SIDEBAR - DAYTON 1970S OVERVIEW


Meaning of SIDEBAR - DAYTON 1970S OVERVIEW in English

Dayton, Ohio, the small industrial city of approximately 200,000 people located 50 miles north of Cincinnati, produced a series of popular funk bands with a string of national hits during the 1970s. The Ohio Players, Lakeside, Slave (featuring Steve Arrington), Heatwave, Sun, Faze-O, and Zapp (featuring Roger) all claimed Dayton as their home. These bands were among the most prolific hit makers of the era, compiling more than 110 charting rhythm-and-blues singles between 1972 and 1988. Dayton funk bands all featured dance music with an emphasis on heavy bass, aggressive rhythms, complex horn arrangements, ensemble vocals, and showstopping choreography. During the 1970s, industries such as a Chrysler plant, the Harrison Radiator factory, and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base provided a stable income base for a population that was roughly 50 percent African-American. From this base came high-school bands who sought the stardom first achieved by the founders of Dayton funk, the Ohio Players. Their number one pop hits Fire (1974) and Love Rollercoaster (1975) set a standard for local bands to aspire to, and six different record labels had signed Dayton bands by 1978. Slave, which had strong ties to the Ohio Players, scored a national hit with Slide in 1977 and continued to make hits through 1983. Crosstown rival Lakeside moved to Los Angeles before striking it big with It's All the Way Live in 1978. Keith and Johnnie Wilder developed their band, Heatwave, while stationed in West Germany and returned to the United States with a global hit, Boogie Nights, in 1977. Roger Troutman and his band, Zapp, lasted into the 1990s with a slick, high-tech sound and dynamic show. Rickey Vincent

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