Denver Dream (song) explained

Denver Dream
Cover:Denver_Dream_(Holland).jpg
Type:single
Artist:Donna Summer
B-Side:Something's In the Wind
Released:January 3, 1974
Recorded:1973
Genre:Pop
Length:3:24
Label:Lark Records
Producer:Giorgio Moroder, Pete Bellotte
Prev Title:Sally Go 'Round the Roses
Prev Year:1971
Next Title:The Hostage
Next Year:1974

"Denver Dream" is a song by American singer Donna Summer, released in 1974. This was her first collaboration with Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte, a songwriting team that would stay together until 1981 and produce all of Summer's biggest disco hits.[1] At this time Summer was living in Munich, Germany and singing backup for groups such as Three Dog Night.[2] Through her job as a backup singer she met Moroder and before long he started using her as a lead vocalist. This single also marked the first usage of Summer's stage name (she had previously been credited as Donna Gaines, but had anglicised her married name to Austrian actor Helmut Sommer).[3] It was released in The Netherlands, Belgium, and France in 1974, but did not make any particular impact on the chart. The B-side, "Something's in the Wind", would, in 1977, be re-worked into the single, "Back in Love Again", which would become a top-40 UK hit. Both sides of this single now appear on the CD compilation "Giorgio Moroder - Vol. 2-On The Groove Train 1974-85"

Notes and References

  1. News: Herrera . Dave . Listen to Donna Summer's "Denver Dream" . . May 17, 2012 . October 6, 2019.
  2. News: Stevens . Jenny . Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: 'We regret not recognising Donna Summer' . . May 18, 2012 . October 6, 2019.
  3. News: Weinraub . Bernard . For Disco's First Diva, It's Still Not Last Dance . . November 11, 2003 . October 6, 2019.