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The Trammps - Disco Inferno album flac

The Trammps - Disco Inferno album flac Performer: The Trammps
Title: Disco Inferno
Style: Disco
Released: 1976
Country: US
MP3 album: 1235 mb
FLAC album: 1954 mb
Rating: 4.9
Other formats: AHX WAV RA VOC MIDI DMF DTS
Genre: Funk and Soul

Авторы текста и музыки. Leroy Green, Ron Kersey.

Disco Inferno is the fourth studio album by American soul-disco group, The Trammps, released in 1976 through Atlantic Records. The album peaked at No. 16 on the R&B albums chart.

Disco Inferno Lyrics. Burn baby burn Burn baby burn Burn baby burn Burn baby burn Burning. To my surprise - listen - one hundred stories high People getting loose y'all, getting down on the roof, do you hear? The funk was flaming, out of control It was so entertaining, when the boogie started to explode. I heard somebody say Burn baby burn, disco inferno Burn baby burn, burn the mother down Burn baby burn, disco inferno Burn baby burn, burn the mother down Burning. Disco Inferno is a 1976 song by The Trammps. At its original release it reached 53 on the Billboard Top 100. It did not find major success until being released on the Saturday Night Fever motion picture soundtrack. It came to be The Trammps' most recognizable song, reaching number 11 on its rerelease in 1978. It was inspired by the scene of the burning discotheque in the 1974 movie The Towering Inferno.

Musician: Ronnie Baker Album: Disco Inferno Released in: 1976 Label: Atlantic Length: 3:56 Info: More Ronnie Baker. Do you want to report this video as not working? Yes. Cancel. Posted on: 08 17 2012.

Disco Inferno" was first released in 1976 on the album of the same name. It was popular in dance clubs, but made it to just on the US charts. In 1977, the song was used in the movie Saturday Night Fever, and in 1978 it was re-released as a single, going to The scene where the song was used in the movie was shot at the 2001 Club in New York, where The Trammps would often perform. The Trammps were a Philadelphia group that had their most success on the R&B charts, mostly with disco songs, including "That's Where The Happy People Go," which made in 1976. They came together when two local groups, The Volcanoes and The Exceptions, merged. They called themselves The Trammps after Charlie Chaplin, who was known as "The Little Tramp," and added the extra M to infer they were "superior tramps.

Disco Inferno" is a song by American disco band The Trammps from their 1976 fourth studio album of the same name  . Disco Inferno" gained much greater recognition when the 10:54-minute album version was included on the soundtrack to the 1977 film Saturday Night Fever. Re-released by Atlantic Records, the track peaked at number 11 in the . during the spring of 1978, becoming The Trammps' biggest and most-recognized single. Later, it was included in the Saturday Night Fever musical, interpreted by 'DJ Monty' in the "Odissey 2001" discothèque.

Album · 1976 · 6 Songs. Rhino Hi-Five: The Trammps - EP. 2005. Where the Happy People Go. 1976. Trammps (Extended Version). Choice Soul Cuts: The Trammps (Re-Recorded Versions). The Very Best of the Trammps (Re-Recorded Versions).

Tracklist

A Disco Inferno (Part I) 5:20
B Disco Inferno (Part II) 5:20

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
45-3389 The Trammps Disco Inferno ‎(7") Atlantic 45-3389 US 1977
P-176A The Trammps Disco Inferno ‎(7", Single) Atlantic P-176A Japan 1976
ATL 10914 N The Trammps Disco Inferno ‎(7") Atlantic ATL 10914 N Germany 1978
AT 3389 The Trammps Disco Inferno ‎(7", Single) Atlantic AT 3389 Canada 1976
ATS 705 The Trammps Disco Inferno ‎(7", Single) Atlantic ATS 705 1977