Donna Summer
will be remembered as the queen of disco, but in fact her best records
transformed not just dancefloors but the course of pop music. Released
in 1977, the year of punk, her single
I Feel Love
was as radical as any record that has got to No 1. Sparks were a glam
rock band until they heard I Feel Love, when they decided to throw their
entire musical direction in the dustbin and make pulsing, synthesised
disco records with its producer,
Giorgio Moroder.
Seeking to assert his credentials as a man of impeccable musical taste,
Bobby Gillespie of Primal Scream used to boast that he had bought both
I Feel Love and the Sex Pistols' God Save the Queen on the same day. The
combination of silvery female soul vocals with state-of-the-art
electronic production, which has been responsible for some of pop's
greatest and most groundbreaking singles, from Janet Jackson to Aaliyah
to Beyoncé, was pioneered right there by Summer and her two Italian
producers - Moroder and Pete Bellotte.
Working from the unlikely
location of Munich, the trio managed to fuse soul with the surgical
precision of Kraftwerk, creating a record so far ahead of its time that
pop took a good 20 years to catch up. Like the Beach Boys' Good
Vibrations, I Feel Love is a studio recording so perfect that covering
it – or even playing it live – would be pointless, though many have
tried. The sparsest ingredients – lyrics that could be written on the
back of a beermat with room to spare, a bassline that, in theory, a
three-year-old could play – are turned, in Summer and Moroder's hands,
into an entire world of futuristic wonder. Moroder took a Moog Modulator
synthesiser and put a delay on the bassline, creating the
"dugga-dugga-dugga" sound that has galvanised dancefloors ever since.
Summer's vocal is no less wonderful – ethereal and otherworldly.
If that was all Summer had ever done, her place in pop would be
assured, but she made a number of standout records that have influenced
musicians right across the spectrum, from rock to R&B. The drum
break on her 1979 album track Our Love was filched for the beginning of
New Order's Blue Monday, who also put the epic Patrick Cowley mix of I Feel Love on their Back to Mine compilation.
Her version of Jon and Vangelis's State of Independence
was covered by Chrissie Hynde. Part of Summer's strength was her
versatility. The high concept of her album I Remember Yesterday was that
each track would pastiche the sounds of a different decade, from the
magnificent
Love's Unkind,
her take on Phil Spector, to I Feel Love (which represented The Future)
and her voice is at home in any style Moroder and Bellotte can throw at
her. Pitted against Barbra Streisand on the scenery-chewing 1982 duet
No More Tears (Enough Is Enough), Summer demonstrates in grand style that she can face down any diva. Every time
someone demolishes Summer's On the Radio on a TV talent show,
remembering the original – surely one of the greatest ever songs about
that medium – only reaffirms Summer's technical and emotional mastery.
Even the records she made with Stock Aitken Waterman in the late 80s, a
collaboration which seemed sacrilegious at the time, are animated by the
power and sincerity of her voice.
And then, of course, there is sex. Summer's single
Love to Love You Baby
announced her arrival to the world – 17 minutes of groaning, whimpering
and moaning. Get past its use by Mike Leigh in Abigail's Party – which
made it an icon of bad taste thanks to it being played by the awful
Beverly – and Love to Love You Baby is charged with feelings of
liberation, a pre-Aids world of pansexual freedom and adventure. While
Summer renounced her raunchy past, betraying her gay fans in the
process, her best records still pulsate with that spirit, the lifeforce
of pop itself. At
only 63, that life force was extinguished.
Alex Needham @
'The Guardian'
We are all entitled to our view...great records - but as radical as punk? Hmmm!