This monthly post is dedicated to the 30th Anniversary of the album, MICKEY MOUSE DISCO. It was released in 1979 and featured 9 disco songs-three of them Disney standards. Without a doubt, this is one of the best Disney LPs I ever owned and it still gets played to this day via vinyl or on CD when on the go. To see an ad for the album, see the previous post for Disneyland Record Commercials.
The album cover was beautifully done by Dick Duerrstein and illustrated by the Alvin White Studio. The front features Mickey and Minnie dancing with a cavalcade of disco lights on a dance floor . The rear cover features a smaller version of the title logo with a huge spotlight on the right right Daisy and Donald, Horace Horsecollar (with his cool plaid bellbottoms and platforms), Clarabelle Cow and Chip & Dale all dancing to the beat with more flashing lights.
The songs on the album:
Disco Mickey Mouse
Welcome to Rio
The Greatest Band
Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah (Oscar Winner from Song of the South)
Macho Duck (a parody of The Village People’s Macho Man and featured Donald Duck, voiced by Jim Tadevic, NOT Clarence “Ducky“ Nash)
Mousetrap (written by album producer Jymn Magon)
Watch Out For Goofy (Goofy makes a cameo, voiced by Tony Pope)
It’s A Small World
Chim Chim Cher-ee (Another Oscar Winner from Mary Poppins and is Instrumental with a great sax solo)
The arrangements were done by Dennis Burnside, with the exception of It’s a Small World.
Interestingly, the tracks Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah and Chim Chim Cher-ee were both on the Musicor Records’ album CARTOON DISCO, released one year before and in the same arrangements but remixed differently. That album also featured disco versions of the Mickey Mouse March, Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf, and Whistle While You Work. One has to wonder why these tracks weren’t included on Mickey Mouse Disco. If I had a wish, it would be an expanded version of Mickey Mouse Disco with the original release and the Cartoon Disco Disney tracks as bonus cuts.
Disney released the album in July 1979 and it went Gold in April 1980, then a month and a half later, it reached Platinum and in October 1984, it became the first children’s album to reach Double Platinum status.
It reached #35 on the Top 40 album charts. And Record World magazine named it the Number #1 Children's Album.
In addition, the album was released world-wide and international versions were released in the Latin American countries and in Japan. Also, tie-in merchandise were made such as record players, record cases, etc and a 7-8 minute cartoon was released featuring 5 songs from the album set to clips from classic Disney shorts such as Thru the Mirror, Clock Cleaners, Mickey’s Delayed Date, etc.
The album’s legacy still lives on as you can get the album on vinyl on Ebay but in digital form on Itunes.
After 30 years, that Mouse will never fail and never will this classic album.