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  1. Dictionary
    Dis·co
    /ˈdiskō/

    noun

    • 1. a club or party at which people dance to recorded pop music: "on Friday evenings, he often attended a disco with school friends"
    • 2. a style of pop music intended mainly for dancing to, typically soul-influenced and melodic with a regular bass beat, popular particularly in the late 1970s: "the music hops from one genre to another – electropop and post-punk, but also disco, hip-hop, and soul"

    verb

    • 1. attend or dance at a disco: "for the next three hours he discoed nonstop"
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DiscoDisco - Wikipedia

    Disco is a genre of dance music and a subculture that emerged in 1974 from the United States' urban nightlife scene. Its sound is typified by four-on-the-floor beats, syncopated basslines, string sections, brass and horns, electric piano, synthesizers, and electric rhythm guitars.

  3. 1. : a nightclub for dancing to live and recorded music. 2. : popular dance music characterized by hypnotic rhythm, repetitive lyrics, and electronically produced sounds. disco. 2 of 3. verb. discoed; discoing; discos. intransitive verb. : to dance to disco music. disco- 3 of 3. combining form. see disc- Examples of disco in a Sentence.

  4. Disco, beat-driven style of popular music that was the preeminent form of dance music in the 1970s. Its name was derived from discotheque, the name for the type of dance-oriented nightclub that first appeared in the 1960s. Initially ignored by radio, disco received its first significant exposure in.

  5. Jun 25, 2024 · What Defines Disco? The word “disco” comes from “discotheque,” a kind of dance club known for playing popular music. As both a genre and a subculture, disco was most popular in the 1970s,...

  6. a style of popular music for dancing, usually recorded and with complex electronic instrumentation, in which simple, repetitive lyrics are subordinated to a heavy, pulsating, rhythmic beat. any of various forms of dance, often improvisational, performed to such music.

  7. The term “disco,” the abbreviation of the French word discothèque, first became associated with European up-scale dance venues that featured primarily recorded Black music, especially jazz. In the US and pioneered by mobile disc jockeys (DJs), it emerged as a musical genre in underground dance venues such as house and loft parties ...

  8. an event where people dance to modern recorded music for entertainment, or a place where this often happens: disco lights. Fewer examples. Several parents acted as chaperones for the school disco. He was injured in a Saturday-night fracas outside a disco.

  9. Jun 7, 2021 · Though it is among the most short-lived crazes of the music industry, disco has majorly influenced contemporary electronic dance music and made a powerful, lasting impact on music production.

  10. an event where people dance to modern recorded music for entertainment, or a place where this often happens: disco lights. Fewer examples. Several parents acted as chaperones for the school disco. He was injured in a Saturday-night fracas outside a disco.

  11. disco, Style of dance music that arose in the mid-1970s, characterized by hypnotic rhythm, repetitive lyrics, and electronically produced sounds.

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