Behind The Song

Remember When Everyone Was Singing Along to Great Depression-Era Lyrics With This 1979 Disco Hit?

When Chic first released their 1979 disco hit โ€œGood Timesโ€, they faced intense criticism for putting out vapid feel-good music as the rest of the United States struggled in the aftermath of the mid-1970s recession. But those who allowed the song to anger them werenโ€™t listening closely enough to realize what Chic was actually saying.

In fact, the dance-floor anthem that had everyone singing โ€œthese are the good times, leave your cares behindโ€ was actually inspired by the Great Depression (in more ways than one).

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Nile Rodgers Said Chic Always Looked For โ€œDeep Hidden Meaningโ€

During a 2002 interview with the EMP Museum, now the Museum of Pop Culture, Chic frontman Nile Rodgers said that people who were upset about โ€œGood Timesโ€ hadnโ€™t picked up on the โ€œdeep hidden meaning,โ€ or โ€œDHM,โ€ of the song. According to Rodgers, that was something he and co-writer Bernard Edwards put into every single one of their songs. โ€œIf the song didnโ€™t have any DHM, we werenโ€™t putting it out,โ€ Rodgers said.

The DHM in โ€œGood Timesโ€ was a not-so-subtle callback to Al Jolson, a famous minstrel performer from the 1920s. Jolsonโ€™s career reflected the deep disparities Black musicians faced at this time. Audiences were hungry for their music but refused to open their world to Black performers. Of the many ways this discrimination manifested, one was refusing them lodging or service at the hotels and venues where they played. Jolson was singing the same kind of music. But since he was white, he was accepted by the masses.

Those familiar with Jolsonโ€™s career might have recognized the lyrics Chic pulled directly from the popular song โ€œAbout A Quarter To Nineโ€. โ€œStraight up Al Jolson,โ€ Rodgers told the EMP Museum. โ€œโ€˜The stars are going to twinkle and shine, this evening about a quarter to nine, and oh, la-la-la-la.โ€™ Thatโ€™s how we started. We went back, and we took that.โ€

His Political Background Prevented Those Rumors From Being True

For those unaware of Al Jolson, his songs, or the financially and socioeconomically destitute time period he came to represent, โ€œGood Timesโ€ by Chic really does sound like a song about grooving, having a good time, and enjoying the here and now. Nile Rodgers said that his political background practically ruled out the possibility of these rumors being true.

โ€œThere was no way that I was ever just gonna write a song about partying and dancing,โ€ Rodgers said in 2002. โ€œI mean, Iโ€™m a Black Panther. What are you talking about? It was always about compromise.โ€ 

In a way, though, the rumors were a positive sign. It showed that Chic had done their job so effectively that their music could reach the peak of commercial platforms while still delivering a covertly impactful message. โ€œWe realized that we had done our job so effectively that all of our lyrics were shrouded in double-entendre.โ€ 

โ€œThis was all seriously thought-out stuff,โ€ Rodgers said. โ€œWe didnโ€™t just randomly write this. This was protest.โ€

Photo by Mike Prior/Redferns