Peter Jacques band
Peter Jacques band | |
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Origin | Bologna, Italy |
Genres | disco, Hi-NRG |
Years active | 1978–1986 |
Labels | Prelude Records, Goody Music Records, Renaissance International |
Past members | Jacques Fred Petrus, Mauro Malavasi, Davide Romani, Gabriele Melotti, George Aghedo, Leroy Burgess, Rudy Trevisi, Sandro Comini |
Peter Jacques band was an Italian Disco band, created by French-Italian-American businessman Jacques Fred Petrus (1949–1986) and songwriter and producer Mauro Malavasi (1958–). They released three albums all reaching minor success but most of all opened up the US market for Italian made disco. In 1979, his greatest single hit was "Walking on Music" from the "Fire Night Dance" album. All tracks from this album peaked #6 on the US disco chart.[1] Other albums were, "Welcome Back" released in 1980 and "Dancing In The Street" released in 1985. After financial problems Petrus had less means and studio time to succeed with PJB and his other projects like Change and B. B. & Q. band. In 1987, while in Guadeloupe, a Swiss tourist was accused of murder.[2] After whichPJB vanished.
The band is considered one of the pioneers of Italian produced Disco music in the U.S. and Europe. Still, the style of the music of the band is not an Italo disco (a specific dance music genre that developed in Europe in the 80-s). It's rather a real, "traditional" (US-rooted) disco music produced in Italy. It's clearly reflected in its "cold" dance-style sound and upbeat rhythm, and in the fact that it was mainly marketed in the US, where it gained a huge popularity.
In 2007, Turbofunk (Patrick Alavi) released "Gotta move" which was a remix of "Dancing In the Street".
External links
- Peter Jacques band biography
- Leroy Burgess interview by Pete Lewis, 'Blues & Soul' September 2010
- Freestyle roots
- "JACQUES FRED PETRUS & MAURO MALAVASI: The perfect Italian disco chemistry". jacquesfredpetrusmauromalavasi.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2016-11-12.
References
- ↑ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Hot Dance/Disco: 1974-2003. Record Research. p. 133.
- ↑ "The Story of Italy's Biggest Disco Producer, His Ruthless Rise to the Top, and Eventual Assassination | Thump". thump.vice.com. Retrieved 2016-11-12.