This song always brings back a memory of my first visit to Paris. I was returning with my friend to his apartment. This was on the radio in the taxi and it was snowing. It was magical.
I am a Rock & roll fan I remember we used to make fun of DISCO music. In Chicago in the 70's WLUP RADIO STATION THE LOOP had disco demolition drive in grant Park... Burning and destroyed tapes (cassettes/8 tracks)but now when I look back I think disco was and is much better than today's rap music.....
It’s on,y got 444 likes and the lyrics are in Tim’s, and I’ve been trying to find one with the lyrics on time and this one is it! This should have 1000000M likes
My buddy Charlie Iseman wears his black cowboy hat His red cowboy shirt and his black cowboy boots And his little brother Scott Masters wears his blue dress that makes him look like Cinderella Charlie Iseman and his little brother Scott Masters Both enter The dance competition They both danced on the dance floor singing staying alive by The Bee gees
I have seen multiple people who insist that this song isn’t really a disco song, but instead a funk or soul song with a dance beat. Those same people say that Night Fever and More Than A Woman are real disco songs. I grant that this song is a bit slower tempo than those and has a little more of a funk sound, but does that really mean Stayin’ Alive doesn’t qualify as disco?
This sounds horrible The track breaking up in the recording as sounds the recording levels were to high Sounds as if the it was recorded with the recording levels clipping It's breaking up like a cellular phone with poor signal Sounds Terrible Seriously Do Not Put Poorly Recorded Tracks In My Recommendations That's Horrible Trying To Listen To This Screw This You Listen To It If You Wanna I'm Out Of Here
I love this song, but the lyrics do not make sense, hence the listener creates sense which makes it sound very deep. -I'm a woman's man. no time to talk. (I thought womanising is hard when you have no time to talk) All loose sentences out of which the listener makes his own sense.
The lyrics make perfect sense but they were given a slight "code" by Brummie wit. The NY times effect on man is about the rat race and inner city pressure, the protagonist/singer uses music and women to distract from a low social station. The song alternatives between a desperate optimism regarding night life (wings on shoes) to a morbid reflection on their social position (I'm going nowhere) which becomes a cry for help. The song was written for the film and character, and is intentional on John's duality as a kind of night-life king and a day-time nobody.