever
kick out
what we think
might be the
worst songs
of all time
I won't spoil it
but there is a song
on To The Extreme which is the album that this is on that I consider to might be the worst songs of all time. I won't spoil it, but there is a song on to the extreme,
which is the album that this is on that I considered to be possibly the
worst song of ever.
So there's a little,
what is it?
It's called.
I love you.
I love you too,
but what's the song called?
Who's on first.
Okay.
Final jam time.
Are you ready?
Cam?
Final jam.
Cam, are you going to sing?
You want me just to kick it and then you talk about it?
Yeah, just kick it.
Okay, let's kick it. For a steer, it ran one step ahead, as we followed in the dance.
The carpet's part is melting in the dark.
All the dinosaurs
blowing down
Someone left the chaos
in the rain
I almost kicked this out last week,
but not this version, obviously.
I don't think that I can take it
Cause it took so long to make it
Who did, what celebrity did a version of this?
The famous version of this song
Is not Donna Summer
Which we're listening to right now
It is MacArthur Park
It's
Who
Fuck
I should probably know this
Because I got
Yeah do you have those notes?
He's
The actor he's dead
But he was the father I believe
Of the guy who played
The king In the crown So the father, I believe, of the guy who played the king in The Crown.
So the father of Queen Elizabeth in The Crown, that guy.
He's from Mad Men.
Who's the actor in Mad Men?
And I won't spoil it, but had a, you know.
Oh.
The father of his, an Irish, famous Irish actor.
Sean Connery.
Richard.
Sutherland.
I'm going to just Google it
Fuck it I'm going to Google it
Here it is
But I almost kicked this out
As a popular song by a actor
Okay
Well of course
Richard Harris
Richard Harris
Richard Harris
Who is he in Mad Men?
Richard Chang
No his son is in Mad Men
His son
Richard Harris' son
So here
Let's get these facts right,
and then we'll hear your fun facts about this song.
Richard Harris' son is Jared Harris.
Jared Harris was fantastic in Mad Men
because he played the role of Lane Price.
Oh, okay.
So Lane Price's dad recorded MacArthur Park and had a hit wow okay that that's
a fun fact and lane price i think hung himself oh i was actually purposely not spilling that
because i thought it was a spoiler but yeah there's a it's quite that's quite the series
by the way if you're out there and you haven't watched mad men it's fucking brilliant you should
watch it i'm so that's actually a show i've seen. I'm very familiar with it. Anyway, the name of the song,
MacArthur Park.
He's piping in the dark.
Yeah, named after Scott MacArthur.
September 1978.
FOTM Scott MacArthur.
Scott Hughes.
Shit stains.
This version, this is a cover.
Donna Summer, we've talked about
on past episodes episodes sort of really
when you think of the disco queen i know leaf gay famka has that as your display name um if anyone
was gonna take that uh crown or tiara as it were probably would be donna summer i still give it to
fam you know what i hear you i agree 100 and i was hoping she wouldn't be hansen because she is the
queen of disco. Absolutely.
And, you know, similar to my picks from Boney M.
You're like Gloria Gaynor, I Will Survive.
Is that a disco jam?
Isn't that like sort of? Yeah, but I would say Donna Summer's string of hits in the peak of disco,
like it's unprecedented.
And I don't think she got the credit she deserved, actually.
This was one of many.
So this was a massive hit.
This covered number one in the U.S., number one in Canada, top ten in the U.K., Ireland, and the Netherlands.
Now, who wrote this song?
A guy named Jimmy Webb.
Jimmy Webb.
But the original recording is Richard Harris.
That is correct.
Dick Harris, as his friends call him.
Good Irishman.
There was also a version by Waylon Jennings.
Yes, that's the one I'm familiar with.
Who he kicked out because he did the theme song to
the Dukes of Hazzard. That's right.
Absolutely.
Just a good old boy.
Meaning no harm.
So a lot of range in this song.
Problematic game, by the way.
Oh, because of the Dixie
flag. Yeah, terrible flag flag Just a good old boy
Fuck that flag but that song is great
Yeah now Stu
Sort of let the rat out of the bag
With the
I wouldn't call this a mind blow
Because I think those of us of a certain age
Will remember this 90s interpretation
Of this song
Now I'm being chased by some irate
velociraptors.
Well, believe me,
this has been one lousy day.
Well done, Cam.
I still love this Weird Al parody.
Jurassic Park is frightening in the dark.
All the dinosaurs are running wild.
Well done.
Yeah, so just as a quick fun fact about this,
this is Jurassic Park by Weird Al.
This song actually went to number five on the Billboard charts.
Really?
That's not true.
Wait, the Billboard Hot 100?
There's no way that's true.
Let me strike that.
What's your source on this?
A notepad on my computer.
Fun fact about Jimmy Webb and this song.
Jimmy Webb had, Weird Al had the full blessing of Jimmy Webb,
who thought it was great, hilarious, fun for the whole family.
To the extent that when Weird Al
around the time this came out was playing
concerts in both New York and Los Angeles,
he actually brought Jimmy
Webb out to perform an acoustic version
of MacArthur Park who
would sort of like come muddle his way
through it and flub and then
Weird Al would come on stage and they
break into the Jurassic Park version.
So there you go.
So generations coming together.
Love it.
Just like David Bowie and White Christmas, Big Crosby Man.
Big Crosby.
Exactly the same.
And I don't know about you guys.
I learned about this song first from Jurassic Park version.
I had never heard this song.
So 100% true for me as well. I heard
the Jurassic Park and then discovered the Richard Harris
but I did not hear Richard Harris' first.
Okay, yeah.
I feel like I probably went to the Jurassic Park.
I never knew about Donna Summer until I heard
and I avoided most disco
stuff in my defense.
Basically, I heard a podcast about the dominance
of the queen of disco in this era
and I started hearing all the songs and how many great hits she had.
And then that's when I learned that she had covered this song.
Oh, like a slew.
And we've talked about her before.
So similar to Nile Rodgers, I didn't feel like we need to belabor her bio.
But a legend.
Like a legit legend.
Well, do you want to name check?
I'll do it if you don't want to do it.
But do you want to name check some of the big hits?
Like I Feel Love.
I Feel Love.
Hot stuff.
A lot of stuff she did with Giorgio
Moroder, who I don't think we've mentioned.
Who produced a lot of disco tracks.
No, it's a bit of a blind spot for me, to be
quite honest.
I'm trying to remember what else she said.
She's such a legend.
I Feel Love is a big one.
Here, what would be a big one?
Love to love you, baby.
Love to love you.
That was a big one.
She was the greatest disco queen ever.
She had all the biggest hits.
Her songs include I Don't Remember.
No, honestly, she is the queen of disco.
I think that's just like we call Michael Jackson the king of pop. Without a doubt, Donna Summer is the queen of disco like i think that's like just like we call uh uh michael jackson the king of pop without a doubt donna summer is the uh king of queen of queen of disco
do you guys remember the film what's love got to do with it of course
uh with tina turner anime i told you anime i made you i can break you
anime you know the movie i'm speaking of are you guys there you guys there? Yeah, we're just... You don't know?
You mentioned Last Dance
and MacArthur Park,
Hot Stuff,
Bad Girls.
I don't know.
Can you guys hear me?
Yeah, go ahead.
Sorry.
Do you remember
there was like a
Donna Summer thing in there?
Like Tina Turner was like
trying to make her comeback
and like Donna Summer
was the hot act
and they were like,
you'll never do it, Tina.
You can't.
You don't have the hits
like Donna does.
Right.
And then she did, what's love got to do with it?
And blew Donna Summer out of the water.
Right.
Although I will say Donna Summer was a rare disco artist that also had a lot of big hits in the 80s too.
Yeah, she's great.
Donna Summer is very, very good.
And I know that, you know, Cam and I have done lots of drugs.
She works hard for the money.
Yeah.
She does.
There you go.
So well done.
We would have had to throw in this disco episode in the garbage
if we didn't have any Donna Summer on it.
So thank you so much.
I totally agree.
But there's another artist I didn't want to get a hand sent in.
I think we're going to hear this artist next,
but I want to hear Stu's intro.
I'm going to just
preface this song
by saying
freak out
freak out
oh yeah
I hope I have the right version
actually
I think it might be like a
they must have remade it, but it is the song.
Maybe it was modernized.
Yeah, you better stop this and get us the real version, Mike, because it's a disgrace.
Oh, hold on.
Yeah, please turn this off, and I'll go back to my impression.
Well, it's going to turn into your song. Hold on.
No, it won't. It sounds like a really... a real fuck-up.
Okay, I'm fixing it. I'm fixing it. I'm fixing it. Okay sounds like a real fuck up. Okay, I'm fixing it.
I'm fixing it.
Okay, the 1978 version coming up.
Oh, yeah.
Let me tell you something, Elizabeth.
All right, here we go.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah. We love you. We love you. We love you. We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you.
We love you. Are you fucking with us?
This is their live version from the MDA telethon in 1979. The morning's go, man, go. Workouts in the health bar, muscles flow.
You can best believe that he's a macho man.
That he took it down with anyone he can.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
Macho, macho man.
Macho man, yeah.
I've got to be a macho man.
I've got to be a macho man I've got to be a macho, macho man
I've got to be a macho
All right, what we're listening to here is the Village People.
The song is called Randy Savage, the Macho Man.
Village People, Macho Man.
I could have gone with YMCA, but I feel like that song sort of got trumped. And Macho Man I could have gone with YMCA but I feel like that song sort of got trumped
and Macho Man
But this song was trumped too
It was, but not as much
I mean, trumped as in like this was
Trump, you know
YMCA was at every MAGA rally
Right, but we heard this in the background
while they were storming the Capitol there
Sure, sure, sure
So this is a shout out to all those Stop you know, Stop the Steal, etc.
It's quite the song for Trump, right?
Because it's such a proud anthem.
It makes no sense.
It's like everything about him.
It makes nothing.
It makes zero sense for a Village People song to be like a MAGA anthem.
But it is.
A shout out to Sheila.
I want to point out that this was the first song that the village people charted with.
A lot of people think YMCA is probably the first song they charted with.
No, that's not true.
Macho Man, ladies and gentlemen.
Wow.
It peaked.
It went to number 25 in September of 1978.
Funny song about how they wrote the song.
The Monday after Thanksgiving in 1977, they signed their record contracts, the Village People did.
And Tuesday after that, they were in the studio recording Macho Man with handwritten lyrics that were written the morning of on a napkin.
The term, this was written on a napkin, applies to Macho Man.
And look at it.
Written on a napkin, big stinking hit.
Wow.
How about that?
How about that?
How about that?
I have to ask, is the indigenous person member, is that problematic now?
No, because I think he was legit.
That's why I'm wondering.
I didn't know if he was legit or not.
It's like a Jewish guy can't play Santa Claus anymore, right?
But you can't play santa claus anymore right but uh
you can't is that true i feel like it doesn't work that way it's okay i thought it was like the uh the the non-oppressed can't play an oppressed role well i don't know i think the whole situation of
the village people is probably problematic but back then you talk about a gimmick kiss had the
makeup the village people had their costumed characters right cop there's the construction worker there's the native american there's the
various uh different uh characters uh they sang a lot of anthems that uh uh you would hear uh maybe
in pride parades or uh sort of uh you know uh proud fm playlist uh quite maybe stereotypical
at this point but uh you know it crossed over to the masses.
I don't think you need to be gay to love the village people.
It's a good time.
Party anthem type guys, you know,
Just say every sports arena across maybe around the world,
they'll dance to like YMCA and stuff like it's just,
So for years, my, my kids went to like a YMCA before school,
after school daycare thing.
And they would actually play that every morning.
They would play YMCA by the village people.
I mean, it just kind of shows you where Donald Trump's pop culture sort of sweet spot is.
Because the music at his rallies include village people songs.
And he's dancing to them.
And you kind of think maybe that's when he was listening to music like in
78 and he kind of stopped after that.
It was like the last album he ever bought.
Right. But shout out to Sheila. I will say that.
I don't think she listened.
It's very funny. She'll let herself out.
I want to mention that this song was a pop culture phenomenon, Cam.
Macho man, of course, Randy Savage.
If there's no village people, Macho Man, maybe he's not called the Macho Man.
That's true. I would say that's true.
I think the vernacular was made famous from this song,
where Macho Man, I think, is a derivative.
Yeah, and very much so.
I mean, listen, people, Leva Femke will tell you,
she's looking for a macho man.
She found one in one.
But, you know, everyone likes MF found a macho man.
Cam is a macho guy.
MF did find a macho man.
And then she started dating Cam.
Well, actually, his name is Macho Cam.
I think we should do a sp-off called Macho Macho Cam
Briefly the Macho King
A Macho Cam
I'm talking about
Cambrio there not Cam Gorshow
Shout out to Cambrio
FOSS
Do you remember in the early days when Linda was the only
FOSS like that was Linda's domain
and now we don't even talk about Linda
You know it's like the village people
I became this juggernaut
where
people just can't get
enough stew. I mean, some people can.
It's a movement.
It's a stone movement, if you will.
Let's talk about the macho
man and disco as
a whole here, Mike, because I'm going to
blow your minds all over the place.
I hope you're sitting down. We're going to blow some fucking minds here, guys, because I'm going to blow your minds all over the place. I hope you're sitting down.
We're going to blow some fucking minds here,
guys. Kids, cover your
ears in the back of that
minivan. We're about
to work blue here. We're about to blow
some minds, damn it.
The Macho Man is probably
the most famous disco song. I'm going to
say it right now. Not because
it is number one. Not because it is played at parties still, because it spawned so many other entities to
get into the disco realm. And I'm going to show you several examples of that. Let's start with this one.
Oh, good evening, Mr. Duck.
Hello, Scott.
May I get the door for you?
Thank you very much.
Let's go!
He's got style.
He's got flair.
He's got two left feet, but he doesn't care Dressed in blue, fit to the fore
A lady in love that touches uniform
Mess with him and you're out of luck
He's a Macho Duck
That's me!
Macho, Macho Duck. Watch me. Macho, Macho Duck.
Oh, he is a manly sensation.
Incredible.
Macho, Macho Duck.
He's a Macho, Macho Duck.
He's Macho Duck from the Disney's Mickey Mouse disco album.
Donald Duck on vocals.
Calm down, everybody.
We'll get there.
This is Macho Macho Duck,
which is clearly Macho Macho Man.
Now, the success of Macho Macho Duck,
definitely, it's sort of like this sort of evolution that starts at Macho Man, and then Macho Macho Duck definitely it's sort of like this sort of evolution
that starts at Macho Man and then
Macho Macho Duck comes around
and then this happens. The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The
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The
The
The
The
The The The How in the world can I keep my seat?
All of a sudden I began to change I was on the dance floor acting strange
Flapping my arms, I begin to cluck.
Look at me.
I'm the Disco Dog.
Oh, check out, Mama.
I'm the Disco Dog.
Disco, Disco Dog.
The Disco Dog.
Disco, Disco Dog. Oh, check out, Mama. You know, these jams, man, bring you right back.
But this jam by Rick Dees, I think, helped kill disco.
It was referenced on.
I hope so.
But Disco Duck, ladies and gentlemen, started as a morning show gag by Nashville radio DJ Rick Dees and actually accidentally became a smash hit.
radio DJ Rick Dees, and actually accidentally became a smash hit.
Pretty shockingly, this song, ladies and gentlemen,
made the top 20 on the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart.
Do you hear, Stu, when you listen to that song,
do you hear the Sanford and Sons theme in there?
Well, I actually want to get to something for a second about, not Sanford and Son, but I guess I kind of hear that, but not really.
I read the wrong theme.
I think I'm thinking the same.
The shocking part about Disco Duck, guys, is that it actually became a number one hit on the Billboard Hot 100.
October 1976, it was number one on the Billboard Hot 100.
Macho Man by the Village People, I don't think, did that.
Disco Duck did.
Let's go to the Sloan test.
How many copies did Sloan sell of their number one record?
Can we do that?
80,000.
Yeah.
How many copies of Disco Duck do you suppose sold in Canada alone?
In Canada?
Yeah.
200,000 copies. 150,000 sold in Canada alone? In Canada? Yeah. 200,000 copies.
150,000 copies in Canada.
Two million copies in the United States.
So there was obviously some legal battles
surrounding this song because, you know,
that's not Donald Duck on this track.
That's somebody doing a Donald Duck
and maybe Disney actually has a claim here
because sort of implying that it could be Donald Duck there,
but it's a Donald Duck-esque voice,
not actually Donald Duck.
Clarence Nash, the original voice of Donald Duck,
did not do the voice.
However, nationwide hit,
the song was actually banned in Tennessee because theennessee uh because the rival radio station that was rick
d's rival wouldn't play it uh and rick d's wasn't allowed to play because it was a conflict of
interest because it was his own song right so they were it was banned and then when rick d's would
reference the song uh he ended up getting fired from one station. Then the competition, he ends up working for the competition.
So Rick D's the weekly top 40 guy, disco duck.
Here's a fun fact.
When Jamie Kennedy and I were trying to get a record deal with Warner
brothers and we were playing, we met with Tom Wally,
the chairman of Warner brothers music at the time, Tom Wally.
We're in his office.
This is the most intimidating meeting of my life.
The chairman of Warner music.
We're sitting in there playing him,
rolling with Bob Saget.
And we finish playing it, and he goes, so why is this funny?
And we're like, well, because it's Bob Saget rapping.
He's like, uh, so is this sort of like disco duck or boogieing your butt?
And we were like, yeah, yeah, this is just like the disco duck.
And he's like, I like it.
Yeah.
Okay.
Now I get it.
Disco duck.
Let's do it.
That's a great story.
Boogieing your butt and disco duck.
That's a man with his finger on the pulse of culture.
So he was like, oh, I remember we made money with the disco duck.
This could be the next thing.
The next disco duck could be rolling with Bob Saget.
How about that?
What were the forecasts?
I know you said they were disappointed with your 300,000 units,
but what was the forecast?
I think the music business as a whole was just like getting –
we were right when the Titanic started sinking, so to speak.
Was that Napster time?
Napster was alive and well.
Actually, we were told that over 3 million illegal downloads
of our album took place.
I bet.
And at that point, we were actually considering having a press conference as a publicity stunt so that we could get a platinum record for illegal downloads.
And the record label wouldn't do it.
But I thought it would have been a pretty good stunt at the time.
No laughing matter.
No laughing matter.
So that's the that's the the disco duck, but we're not done here, guys.
We weren't just limited to disco ducks, were we, Mike?
No, and you want me to kick this off?
Because there's other pond animals we have to talk about.
This is my last mind flow here.
Just a nail.
Stick the nail in the coffin for mic selection last week.
Rainbow Connection.
In the evening when the sun goes down,
folks all hurry to the edge of town.
At the bayou bank they stand and wait, it appears there.
Soon the water ripples catch their eye, and the ladies hush and breathe a sigh.
On a lily pad all dressed in white He appears there
And then he
Boogies up and down and shuffles right
Slips and splashes in the full moonlight
Alligators with their teeth so bright
Smile and sway there
And soon the
Loons are joining in the jamboree
Everybody's happy just like me
Watch him dance
On that block
Oh shit's the disco frog
Stewart
Yes
You and I have talked in the past How we both had Sesame Street Fever, right?
Sesame Street Fever was a great record.
Sesame Street Disco album.
It's like Grover was on the cover.
Grover was on the cover.
You know, Leisure 2, doing the whole gimmick.
But hearing this song, this song is not from Sesame Street Fever.
Oh, yes, it is, Mike.
Okay, I didn't think it was.
I don't know what to say.
Typically, you are wrong about these things, and this would be no exception.
So what is the name of this song?
It's called Disco Frog.
Okay, because I understand you have the first track, of course,
Sesame Street Fever, in which you get Robin Gibb
joining the gang from Sesame Street.
Then there's Doin' the Pigeon, and then there's Rubber Ducky,
then there's Trash.
Again, Robin Gibb comes in for that.
The album is called Sesame Disco that this is on.
Yeah, that's a different album.
Sorry, I didn't know they did two disco albums.
But yes, Grover's still on the cover.
Same leisure suit here.
It features Me Lost Me Cookie at the Disco by Cookie Monster.
The Happiest Street in the World by Big Bird.
Disco Frog by Kermit the Frog.
Doin' the Trash by Oscar the Grouch.
Bein' Green, Kermit, with another entry in there by Kermit the Frog, Doin' the Trash by Oscar the Grouch, Bein' Green, Kermit, with another entry in there
by Kermit the Frog.
How about this, Mike?
This came out years before
your Rainbow Connection,
just proving further
that Kermit the Frog
was already an established
song and dance guy
long before the Rainbow Connection
came around.
And this is proof of that
because during the disco craze,
Kermit the Frog
not only appeared
on disc sesame fever but sesame disco two songs and these are all before uh the rainbow connection
the guy was an established singing sensation yeah now song you picked okay you made your point there
uh that's fine but the sesame street fever which is the one i had so of course the only one that
matters is the one i owned, okay? Shockingly,
does not have an appearance by
Kermit, as far as I
know and as far as I remember.
Disco Frog, guys. We've got the Disco
Duck. We've got Macho Duck. We've
got Disco Frog. We've got Macho
Man. We've got Juan. No wonder
this fad died. Okay. Now,
very good. Thank you, Stu.
Are you guys ready for my final jam?
I'm done.
I'm done.
Mic drop in.
That's another victory
for Stu.
Thank you.
Leave a fam cut thumbs up
if you agree.
And yeah, double thumbs up.
There you go.
Let's finish strong.
Oh, there she is.
Very good.
Very good.
Very well metronomed sometimes, too. Very good lyrics.
I don't know.
Yeah, I know.
Lyrical, excellent lyric.
I was going to give it a moment.
I was really digging it.
It holds up, eh?
Like, even now, it feels like it's
empowering me like i want to bust through this wall over here like what a jam so gloria gainer
uh i will survive is the name of the jam and it like many of the songs we heard uh peaked at number
one on the billboard hot 100 the u.s billboard Hot 100. This came out in late, like in October 1978.
And it's a banger.
And I got a couple of mind blows.
So Gloria Gaynor, the original.
This is a great, great, great disco song.
But guys our age and gals our age might know this particular version.
I forgot about this one.
Yeah.
What do you,
don't tell me.
I saw them get pummeled with water bottles at Molson park and Barry once.
Yeah.
What's this guys?
These guys got a few hits.
At first I was afraid.
I was petrified.
So I'll bring it down so we can hear you.
What was your guest do?
Cake.
Cake, yeah, Cake.
Yeah, Cake did have a string of hits on alt-rock stations like CFNY.
And this is their cover of I Will Survive, High Rotation.
I own this disc, so I used to spin this a lot and uh it's a great cover because it's
it's like it's still the same song with the great lyrics we talked about but completely like
reimagined you know this is i feel like cake doesn't get enough uh shaming for being one of
the worst band names of all time like it's a pretty bad band name it's a bad seo name like
don't forget they weren't thinking thinking of SEO when they named themselves.
By the way, you know what's a great SEO name?
Linkin Park.
Well, let's just say the aforementioned head.
Because when I went to search for some head content, it's simple.
Very true.
Very true.
It's like they were ahead of the curve on that one.
Because Linkin Park famously,
they did emerge in an era where seo existed and uh therefore their lincoln they changed the spelling
of lincoln just so that they could have a unique you know domain name and everything that comes
with that so web web savvy voice right okay so cake i'm sure they're web savvy now i will survive
uh great cover i was listening to it again last night.
I really dig it.
But my daughter was listening to me listening to this.
So she kind of was, you know, we played some disco stuff on Spotify as we chatted about this.
She's 16 and a half.
Shout out to Michelle.
But she said, oh, daddy, I know that song.
And she played a song for me I'm going to play for you right now.
So courtesy of michelle at first i was afraid i was petrified kept thinking i could never live without you by my
side but then i spent so many nights thinking how you did me wrong and i grew strong
and i learned how to get along
And so you're back
Where the hood, where the hood, where the hood at?
Had a nigga in the car, where the wood at?
All the niggas acting up, where the walls at?
You better bust that if you gon' pull that
Where the hood, where the hood, where the hood at?
Had a nigga in the car, where the wood at?
All the niggas acting up, where the walls at?
You better bust that if you gon' pull that
Man, cats don't know what it's gon' be
Fuckin' with a nigga like me What we have here is a song that's big on TikTok.
So Michelle is my TikTok connection.
So not a rainbow connection, but a TikTok connection.
In that, here, I'll bring it down a bit.
But there are songs that I just don't hear in the world
that are very popular amongst kids on TikTok.
Do you guys know this?
Do you know this, Stu?
Are you on TikTok?
Stu still there?
I'm here.
I just don't know it.
No, I just wondered if you had a TikTok account.
I don't have a TikTok account.
I sent you a link, though, in the chat.
Okay, I'll play this now here.
So let me come out of this uh tiktok
song which i don't even know it's it's i will find the hood is the name of the song by ritzy
not gretzky but ritzy so thank you michelle for telling me she knows that song from the tiktok
song i just played right there and stew stone is linking me to uh Man. He was in The Wire.
I read the liner notes. It's in there.
When I first
stepped on the scene
Others was
petrified
Oh, the clean version.
Tried it back to the lab
Yeah, this is the one they played
on MTV.
My rap flow does you right to care And it will never Yeah, this is the one they played on MTV. Right.
Oh, censored version version Anyway, very well done
This was kicked out
You know what I think?
I think this is the anniversary
of Ryan Walstat
who writes for the Toronto Sun
He writes about the Raptors
I believe this is the anniversary
of his appearance here
where he kicked out
his favourite 90s hip-hop
and we kicked this out
on that episode
There you go i feel like
you retweeted the photo of yeah this morning yeah so what a coincidence uh how are you guys feeling
about the disco episode i think like we've scratched the surface i feel like there's a lot
more disco in us so maybe we can revisit this uh down the line with uh more disco yeah a lot a lot
of stuff left on the table, for sure.
Yeah, well, at the rate that these vaccinations are going out,
we might have time to get to part three, part four.
We didn't play Make a Little Love, Get Down Tonight.
Lots of stuff on the cutting room floor.
And there is a band from Sweden that was completely handsome tonight.
ABBA?
Yeah.
How did no one pick Dancing Queen?
I don't know if I consider them a disco band.
I don't know.
They definitely swim in the same pool.
Yeah.
But that's part of the great debate.
None of us picked them.
But holy shit, guys.
Another episode of Pandemic Friday has concluded.
That's 44 weeks in a row.
I've been here 44 weeks.
We gave Cam a week off.
Stu needed a couple of weeks off. But we've done this 44 weeks in a row. I forgot been here 44 weeks. We gave Cam a week off. Stu needed a couple weeks off, but
we've done this 44 weeks in a row.
There's something I forgot to tell you, Mike.
Okay, I'm bringing down Lois and Lodi here. What are you going to say?
And that!
Are we making t-shirts? Maybe to sell at the end.
And that!
The TMLX with
the reunion of head.
I think that's all going to happen with these and that t-shirts and that
brings us to the end of our 786th show.
One of our longest shows.
I don't know,
man.
We go about two hours and 15 minutes and I'm looking over here and I see
this is,
Oh yeah.
234.
Holy smokes.
If we hit,
wow, that is a long episode. Uh, lots of over here and I see this is, Oh yeah. Two 34. Holy smokes. If we hit, wow,
that is a long episode.
Uh,
lots of fun facts and mind blows today.
And you can follow me on Twitter.
I'm at Toronto.
Mike see Periscope is dead to me,
but I still enjoy Twitter.
Stu is at Stu stone.
Our friends at great lakes brewer.
Oh yeah.
Cam Gordon.
Sorry.
Cam Gordon is at Cam underscore Gordon.
That's right.
Our friends at Great Lakes Brewery are at Great Lakes Beer.
Palma Pasta, they're at Palma Pasta.
Sticker U is at Sticker U.
CDN Technologies are at CDN Technologies.
And Ridley Funeral Home, they're at Ridley FH.
See you all next week.
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