#MECoE
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
vintagegeekculture · 8 months ago
Note
I remember a friend of mine had some LPs that were Star Wars themed disco albums, and it brought back a very weird memory from back in the 70s (yes, I'm old!) of listening to a Star Wars disco mashup on the radio. What was all that about? I also remember something like that for Close Encounters, too.
Tumblr media
You remember correctly, and this went on for a long while. In 1983, disk jockeys around the country played a record that involved an Ewok rapping the plot of Return of the Jedi in Ewokese. This made it to #60 in the Billboard Top 100.
youtube
This is hard to explain to people who weren’t there….but in the wake of Star Wars in the late 70s and early 80s, scifi was so beloved and mainstream that the orchestral music for nerdy scifi and fantasy movies about outer space were remixed and sampled into Giorgio Moroder-esque Italo-Disco dance numbers. And the most astonishing thing is, instead of being consigned to convention acts the way “horse famous” Brony dubstep acts are, this received national airplay on the radio, reached the pop music charts, and were played in discotheques. And incredibly, this continued for years and expanded from Star Wars into Star Trek, Wizard of Oz, Black Hole, Close Encounters….
All of this was the work of one specific person: Meco (or Dominico Monardo). The term “ahead of their time” is thrown around a lot, but Meco really was: a combination producer-songwriter and Italo-Disco pioneer in the style of Giorgio Moroder, he did several things that are now absolutely standard: he used remixes and sampling before hiphop made that standard for musicians, he wrote “fandom music” on a Moog synthesizer decades before Bronies turned their conventions into cringey dubstep concerts with songs like “Everypony Dance Now.”
It's stunning to me that Meco has not been rediscovered, considering every single trend in the culture essentially went his way.
Tumblr media
The most startling thing about Meco’s Star Wars disco album, the one that got the ball rolling on this trend, is this: I always assumed it was some kind of cash in created by a record label mandate, a label executive’s completely cynical choice to hop on a hot new trend. That isn’t a crazy thing to think at all, since Star Wars is and always has been the most merchandized and sold out scifi property ever. But it wasn’t! You see, it was all the product of a single man’s specific vision: Meco had to convince his record label to make the record because they were skeptical.
Tumblr media
When Meco went to see Star Wars in 1977 on Opening Day (what an experience that must have been) with his friend and fellow Italian chest hair/gold medallion enthusiast Tony Bongiovi, he was already an experienced producer-songwriter who had worked with Gloria Gaynor, Diana Ross, and formed DCA, the Disco Corporation of America. If you've ever listened to Diana Ross's "I'm Coming Out," Meco actually played the trombone solo in that song. Seeing the Star Wars movie for the first time, though Meco thought the movie was nothing short of a religious experience. Originally, he wanted to do Star Wars music as a b-side on a Gloria Gaynor album, but expanded the idea into an entire album.
Tumblr media
In Meco’s own words:
"When I think about what I did, nobody came to me, nobody said 'Meco, why don't you do this.' Nobody says 'Here's some money go make a record of this movie.' It was just my own... It was magical, it was just out of this world when all that happened."
Not only did this album hit platinum, not only did it actually outsell the Star Wars soundtrack, his remix of the Star Wars theme also went to #1 in the charts. It’s actually the best selling instrumental single of all time. A record, that, incidentally, it holds to this day.
Dick Clark, host of American Bandstand, had this to say about Meco:
Tumblr media Tumblr media
"In 1977, Meco Monardo accomplished something no one else has ever done to the best of my knowledge. He was the first one in history to out-sell the soundtrack of a motion picture with his own distinctive version of a film's music. The music was totally danceable, and broke new ground. It's no wonder the STAR WARS THEME went to # 1. I loved his treatment of music from THE WIZARD OF OZ. Again, Meco created something innovative. The fun and the excitement gave a whole new feel to that totally familiar and well-loved music."
Like a lot of studio producers, Meco had an insane work ethic and hit when the iron was hot: he did an album about Close Encounters that exact same year, but also did a Star Wars Christmas Album, one of the strangest pieces of Star Wars kitsch around.
youtube
One of the most interesting things about the Star Wars Christmas album is that one of the songs, “R2D2’s Wish You a Merry Christmas” is the first professional vocals by John Bon Jovi, who was Meco’s friend Tony Bongiovi’s seventeen year old younger cousin (he was initially known as John Bongiovi). It's incredible to hear a squeaky voiced teen Bon Jovi on a kitsch album about a robot Christmas.
1978-1979 was really his best year. Meco made an Italo-Disco remix album entirely devoted to Superman, and at this point, Meco had the pull to get access to John Williams's sheet music for the score before the music even came out. In my personal opinion it's the best of them because he has to recreate it entirely with his own instruments, leading to a very unique sound.
He also did an album based on the Wizard of Oz:
And a combination album of Star Trek/Black Hole. It's probably the earliest remixing date of Goldsmith pieces of music: the Motion Picture Theme (which is now associated with the Next Generation - hearing it done in Italodisco is uncanny) and the Klingon Theme:
Incidentally, I think the design here of the Meco Enterprise, which had to be modified for legal reasons, would make a wonderful canon starship if anyone wants to be inspired by it. It reminds me of the same concept that would be used in the very next film for the Reliant-class of ships.
Tumblr media
Meco eventually retired from music in 1985, but unfortunately he is no longer with us, as he passed into the next dimension in 2023. I think he showed us that creativity is often about transformation, and was inspired to make his art by a legitimate awe of space, the cosmos, and human imagination that the scifi movies of the 1970s and 80s provoke.
612 notes · View notes
theamericanpin-up · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Bill Randall - 1970s Meco Welding Calendar Advertising Illustration - Kemper-Thomas Calendar Co. - American Pin-up Calendar Collection
223 notes · View notes
captainkon0 · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Real quick doodle while working on the comic (I've been writting the whole plot and sketching it). Just to keep alive the account lol
277 notes · View notes
retroscifiart · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Art by Shusei Nagaoka for "Music From Star Trek and Music From The Black Hole" by Meco (1980)
180 notes · View notes
humanoidhistory · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Japanese record store poster for the legendary Star Wars and Other Galactic Funk by Meco, 1977. Art by Robert Rodriguez.
312 notes · View notes
spirit-of-anime · 13 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Itoshimi no Shady
28 notes · View notes
vinyl-artwork · 11 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Meco - Star Wars And Other Galactic Funk (1977)
Design by Gribbitt!, Stephen Lumel
143 notes · View notes
mrsdaphnefielding · 13 days ago
Text
METRO (5)
Tumblr media
...Casting the woman as a faraway muse is probably the most reasonable thing Fina can do, given that she cannot stop thinking about her. The woman is a stranger and will remain a stranger, with a job in Finance and probably a lawyer for a boyfriend, and she is clearly at an age where the term for that is not “boyfriend” any longer, and her life is very far away from Fina’s.
If she keeps having this impact on Fina, the dissertation will be done by the end of the semester and Fina ponders, for a moment, whether she would add a thanks to the beautiful stranger on the metro to her acknowledgements section. Perhaps in some penultimate take that she will not show to her supervisor.
20 notes · View notes
skooodles · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
10 notes · View notes
fabien-euskadi · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Winter slowly dying at the Meco Beach.
20 notes · View notes
thinkbolt · 3 months ago
Text
youtube
No joke. My favorite album of the late 70s. I played side B non-stop. (And I still have it!)
Another note - after listening to this for almost FIFTY YEARS, I just realized in 2024 what this is : it's DRUMLINE
4 notes · View notes
6ix-dragons · 8 days ago
Text
What flying Shiki in exploration mode really be like…
5 notes · View notes
captainkon0 · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I did a lot of sketches this week to get used to draw them for the Atlantis AU! x Arcane that now I want to see them finished
70 notes · View notes
ominous-synths-records · 21 days ago
Text
Nights Are Forever (Twilight Zone The Movie) - Meco
Listen to more by this artist
View our full out of print music library
3 notes · View notes
balsanja · 1 year ago
Text
Meco - Star Wars Theme
14 notes · View notes
myimaginaryradio · 5 months ago
Text
Star Wars Theme - Meco
youtube
2 notes · View notes