With each passing decade, music seems to shift into a new evolutionary phase that defines a specific moment in time. The bubblegum pop of the 1950s gave way to the blues-driven rock โnโ roll of the 1960s, which eventually ceded to the hard rock psychedelia of the 1970s. By the end of that decade, disco had overtaken hard rock in a wave of sequins and lamรฉ. As each new musical cycle begins, some artists are left behind, doomed to grow more and more antiquated.
But for heavy rock โnโ rollers Wild Cherry out of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, this musical shift wasnโt just happening on the Billboard charts. The musicians could see those changes unfold right in front of them, with each pair of feet that walked off the dance floor whenever they came up to play at a nightclub. After a long, slow battle of trying to resist the changing tide, Wild Cherry got feedback from an audience member that ended up becoming a massive 1976 hit.
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Although technically, it was more of a question.
How a Passing Question Led to โPlay That Funky Musicโ
In a 2013 interview with Tampa Bay Times, Wild Cherry guitarist Rob Parissi reflected on what the wave of disco did to his heavy rock band. The music that once got them in the door in various nightclubs and venues around the Pittsburgh area now felt outdated. People left the dance floor specifically when they started to play their heavy rock music. They wanted disco. So, Parissi tried to tell the band that. โThey went nuts,โ he said. They didnโt want to play disco.
But one fateful night at the 2001 Club on the cityโs north side, the band realized that even though they didnโt want to play disco, they might have to start. โWhen we would play clubs like 2001, the dance floor would just clear out,โ Wild Cherry member Bryan Bassett told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. The night the band wrote the song that would turn them into one-hit wonders, they were playing to a predominantly Black crowd that wasnโt connecting to their music.
At one point, a man approached the bandโs drummer, Ron Beitle, and said, โAre you going to play some funky music, white boys?โ Beitle told the band what the man said, and a lightbulb went off in Parissiโs head. โI grabbed a drink order pad and started writing, โOnce I was a boogie singer playinโ in a rock โnโ roll band,โโ Parissi told the Tampa Bay Times. โIt probably took me five minutes to write the whole thing.โ
A Chart-Topper, One-Hit Wonder, and Music History Lesson
Wild Cherryโs 1976 single โPlay That Funky Musicโ was a smash hit, topping the Billboard Hot 100 and entering the Top 10 in the U.K., Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Belgium. This was Wild Cherryโs biggest and only success, landing them in the one-hit wonder category. Still, thatโs not to diminish its impact. Itโs not often that a one-hit wonder can also serve as a music history lesson with a beat. But โPlay That Funky Musicโ could.
The Wild Cherry hit marks a milestone in the transition from hard rock to disco that would come to define the late 1970s to early 1980s. By the end of the following decade, hair and glam metal bands would face the same fate as grunge pushed them out of the mainstream in the mid-1990s.
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