Discothèque

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For the U2 song, see Discothèque (song).

A discothèque (or discoteque) (pronounced disko-tek) is an entertainment venue or club with recorded music, played by "Discaires" (Disk jockeys), rather than an on-stage band. The word derives from the French word discothèque (a type of nightclub). Discothèque is a portmanteau coined around 1941 from disc and bibliothèque (library) by La Discothèque, then located on the Rue de la Huchette in Paris (Jones + Kantonen, 1999). Previously, most paid entertainment in public venues used live bands.

Today the term discothèque is usually synonymous with nightclub. The term "disco" was originally a 1960s U.S. abbreviation of discothèque, a place where "disco music" was played.

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[edit] Some historical discothèques

  • Ad Lib, in London, opened 1963 by Nicholas Luard and Lord Timothy Willoughby
  • La Discothèque, in London, opened 1960
  • Chez Regine, in Paris' Latin Quarter, opened 1957 by Régine
  • La Discothèque, in Paris (on rue Hachette), opened 1941
  • Whisky à Go-Go, in Paris, opened 1947 by Paul Pacine
  • 2001 Odyssey, in Brooklyn, New York (was rechristened as The Spectrum in 1987; club demolished in late 2005)
  • Arthur, in New York City, opened 1965 by Sybil Burton at site of the defunct El Morocco
  • Aux Puces, in New York City, one of the first gay discos
  • Cheetah, in New York City, at Broadway and 53rd Street
  • Civic Theatre Disco in New Orleans owned and operated by Glen Tortorich. A converted Art Deco theater was billed as the world's largest disco accommodating over 1500 and referred to as the Studio 54 of the South.
  • Dlux club Caspe dlux.es
  • Down The Street, in Asbury Park, New Jersey, open until 1999
  • Electric Circus, opened 1967 on St. Mark’s Place
  • Il Mio (an Italian "discoteca"), in New York City,
  • L’Interdit, in New York City
  • La Dom, downstairs from Electric Circus; run by Andy Warhol
  • Le Club, in New York City, opened 1960 by Olivier Coquelin, a French [[expatriate]
  • Ones Discotheque, New York City 1972-1982
  • Peppermint Lounge, in New York City, opened 1961
  • Shepheard's, in New York City,
  • Studio 54, in New York City, operated by Steve Rubell; depicted in the 1998 film 54; parodied in the 2002 movie Austin Powers in Goldmember as Studio 69.
  • The Loft, in New York City, opened 1970 by David Mancuso
  • The Sanctuary, in New York City, a famous early-1970s gay disco; part of the movie Klute was filmed there
  • Whisky a Go Go, in Chicago
  • Whisky a Go Go, in West Hollywood, California, opened 1964

[edit] Disco

Main article: Disco

The term disco is derived from discothèque. It generally refers to a specific style of music and dance that coincided with this cultural landmark.

[edit] See also

[edit] References