Bad Girls (Donna Summer album)
Bad Girls is the seventh studio album by American singer and songwriter Donna Summer, released on April 25, 1979, on Casablanca Records. Originally issued as a double album, Bad Girls became the best-selling and most critically acclaimed album of Summer's career. It was also her final studio album for Casablanca Records. In 2003, Universal Music re-issued Bad Girls as a digitally remastered and expanded deluxe edition.
Bad Girls reached atop the US Billboard 200, where it stayed for six weeks: for one week on June 16, 1979, and then for five consecutive weeks, from July 7 to August 4, 1979. Bad Girls also topped the Billboard R&B Albums chart for three weeks, from June 23 to July 7, 1979, and all cuts from the album topped the Disco Top 80 for seven weeks, from May 26 to July 7, 1979. It contained the US Billboard Hot 100 number-one hits "Hot Stuff" and "Bad Girls", and the number-two hit "Dim All the Lights". Summer also achieved further success when she became the first female artist to have two songs in the top three of the Billboard Hot 100, when on the week of June 30, 1979, "Hot Stuff" fell to number two and "Bad Girls" rose to number three.
Bad Girls was universally acclaimed and was certified platinum—now double platinum—by the Recording Industry Association of America within just a week of its release. At the 1980 Grammy Awards, Bad Girls was nominated for Album of the Year and "Hot Stuff" won Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. Additionally, "Bad Girls" was nominated for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and "Dim All the Lights" was nominated for Best Disco Recording.
Bad Girls is widely considered one of the greatest disco albums. It was ranked by Rolling Stone
Background
Having made her name in the preceding years as "the queen of disco," Summer set to work on her new album with long-time partners Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, as well as various others she had not worked with before. By this time, although disco music was still popular, other styles such as punk and heavy metal were also doing well on the charts, so the team decided to incorporate a rockier sound into some of the songs. Other songs had a more soul/R&B feel to them, and in all it was probably Summer's most diverse album to date. The fusion of rock and disco was particularly evident, and synthesizers were used to augment the sound for a more electronic and dance oriented electro music in the first two songs on the album – "Hot Stuff" and "Bad Girls", which also became the first two singles to be released from the album. Both were huge hits and made number one on the American singles chart. The former also won Summer a Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance and became popular again in the 1990s when it was featured in The Full Monty and again in the film The Martian. "Dim All the Lights" was the third single and also became a huge hit, peaking at number two in the U.S.Release and reception
Bad Girls was universally acclaimed by music reviews. The album was certified double platinum for sales in excess of 2 million copies in the U.S. on December 1, 1993. It also became her second consecutive number-one album in the U.S., also spending three weeks at number one in Canada on the RPM 100 national albums chart. As well as the aforementioned Grammy Award for "Hot Stuff", the song "Bad Girls" was also nominated for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance and Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. "Dim All the Lights" was nominated for Best Disco Recording and the album itself was nominated for Album of the Year. The album was also nominated for "Favourite Pop/Rock Album" at the American Music Awards of 1980. The single took an American Music Award for "Favorite Pop/Rock Single", while Summer took awards for "Favorite Pop/Rock Female Artist" & "Favorite Soul/R&B Female Artist".Bad Girls would be Summer's final studio album for Casablanca Records, who ended 1979 with the release of a greatest hits double-album. For her next studio album, Summer wanted to branch out into other formats of music but since she and Casablanca could not come to an agreement on her musical direction, Summer opted to sign a new deal with Geffen Records, the then-new label formed by David Geffen. Her first album with Geffen Records was more rock/new wave oriented. In the meantime, Casablanca chose to release more singles from the Bad Girls album into 1980: "Sunset People" and "Walk Away", the latter of which became a moderate hit reaching the top 40. Casablanca/PolyGram also released a special edition compilation entitled Walk Away – Greatest Hits 1977–1980, which featured a selection of her hits from the Bad Girls period and the preceding years. In 2003 Universal Music, owners of the Casablanca/PolyGram back catalogue since 1998, re-issued Bad Girls as a digitally remastered and expanded deluxe edition.
Commercial performance
The RIAA site has the album certified as 1,000,000 sales as of May 3, 1979. The RIAA did not introduce multi-plantinum awards until 1984, thus there are no artist with multi-plantinum certifications on the RIAA web site before 1984. Bad Girls the album was designated Triple Platinum in 1979. It has sold over 4 million copies in the US.Track listing
All tracks produced by Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte except "My Baby Understands" by Donna Summer and Juergen Koppers.Personnel
Musicians
- Donna Summer – lead and background vocals, composition, production
- Giorgio Moroder – bass guitar, synthesizer, guitar, composition, production
- Pete Bellotte – bass guitar, composition, production
- Harold Faltermeyer – bass guitar, composition, drums, keyboards, synclavier
- Bruce Sudano – synthesizer, composition
- Joe Esposito – background vocals, composition
- Keith Forsey – background vocals, drums, percussion, composition
- Jeff Baxter – guitar
- Bob Conti – percussion, composition
- Edward "Eddie" Hokenson – composition
- Pamela Quinlan – background vocals
- Jai Winding – piano
- Jay Graydon, Paul Jackson Jr. – guitar
- Al Perkins – steel guitar
- Sid Sharp – strings
- Scott Edwards, Bob Glaub – bass guitar
- Gary Grant, Jerry Hey, Steve Madaio – trumpet
- Gary Herbig – saxophone
- Dick Hyde, Bill Reichenbach Jr. – trombone
- Stephanie Straill, Julia, Maxine Willard – backing vocals
Production
- Producers: Giorgio Moroder, Pete Bellotte
- Arranged by: Harold Faltermeyer
- Recording Engineer: Jürgen Koppers, Steven D. Smith
- Assistant Engineer: Carolyn Tapp
- Mixing Engineer: Jürgen Koppers
- Original Mastering Engineer: Brian Gardner at Allen Zentz Mastering, Hollywood
- * recorded and mixed at Rusk Sound studios, Hollywood; January – March 1979
- Production manager: Budd Tunick
- Art direction: Jeffrey Kent Ayeroff
- Design: Jeffrey Kent Ayeroff, Jeri McManus
Charts and certifications
Weekly charts
Year-end charts
Singles
- Billboard
Single | Chart | Peak position |
"Hot Stuff" | Billboard Hot 100 | 1 |
"Hot Stuff" | Club Play Singles | 1 |
"Hot Stuff" | Hot Soul Singles | 3 |
"Bad Girls" | Billboard Hot 100 | 1 |
"Bad Girls" | Club Play Singles | 1 |
"Bad Girls" | Hot Soul Singles | 1 |
"Dim All the Lights" | Billboard Hot 100 | 2 |
"Dim All the Lights" | Club Play Singles | 1 |
"Dim All the Lights" | Hot Soul Singles | 13 |
"Dim All the Lights" | Adult Contemporary Singles | 44 |
"Walk Away" | Billboard Hot 100 | 36 |
"Walk Away" | Hot Soul Singles | 35 |
- Outside North America
Single | Chart | Peak position |
"Hot Stuff" | German Media Control Singles Chart | 5 |
"Hot Stuff" | Norway VG-lista Single Chart | 2 |
"Hot Stuff" | Sweden Single Chart | 2 |
"Hot Stuff" | UK Singles Chart | 11 |
"Bad Girls" | German Media Control Singles Chart | 9 |
"Bad Girls" | Norway VG-lista Single Chart | 8 |
"Bad Girls" | Sweden Single Chart | 13 |
"Bad Girls" | UK Singles Chart | 14 |
"Dim All the Lights" | German Media Control Singles Chart | 25 |
"Dim All the Lights" | UK Singles Chart | 29 |
"Sunset People" | UK Singles Chart | 46 |