Do people still dance together? I know i'm out of it here in the sticks but I haven't seen anyone dance for many, many years! Bars are for drinking. Clubs where you used to dance are gone away.
Are any of you old enough to remember the waltz, Foxtrot, swing, tango?
My favorite were the latin dances, especially the rumba and the samba!
Then disco came in. This IMO was the death of music for awhile. Good musicians, all over the country, couldn't get work because of the piped-in electronic
"stayin alive"stuff. Not only was real music dead but dancing was dead. Well, Dancing with a partner, I should say.
Do any of you still dance? Do live bands still exist out there?
Dancing in the sense that you are describing was dead well before disco, though as you say, the onset of disco did kill off a lot of musicians' jobs.
In the 1960s there were shows such as American Bandstand, Thaxton's Hop, and others in which people didn't dance. Instead, they just wiggled at each other.
On the other hand, I know some people who are really into ballroom dancing and some even compete nationally. It seems to be a VERY expensive hobby unless you are strictly local amateur taking inexpensive classes. From what I can tell, even that is a lot of fun and a great way to socialize.
When I was growing up and those dance programs in which people just wiggled at each other were popular, square dancing was certainly alive and well among the older crowd.
As for musicians and disco. I was working full time as a musician, playing Holiday Inns, resorts, and supper clubs at the tail end of that era and just as disco was starting to gain ground. Clubs could hire a DJ to just play records, and later, CDs, instead of hiring a live band. I had decided to get out of that life style and settle down at just the right time, but a lot of folks who had committed their careers to that kind of touring, really got short-changed.
The big band players became like a specialized art form that developed into a nice niche for those who stuck with it, though financially it was certainly tough going for them. They began playing concerts instead of dances. I remember going to see several of these when they came through town. The kind of musician I was, and those along with me (or me with them) were on the road all the time playing music to dance to in the forum of then current pop tunes and, in the nice supper clubs, standards, but not to the skill level that the big band musicians were. We were more "jobbers" while those guys were artists, at least in my personal opinion and observation. I was glad to see that at least some of these big band people were able to find a niche when that music was no longer a mainstay in our culture.
But, then, these kinds of sweeping changes come and affect a lot of people. Consider how technology is changing the work landscape today as has been discussed in some recent threads. A lot of jobs that get replaced or changed by technology don't, unfortunately create the new jobs outside technology, just as not everybody wants to be a DJ. I certainly have no interest in that. Part of being a musician is developing a real skill playing one or more instruments, arranging tunes, etc.
So this post isn't disagreeing with you, but instead fully agreeing and adding to it, which is why I quoted it.
Tony