From Local Scenes to Mainstream Saturation (Continued)
Previously skeptical about disco's aesthetic and commercial potential, major music companies including Warner Bros. and CBS responded to the post-Saturday Night Fever boom by establishing dedicated disco departments. As a result, artists such as Alfredo De La Fe (" Hot to Trot " 1979), Herbie Hancock (" You Bet Your Love " 1979), Johnny Mathis (" Gone Gone Gone " 1979), Dolly Parton (" Baby I'm Burnin' " 1978), and the Rolling Stones (" Miss You" 1978) started to record disco, albeit with mixed results.
Around the same time, WKTU, an anonymous soft rock station based in New York, switched to an all-disco format and increased its ratings from a 1.3 share to an 11.3 share overnight. Along with the sweeping success of Saturday Night Fever, the rise of disco radio encouraged the majors to switch their promotional focus from discotheque DJs to radio DJs. Unfortunately, they also decided to expand their disco output exponentially in the belief that anything that contained disco's recognizable four-on-the-floor bass beat would climb the charts. As a result, DJs and dancers alike were faced with a rush of substandard disco releases. However, the shift towards a more profit-driven release strategy was not absolute, and 1978 saw the release of records such as Instant Funk's " I Got My Mind Made Up ," which brought together many of the aesthetic borrowings and innovations of disco, and Sylvester's " You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real) ," which included Patrick Cowley's synthesizer and influenced the "San Francisco Sound." Released the following year and combining hard-edged drums, a prominent bass riff, and shimmering vocals, Chic's seminal " Good Times" aligned the feel-good quality of the discotheque experience with Black upward mobility.