What happened to the disco? Bell Bottom, Afro, music, sex, and drugs can best describe the disco era. The disco era is an important period, there are no rules. People dance at night. Most of the people in the Disco era were living a normal life and they were doing 9 to 5 people a week, but at the weekend they wore a flare pants and a dance shoe and played a disco club. This era will never be forgotten, but it can not be visited again. It is said that Disco started in the gay night club in New York in the mid 1960s.
In short, "Disco" in Japan is not about dancing but about dealing with heterosexual people. Dance will happen, but for most customers this is not the main purpose. This is what happens when everyone gets drunk. Music is usually a commercial / open format. However, in Roppongi's disco, there are times when we actually play classical hits from the 1980s to the 1990s. DISCO's customers usually do not think you are a "club member." They are usually salaried workers going to work after work. As a result, there is a high possibility that the disco in Roppongi and Ginza will be crowded more on Friday than on Saturday. Some of the disco is going all night, and their men are usually much higher prices than women. Women usually enter free of charge early in the morning. In ordinary clubs, there is no price difference by gender, except during special events.
During the disco era, many night clubs usually organize disco dance competitions and offer free dance classes. In some cities, there are disco dance coaches or dance schools that teach people popular disco dance methods such as "touch dance", "bustling", "cha cha". The pioneer of disco dance education was Karen Rustgarten held in San Francisco in 1973. Her work "Warner Books, 1978" is the first book to distinguish a discotheque, a partner, and a line dance by sculpting popular disco dance, organizing it into a dance format and organizing it. This book has been translated into Chinese, German, French, exceeding the list of the best-selling books in the New York Times magazine for 13 weeks.
Disco is coming from the word "discothèque"; French is used to describe the terms of a Parisian nightclub. Disco music became internationally popular in the 1960s and 1970s. Disco music is designed to attract listeners who wake up and dance. Popular disco artists include Bee Gees, Grace Jones and Diana Ross