When you think of the disco era, the Bee Gees' song "Stayin' Alive" surely comes to mind—complete with its pulsating rhythm, Barry Gibb’s famous falsetto, and those "Ah ah ah" lyrics. To this day, "Stayin' Alive" is considered one of the most iconic and defining disco anthems in music history, despite the fact that the Bee Gees were latecomers to disco music.
Disco music started gaining popularity around 1974, thanks to artists like Donna Summer, The Village People, and Sylvester and hit its mainstream peak between 1977 and 1979. Luckily for the Bee Gees, "Stayin' Alive" was released right in that window on November 15, 1977. However, the larger driving factor behind the song's iconic success was its inclusion in the movie Saturday Night Fever, which is about the New York disco scene and stars a young John Travolta in all his disco dancing glory.
The Saturday Night Fever double album soundtrack, which included the song "Stayin' Alive," was released a few weeks ahead of the film on November 15, 1977. The movie debuted on December 14, 1977, and set course to make its indelible mark in pop-culture history (Travolta's Saturday Night Fever character is the dancing emoji, people!)
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"Stayin' Alive" debuted quickly on the Billboard Hot 100 on December 10, 1977, and then hit No. 1 on February 4, 1978, and stayed at the top for four weeks.
While the song is synonymous with disco, "Stayin' Alive" is not featured in one of the movie's well-known dance scenes. Instead, it's well remembered in the opening credits of Saturday Night Fever, in which Brooklyn disco king Tony Manero (Travolta) confidently struts down 86th Street in time to the song's perfect 103 beats per minute (BPM) tempo.
Watch Tony Manero (played by John Travolta) strut to "Stayin' Alive":
One commenter on the video says it perfectly, "When you saw the feet and heard the beat, you automatically knew history was being made."
Photo by Screen Archives on Getty Images
In 1979, the Bee Gees (brothers Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, and Maurice Gibb) and "Stayin' Alive" won a Grammy for Best Vocal Arrangement for Two or More Voices, and the song was also nominated for a Record of the Year Grammy. The same year, the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack won the 1979 Grammy for Album of the Year.
Watch the official Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive" music video:
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