- Source: Meco
- Source: MECO
Domenico Monardo (November 29, 1939 – May 26, 2023), known as Meco, was an American record producer and musician, as well as the name of his band or production team. Meco is best known for his 1977 space disco version of the Star Wars theme from his album Star Wars and Other Galactic Funk; both the single and album were certified platinum in the US.
Early life and education
Meco Monardo was born in Johnsonburg, Pennsylvania, United States, on November 29, 1939 to parents of Italian descent. Building model ships, science fiction and movies were some of his boyhood preoccupations. His father played the valve trombone in a small Italian band, and through him Meco got his first musical education. Meco wanted to play the drums, but his father convinced him that the trombone was the right instrument, and at nine that was the instrument with which he was to stay. However, for Meco, the slide trombone was his choice, troublesome as it was for the small-statured boy to extend the slide fully at first. He joined the high school band while still attending elementary school. At 17, he won a scholarship to the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, which provided him with a solid classical and jazz music education.
Career
While at Eastman School of Music, together with his two friends Chuck Mangione and Ron Carter, he started the Eastman School of Music jazz band. When he enrolled at West Point, he also played in the Cadet Band.
After serving in the US Army, Meco moved to New York City and joined Kai Winding's four-trombone band, and then from 1965 to 1974 he went on as a studio musician. Originally not inclined toward pop music, Meco's heart changed when he heard Petula Clark's "Downtown." He began arranging for musicians, for example the horn section on Tommy James' "Crystal Blue Persuasion" and the Neil Diamond series of Coca-Cola commercials.
As a session musician he played the trombone with acts like Tommy James, Diana Ross, and David Barretto. Although Meco focused on producing in the late 1970s, he contracted the horns and performed on Diana Ross' 1980 album Diana as a favor to producer (and neighbor) Nile Rodgers. His solo on the single "I'm Coming Out" is notable because of the rarity of trombone features on post-big-band era pop records.
Around 1973, Meco and Tony Bongiovi were part of a trio that formed the production company Disco Corporation of America. From 1974 to 1976, Meco worked as a record producer. The team of Meco, Bongiovi, Jay Ellis, and Harold Wheeler produced the 1974 Gloria Gaynor hit "Never Can Say Goodbye." Carol Douglas' "Doctor's Orders" was among the other productions of that period.
= Star Wars theme
=On the picture's opening day, Wednesday, May 25, 1977, Meco attended the 20th Century-Fox soon-to-be blockbuster hit Star Wars. By the following night, he had seen the film four more times, and attended several more screenings over the weekend.
Meco then got the idea to make a disco version of the score by John Williams and contacted Neil Bogart at Casablanca Records to pitch the project. However, rather than greenlighting the project right away, Bogart chose to wait. Only after both the picture itself as well as the original score had become huge hits did Bogart agree to help Meco realize his idea. Contact was established with Millennium Records, then a Casablanca subsidiary, and this became Meco's first record company. Here Meco rejoined with Tony Bongiovi as well as Harold Wheeler who had also been part of the team behind "Never Can Say Goodbye" in 1974. Lance Quinn was also part of the Meco team, and the different roles played by the four musicians is described by Meco himself in a 1999 interview with his fan Web site:
Tony and Lance are the two guys who would not let me be "too musical". Tony would say: "It's not dumb enough—It's too good." Tony is a frustrated drummer and Lance is a guitar genius, so they would make sure the rhythm section was always "smoking" under the very sophisticated arrangements and concepts that Harold and I started with.
In a matter of just three weeks they arranged and recorded Star Wars and Other Galactic Funk. Although the album was nominated for "Best Pop Instrumental Performance" at the 20th Annual Grammy Awards in 1978, the award ultimately went to John Williams for the original soundtrack album.
= The band Meco
=For a period of four months there was even a show band assembled to perform to Meco's disco music in public venues. However, the band was not involved in the making of the music. This initiative was organized by Norby Walters, a booking agent for discos. The band members toured the U.S. and Canada as a high energy show band called Lemon Tree. Norby Walters booked and also managed the band before the Star Wars project. Band personnel was Carmine Giovinazzo, Stan Glogicheski, Tommy Rocco, Tony Abruzzo, and Tony "Butch" Gerace.
= Other soundtracks become "Meco-ized"
=In the fall of 1977, Meco's second album was released. It was another rearranged science-fiction movie soundtrack, Encounters of Every Kind, based on John Williams music of the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind, from which three singles were released: "Topsy," "Meco's Theme," and "Theme from 'Close Encounters.'"
Meco's third album came in early 1978, and this time it was the music from The Wizard of Oz, which got transformed into a disco album by the same name, as Meco described: "It is my best work, bar none." From this album came the hit single "Themes from The Wizard of Oz: 'Over the Rainbow'/'We're off to See the Wizard.'"
In the fall of 1978, Millennium merged with RCA. Since he had developed a deep-bonded working relationship with Neil Bogart and other staff at Casablanca Records (Millennium and Casablanca having cooperated closely), Meco decided to move to Casablanca. Casablanca released the fourth Meco album, Superman & Other Galactic Heroes, featuring two hit singles, "Superman Theme" and "Love Theme From Superman." This was yet another Meco makeover of an original John Williams score.
In 1979, the fifth album, Moondancer, was released, and with it the hit singles "Moondancer," "Grazing in the Grass," and "Devil's Delight." In 1980, Meco's sixth album, Music from Star Trek and Music from the Black Hole, was released, featuring the song "Theme from 'Star Trek.'" The movie Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) featured an original soundtrack composed by Jerry Goldsmith. Meco also created Meco Plays Music from The Empire Strikes Back, which was a 10" EP containing a mash-up of various themes from the John Williams score to The Empire Strikes Back for RSO Records.
The last album that Meco made for Casablanca, his seventh, which came out in 1981, was Impressions of An American Werewolf in London, based on the soundtrack from the 1981 feature film An American Werewolf in London. After this LP, Meco's tenure with Casablanca was over.
Meco also recorded for RSO Records (Empire Strikes Back and Christmas in the Stars) as well as Arista Records (Ewok Celebration, Pop Goes the Movies, Swingtime's Greatest Hits) and with Columbia on the single The Raiders March. His Hooked on Instrumentals was released on CD and Cassette on the K-Tel label in the US, and Mercury released a CD compilation of his greatest hits, The Best of Meco in 1997.
= Retirement from music
=According to Meco, "When disco was new, it was fresh and exciting because it was different. But pretty soon it became too cookie-cutter and wore itself out." He left the music industry in 1985.
Meco died at his home in Tamarac, Florida on May 26, 2023, at the age of 83.
Discography
= Albums
=Star Wars and Other Galactic Funk (1977) - AUS #19
Encounters of Every Kind (1977) - AUS #75
Meco Plays The Wizard of Oz (1978) - AUS #72
Superman & Other Galactic Heroes (1978)
Moondancer (1979)
Meco Plays Music from the Empire Strikes Back (10" EP – 1980)
Christmas in the Stars: Star Wars Christmas Album (1980)
Music from Star Trek and Music from the Black Hole (1980)
Across The Galaxy (1980)
Impressions of An American Werewolf in London (1981)
Pop Goes the Movies (1982) - AUS #88
Swingtime's Greatest Hits (1982)
Ewok Celebration (1983)
Hooked on Instrumentals (with Harold Wheeler) (1983) - AUS #93
The Best of Meco (1997)
Dance Your Asteroids Off: The Complete Star Wars Collection (2000)
Star Wars Party (2005) (This release is only sold on the Internet, a retail release with identical musical content was released as Music Inspired by "Star Wars")
Meco Presents Camouflage / Showdown (2010) (Two LPs reissued together on one CD, both originally released in 1977 on Honey Bee Records.)
= Singles
=Charted singles
Additional singles
"Topsy" / "Lady Marion" (1977)
"Crazy Rhythm" / "Hot in the Saddle" (Mexico promo release)
"Main Title Theme from Superman" / "Love Theme from Superman (Can You Read My Mind?)" (1979)
"Moondancer" (US 12-inch promo) (1979)
"Devil Delight" / "Grazing in te Grass" (1979)
"Theme from Star Trek" / "Clearmotion" (1980)
"Christmas in the Stars" / "Sleigh Ride" (1980)
"Moondance" / "Blue Moon" (1981)
"The Raiders March" (from the Motion Picture "Raiders of the Lost Ark") / "Cairo Nights" (1981)
"Anything Goes" / "Music Makers" (1984)
References
Bibliography
Whitburn, Joel. Joel Whitburn presents Billboard Hot 100 Charts: The Seventies and The Eighties. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc., 1991.
External links
Meco discography at Discogs
Meco Discography
Meco Monardo interview with DiscoMusic.com
Meco fanpage
Meco or MECO or mecos, may refer to:
People
A meco, a member of the Mecos, a Casta, a caste of Amerindians in Iberian colonial empires
= People by the nickname, stagename, pseudonym
=Meco (1939–2023; born Domenico Monardo), American record producer and musician
The Great Meco, a wrestler signed to Revolutionary Championship Wrestling
Carmelo “Meco” Domínguez, a Bolivian drug lord involved in Presidential corruption in Bolivia
Américo "Meco" dos Santos, a soccer player for Atlético Petróleos de Luanda, Luanda, Angola
= People with the given name
=Meco Barcliff, wife of Melvin "Magoo" Barcliff (1973–2023), of the U.S. hiphop duo Timbaland & Magoo
Meço Bono (18th century), member of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces for the Pashalik of Yanina, under Ali Pasha of Ioannina
Meco Chang, an executive of the Asian Weightlifting Federation
Meco Eno (born 1966), American musician
Meco Poliziani, Canadian player of Canadian football, drafted into the Canadian Football League in 1960
= People with the surname
=Éric Di Meco (born 1963), French soccer player
Jose Luis Abalos Meco (born 1958), Spanish politician
Marco Di Meco (born 1982), Italian musician
Richard Meco (1590–1661), English musician
Sonila Meço, an Albanian TV personality on Agon Channel, Tirana, Albania
Sylvia Meco, a competitor for Italy in artistic roller skating at the 1981 World Games
Vincenzo Meco (born 1940), Italian racing cyclist
Places
Meco Mountain, Angola; a mountain, see Portuguese Angola
Meco, a river in Chile; see List of rivers of Chile (D–O)
El Meco, a tributary of the Moctezuma River in Acatlán, Hidalgo, Mexico
Meco (municipality), a part of metropolitan Madrid, Spain
Meco rail station, on the C-8 (Cercanías Madrid) rail line
Meco, New York, USA; a hamlet
Meco Road, Easton, Pennsylvania, USA; bordering its property, is named for Metropolitan Edison (M.E.Co.)
El Meco, Yucatan, Mayan Empire; an ancient port, now an archaeological site in Mexico
Groups, organizations
MECO Construction, a Costa Rican company; see Johnny Araya Monge
Mactan Electric Company, Cebu, Visayas, Philippines; an electrical utility
Magnolia Electric Co. (MECo), an American band, the backing band to Jason Molina
Manila Economic and Cultural Office, Taipei, Taiwan; the representative office and defacto embassy of the Philippines to Taiwan, Republic of China
Maui Electric Company, Maui, Hawaii, USA; an electrical utility
Mediterranean Elasmobranch Citizen Observations, a citizen-scientist organization involved with monitoring illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing
Mecos București, Bucharest, Romania; the Mecos, a soccer tam
Metropolitan Edison (M.E.Co.), an electric utility serving regions of Pennsylvania, USA; later acquired by GPU, and now part of FirstEnergy
Middle East Christian Outreach, which merged with SIM (Christian organization) in 2016
Mining Engineering Company (MECO), Worcester, England, UK
Events, eras, times
Main engine cutoff, the shut-off of the first stage in a multistage rocket
Meco Cup, a women's ice hockey tournament
Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum, a global warming period 40 million years ago, during the Eocene
Middle European Cooperation in Statistical Physics, an international conference on statistical physics
Other uses
Magnetospheric eternally collapsing object, a theoretical alternative to a black hole
Meco, a racehorse, a colt that won the 1874 Juvenile Stakes (United States)
See also
All pages with titles beginning with MECO
All pages with titles beginning with Meco
All pages with titles containing meco
Meko (disambiguation)
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