On this episode of Vinyl Vibes, Jack is joined by Robert Upchurch, long-time member of The Trammps. Finding his musical roots in gospel music, Robert began playing the R&B club circuit in Philadelphia in the early ‘70s. He was soon discovered and signed to Golden Fleece Records, where he released his debut single, The Devil Made Me Do It, and began his journey into disco music. After Robert released his debut single, the Golden Fleece label folded, and its artist roster was bought out by Atlantic Records. The Trammps, a disco group from Philadelphia, were also signed to Golden Fleece when it folded. Now with both artists on the Atlantic label, the label wanted to see how Robert would sound with The Trammps.
Robert officially joined The Trammps, and in 1977 he sang backing on their single Disco Inferno. At first, the single was only a moderate hit, reaching number 53 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States. However, the song was later added to the soundtrack of the disco film Saturday Night Fever. Disco Inferno then experienced immense success, becoming the closing track on the 40 million-selling Saturday Night Fever soundtrack album. As a reissued single, the song was also a hit in its own right, reaching number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 32 on the Australian Kent Music Charts. Today, the song is remembered as one of the signature tracks of the disco era.
Following the group's success with Disco Inferno, into the later ‘70s, disco started experiencing massive pushback from rock listeners. Like many disco groups of the time, The Trammps’ success started to fade. The Trammps would continue to make music into the ‘80s, with their last album, This One Is for the Party, being commercially unsuccessful and only seeing a release in the Netherlands. Since then, the group has continued to play live, and Robert has remained in the group all this time.
In this episode, Jack calls Robert to talk about his early life, hearing his voice for the first time on a reel-to-reel tape recorder, his time doing gospel music, hearing rock and roll for the first time, his time playing on the R&B club circuit, how he came to be discovered and signed to Golden Fleece Records, his first single The Devil Made Me Do It, how he came to join The Trammps in 1976, the recording of Trammps songs such as Disco Party and their famous Disco Inferno, playing his first gig with the group at Madison Square Garden, how Disco Inferno came to be featured in Saturday Night Fever, the success of Disco Inferno, the band's work into the '80s, and the group's touring today.
"The first time we heard it, we were at the office of our production company, and Ron Kersey, who wrote the song, played it for us. My first impression was 'Oh no,' because, like I said, I've never liked disco. I said, 'You guys gotta be kidding, you know, come on, haha.' The other guys thought it was okay, but I just didn't feel it would do anything." — Robert Upchurch on this episode of Vinyl Vibes, talking about hearing Disco Inferno for the first time.
Hosted and produced by Jack Hodgins.