Pre-Disco and Rock Party Dance Hits: Soul, Funk, and Early 70s Dance Favorites
Pre-disco and rock-party dance hits helped bridge 1960s soul, 1970s funk, early disco, and the rock songs that kept parties moving before the mirror ball fully took over. These songs came from dance floors, radio, jukeboxes, roller rinks, bar bands, family parties, and the occasional basement with questionable paneling.
Before disco became a full cultural movement, plenty of songs already had the right ingredients: big grooves, handclaps, horn sections, bass lines, call-and-response vocals, and choruses that made sitting down feel rude. Sly and the Family Stone, Marvin Gaye, The Jackson 5, Stevie Wonder, War, Isaac Hayes, Curtis Mayfield, The O’Jays, and Kool & the Gang all helped shape the sound of danceable pop, soul, and funk.
Rock music had its own party lane, too. Songs by Bob Seger, Grand Funk Railroad, Elton John, The Rolling Stones, Three Dog Night, Kiss, Santana, T. Rex, and Lynyrd Skynyrd gave DJs and party hosts guitar-driven crowd-pleasers that worked beside soul and funk favorites.
This page keeps the focus on pre-disco energy, early disco crossovers, funk grooves, soul party songs, and rock tracks that belonged on the same dance floor before everyone started arguing about whether disco was dead. Spoiler: it was not. It just changed jackets.
Best Pre-Disco and Early 70s Party Dance Hits
Some songs define the pre-disco party sound right away. Dance to the Music, Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin), Superstition, Theme from Shaft, Jungle Boogie, Love Train, and Rock the Boat helped connect soul, funk, pop, and dance music before disco fully dominated the late 1970s.
On the rock side, Joy to the World, Takin’ Care of Business, Crocodile Rock, Rock and Roll All Nite, Come and Get Your Love, and We’re an American Band carried the party with guitars instead of strings and hi-hats. Different engine, same destination.
Pre-Disco Soul, Funk, and Early Dance Hits
- Lady Marmalade – Labelle
- Got to Give It Up – Marvin Gaye
- Dance to the Music – Sly and the Family Stone
- Build Me Up Buttercup – The Foundations
- ABC – The Jackson 5
- Proud Mary – Ike & Tina Turner
- More Today Than Yesterday – Spiral Starecase
- You’ll Never Find Another Love Like Mine – Lou Rawls
- Rock the Boat – The Hues Corporation
- Grazing in the Grass – The Friends of Distinction
- I Want You Back – The Jackson 5
- You’re the First, the Last, My Everything – Barry White
- The Hustle – Van McCoy and the Soul City Symphony
- Jackie Wilson Said (I’m in Heaven When You Smile) – Van Morrison
- Venus – Shocking Blue
- Let’s Get It On – Marvin Gaye
- The Love You Save – The Jackson 5
- Theme from Shaft – Isaac Hayes
- Low Rider – War
- Superstition – Stevie Wonder
- Love Train – The O’Jays
- Give Me Just a Little More Time – Chairmen of the Board
- Tell Me Something Good – Rufus featuring Chaka Khan
- Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) – Sly and the Family Stone
- Groove Me – King Floyd
- Tighter, Tighter – Alive N Kickin’
- Jungle Boogie – Kool & the Gang
- Let’s Stay Together – Al Green
- Dancing Machine – The Jackson 5
- You Sexy Thing – Hot Chocolate
- The Cisco Kid – War
- I’ll Take You There – The Staple Singers
- Stoned Love – The Supremes
- Boogie Down – Eddie Kendricks
- Treat Her Like a Lady – Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose
- Rockin’ Robin – Michael Jackson
- Superfly – Curtis Mayfield
- Freddie’s Dead – Curtis Mayfield
- For the Love of Money – The O’Jays
- Montego Bay – Bobby Bloom
- Fly, Robin, Fly – Silver Convention
- In the Summertime – Mungo Jerry
- I Just Want to Celebrate – Rare Earth
- I Want to Take You Higher – Sly and the Family Stone
- Spanish Hustle – Fatback Band
- The Sound of Philadelphia – MFSB featuring The Three Degrees
- Mr. Big Stuff – Jean Knight
- Back Stabbers – The O’Jays
- Mama’s Pearl – The Jackson 5
- Soul Makossa – Manu Dibango
Early 70s Rock Party Hits
- Old Time Rock and Roll – Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band
- Sweet Home Alabama – Lynyrd Skynyrd
- Joy to the World – Three Dog Night
- Takin’ Care of Business – Bachman-Turner Overdrive
- Brown Sugar – The Rolling Stones
- The Loco-Motion – Grand Funk Railroad
- Gimme Gimme Good Lovin’ – Crazy Elephant
- Thank God I’m a Country Boy – John Denver
- Crocodile Rock – Elton John
- Get Back – The Beatles
- Rosalita (Come Out Tonight) – Bruce Springsteen
- Burning Love – Elvis Presley
- Some Kind of Wonderful – Grand Funk Railroad
- Margaritaville – Jimmy Buffett
- Sooner or Later – The Grass Roots
- Kung Fu Fighting – Carl Douglas
- Rock and Roll All Nite – Kiss
- Maggie May – Rod Stewart
- Rock and Roll – Led Zeppelin
- Green-Eyed Lady – Sugarloaf
- My Sharona – The Knack
- Dancing in the Moonlight – King Harvest
- Only the Good Die Young – Billy Joel
- No No Song – Ringo Starr
- Hooked on a Feeling – Blue Swede
- Spinning Wheel – Blood, Sweat & Tears
- Bang a Gong (Get It On) – T. Rex
- Proud Mary – Creedence Clearwater Revival
- Vehicle – The Ides of March
- Lean on Me – Bill Withers
- Come and Get Your Love – Redbone
- She’s a Lady – Tom Jones
- Pick Up the Pieces – Average White Band
- Temptation Eyes – The Grass Roots
- Oye Como Va – Santana
- Long Tall Glasses (I Can Dance) – Leo Sayer
- No Matter What – Badfinger
- I Woke Up in Love This Morning – The Partridge Family
- Hot Smoke and Sassafras – Bubble Puppy
- Son of a Preacher Man – Dusty Springfield
- Smokin’ in the Boys Room – Brownsville Station
- Domino – Van Morrison
- Love Her Madly – The Doors
- Go All the Way – Raspberries
- The Rapper – The Jaggerz
- We’re an American Band – Grand Funk Railroad
- Roundabout – Yes
- Reeling in the Years – Steely Dan
- Kick Out the Jams – MC5
- Hocus Pocus – Focus
Funk and Soul Songs That Pointed Toward Disco
Disco did not appear out of nowhere wearing platform shoes. It grew from earlier soul, funk, Latin, R&B, and club records that emphasized rhythm, groove, and movement. These songs helped make the dance floor feel like the center of pop culture before disco became the headline.
- Dance to the Music – Sly and the Family Stone
- Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin) – Sly and the Family Stone
- Got to Give It Up – Marvin Gaye
- Superstition – Stevie Wonder
- Jungle Boogie – Kool & the Gang
- Tell Me Something Good – Rufus featuring Chaka Khan
- Low Rider – War
- For the Love of Money – The O’Jays
- Soul Makossa – Manu Dibango
- Pick Up the Pieces – Average White Band
Early Disco Crossovers on the Dance Floor
By the mid-1970s, the line between funk, soul, and disco was becoming increasingly blurred. Some of these tracks are not “pre-disco” at all. They are better understood as early disco or disco-adjacent hits that still belong on a page about how dance music changed before the late-70s explosion.
- Rock the Boat – The Hues Corporation
- The Hustle – Van McCoy and the Soul City Symphony
- Fly, Robin, Fly – Silver Convention
- Spanish Hustle – Fatback Band
- The Sound of Philadelphia – MFSB featuring The Three Degrees
- You Sexy Thing – Hot Chocolate
- Boogie Down – Eddie Kendricks
- Dancing Machine – The Jackson 5
Motown and Philly Soul Party Favorites
Motown and Philly soul gave party music polish, melody, and group vocals that sounded great in a car, at a dance, or around a living room stereo. These songs were not always disco records, but they helped shape the smooth, social, upbeat atmosphere that disco later amplified.
- ABC – The Jackson 5
- I Want You Back – The Jackson 5
- The Love You Save – The Jackson 5
- Mama’s Pearl – The Jackson 5
- Stoned Love – The Supremes
- Love Train – The O’Jays
- Back Stabbers – The O’Jays
- I’ll Take You There – The Staple Singers
- Mr. Big Stuff – Jean Knight
- Give Me Just a Little More Time – Chairmen of the Board
Rock Songs That Kept the Party Loud
Rock party songs did not need a disco beat to fill a dance floor. They worked because they had huge riffs, singalong choruses, handclaps, swagger, or the kind of bar-band energy that makes people point at each other while singing the wrong words with confidence.
- Joy to the World – Three Dog Night
- Takin’ Care of Business – Bachman-Turner Overdrive
- Rock and Roll All Nite – Kiss
- We’re an American Band – Grand Funk Railroad
- Sweet Home Alabama – Lynyrd Skynyrd
- Crocodile Rock – Elton John
- The Loco-Motion – Grand Funk Railroad
- Come and Get Your Love – Redbone
- Bang a Gong (Get It On) – T. Rex
- Oye Como Va – Santana
Smooth Grooves, Slow Dances and Party Cool-Downs
Not every party song is a jump-around record. Some songs slowed things down without clearing the room. These were the grooves, sway songs, and smooth moments that gave the dancers a chance to recover before someone put Jungle Boogie back on.
- Let’s Stay Together – Al Green
- Let’s Get It On – Marvin Gaye
- You’ll Never Find Another Love Like Mine – Lou Rawls
- You’re the First, the Last, My Everything – Barry White
- More Today Than Yesterday – Spiral Starecase
- Lean on Me – Bill Withers
- Jackie Wilson Said (I’m in Heaven When You Smile) – Van Morrison
- Domino – Van Morrison
Pre-Disco and Rock Party Song Trivia
- Theme from Shaft became a landmark soul and soundtrack hit. Isaac Hayes’ title theme reached across pop, soul, film music, and funk, and the Library of Congress later added it to the National Recording Registry.
- Soul Makossa helped introduce a global groove into American dance culture. Manu Dibango’s Cameroonian hit became an important influence on later funk, disco, and dance records.
- Rock the Boat is often discussed as an early disco breakthrough. The Hues Corporation’s smooth groove helped move pop radio toward the dance-floor sound that would soon dominate the late 1970s.
- Sly and the Family Stone helped erase genre walls. Their mix of funk, soul, rock, psychedelia, and social energy made songs like “Dance to the Music” and “I Want to Take You Higher” essential party records.
- Hooked on a Feeling had two very different lives. B.J. Thomas recorded the earlier hit version, but Blue Swede’s 1974 version became the bigger party-pop singalong thanks to its famous chant opening.
- Kung Fu Fighting landed right where novelty, dance, and pop met. It was playful, catchy, and very 1974, which is basically a historical genre by itself.
- Rock and soul party songs often shared the same spaces. A 1970s party playlist could jump from The O’Jays to Grand Funk Railroad to Stevie Wonder to Elton John without needing a committee meeting.
Why These Songs Still Work at Parties
Pre-disco and early-70s party songs still work because they are built around rhythm, personality, and recognition. The best ones have a hook that arrives quickly, a groove that does not need explaining, and a chorus people can join before they remember whether they know the whole song.
They also show how connected popular music was before genre labels became so rigid. Funk borrowed from rock. Rock borrowed from soul. Latin rhythms shaped pop. Soul records became dance-floor staples. Early disco pulled it all together and added a club pulse.
This is the sweet spot before disco became a brand name. It was still soul, funk, rock, pop, R&B, and Latin groove all talking to each other. Thankfully, the bass player usually got the last word.
Sources and Further Reading
- Britannica, disco history and origins: https://www.britannica.com/art/disco
- PBS, “The Dazzling, Daring History of Disco”: https://www.pbs.org/articles/the-dazzling-daring-history-of-disco
- Britannica, funk music history and background: https://www.britannica.com/art/funk
- Library of Congress, Theme from Shaft National Recording Registry essay: https://www.loc.gov/static/programs/national-recording-preservation-board/documents/ThemeFromShaft.pdf
- Library of Congress, complete National Recording Registry listing: https://www.loc.gov/programs/national-recording-preservation-board/recording-registry/complete-national-recording-registry-listing/
Before Disco Took Over, the Party Was Already Moving
Disco may have become the late-1970s dance-music headline, but the party started earlier. Soul singers, funk bands, rock groups, pop acts, and soundtrack composers had already been teaching audiences how to move, clap, stomp, sway, and sing along.
These pre-disco and rock party dance hits capture that moment when popular music felt loose, rhythmic, and wide open. The grooves were getting stronger, the guitars were still loud, the horns were working overtime, and the dance floor was ready for whatever came next.