The Borneo Post (Sabah)

How a trip to the bathroom led to a Diana Ross song

- By Geoff Edgers

WASHINGTON Post reporter Geoff Edgers chatted with guitarist, Chic co-founder and legendary producer Nile Rodgers. Here are excerpts from their conversati­on.

Q: You told me that at one point, you were getting called by famous people who wanted you to make their disco album. Including Frank Sinatra.

A: At some point in time, disco was so dominant in the music scene, everybody figured that all they had to do was a disco record and they’d have a hit record. A very famous flutist named Herbie Mann had a record called “Hijack.”

A woman named Esther Phillips made “What a Diff’rence a Day Makes” with the jazz guitar player Joe Beck. So people just thought, that’s what you’ve got to do, make records that people want to dance to and you get a hit. And Frank Sinatra was no different than anyone else. He loved having hit records.

Q: Didn’t Aretha Franklin also ask?

A: Aretha wanted us to make a record called “I’m Going to Be the Only Star Tonight Down at the Disco.” And (producer) Bernard (Edwards) and I flatly refused. But we felt so bad. We’re like, “Wait a minute. Give us a chance. Let us make an ultra-soulful Aretha record. You do not have to do a disco record. You’re the Queen of Soul.” But sometimes record companies, they just get in an artist’s head and they think that that’s what they have to do. And maybe she believed that, too. But we wouldn’t do it. And a guy named Van McCoy, who did a song called “The Hustle,” he did the record.

Q: You wrote an amazing autobiogra­phy. Tell us about how you ran into a bunch of people dressed like Diana Ross at a club.

A: During the Studio 54 era, clubs in midtown Manhattan were just the thing. So every night we would go club-hopping. On this particular night, I went to a club called GG’s Barnum Room. It was a trans club, and this one time I walked into the bathroom and I happened to be producing Diana Ross. There were all these Diana Ross impersonat­ors in there. And because it was so early in my career, I couldn’t even say, “Oh, guys, you know what? Oh, man, I’m producing Diana Ross” because they would’ve thought I was lying. I’d only done Chic and Sister Sledge.

Then I went outside to a phone booth, called my partner up, and I said, “Yo, Bernard, please do me a favour.” And he was like, dead asleep, like “What, what, what, what’s going on?” I said, “Look, write down ‘I’m coming out.’ “

“What do you mean, man?” I said, “Please, just write down the words ‘I’m coming out’ because I’m going to stay up all night. I’m going to get drunk and I’m going to forget this. I was standing in the bathroom with six or eight dudes dressed up like Diana Ross. And if we do a song called ‘I’m Coming Out’ we will recognize the gay community’s admiration for Diana Ross.”

And he didn’t quite get it. And I said, “Dude, it’ll be like James Brown saying, ‘Say it loud. I’m Black and I’m proud.’ “And Bernard started laughing and said, “I get it!”

 ??  ?? Geoff Edgers and Nile Rodgers chatted on Instagram Live on Sept 11. — Photo by The Washington Post
Geoff Edgers and Nile Rodgers chatted on Instagram Live on Sept 11. — Photo by The Washington Post

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