More than a disco queen, Summer was a deity we could call our own, a Boston native who recorded with Italians, married a Brooklyn paesano and fronted a group called Brooklyn Dreams. With that powerful, breathy-to-guttural-to-rafter-shaking mezzo-soprano, she recorded music of both florid grandeur and hard precision, the very essence of urban life in the 1970s.

She was, in short, an honorary New Yorker. Which I imagine is how hundreds of born-and-bred New Yorkers unconsciously regard the news today of her untimely death at age 63 from (reportedly) lung cancer. Regardless of where her upbringing and musical training had taken her—a childhood and adolescence singing in churches in Dorchester, salad days in Germany in the musical Hair before she met her Berlin-based studio collaborator Giorgio Moroder—Donna, to the end, belonged to all of us: outerborough ethnics; Manhattan velvet-rope aesthetes (and those who pretended); the gay, black and Latino communities.

Of course, if you’re reading this in Detroit or Las Vegas or Minneapolis or Atlanta or Los Angeles or London, Donna spoke to you, too. Considering her lifelong association with a communal, hedonistic pop-culture moment, it’s remarkable when one plays back her oeuvre how intimate, almost solitary her great works really were. Call her the Wanderer, for her ability to stretch, adapt and transmogrify dance music until it embraced everyone and everything.

Chris Molanphy pays tribute to the great Donna Summer, who passed away yesterday.  (via sotc-nyc)

Great write-up on the late and always great Donna Summer but, with respect and apologies, I will forever associate the use of the word and any variants of “transmogrify” with Calvin & Hobbes.

(via thecultureofme)

nprmusic:

Proof that Donna Summer and disco touched all ears, even Brian Eno’s. (From p. 239 of Will Hermes’ book, Love Goes to Buildings on Fire.)

“Love to Love You Baby” was a pro-creation theme song of the 70’s

Once you hear it, muscles start to reflexively gyrate.

#TrueStory

(via npr)

thecultureofme:

Donna Summer - “On The Radio”

REST IN PEACE!!! Ugh.

Whitney, Chuck Brown, Donna Summer

Their music will live on…

(via thecultureofme)