The “Golden Hits Of The 70s” 

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RICK DEES & HIS CAST OF IDIOTS

“DISCO DUCK (PART 1)”

(RICK DEES)

RSO 857

No. 1   October 16, 1976

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Rigdon Osmond Dees III has made money for years as a “personality” DJ–and as Rick Dees, the man

behind a string of nutty novelty numbers.

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Rick attended North Carolina University, specializ­ing in radio and TV studies. His first spot was at WBGB,

in his hometown of Winston-Salem, North Carolina.  As the “move-’em-out” morning man on WMPS in

Memphis, Dees devised an array of wacky promotions.  Reportedly, he holds some sort of world record for

whipping up the largest fruitcake (3,000 lbs.), jelly doughnut (300 lbs.), and lollipop (150 lbs.).  “I was

working out in a gym in Memphis when disco was coming out,” Dees explained to Fred Bronson in The

Billboard Book of Number One Hits,“and I also worked in a club called Chesterfield’s, telling jokes and

spinning records.  The more I played the songs, the more I knew it might be time for a disco parody.  One

of the guys who worked out in the gym did a great duck voice, and I remembered a song called ‘The Duck’

[by JACKIE LEE] back in the ’60s, so I said, how about a ‘Disco Duck’?”

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Dees went home and tossed the idea around for an afternoon.  Three months later, he walked the idea into

Fretone Records, a small label owned by Estelle Axton, founder of the Stax organization.  “Actually, they

thought I was an idiot,” Dees told Bob Shannon and John Javna in Behind the Hits.  “I went into the

studio with a bunch of song ideas, all of them warped.  First, I hit them with my song about Elvis

exploding, ‘He Ate too Many Jelly Doughnuts: And later, ‘Disco Duck.”  First out of the stall was an item

called “The National Wet Off.”  It bombed, but that darn “Disco Duck” didn’t:  once it became popular

throughout the South, RSO acquired the track for national release.

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Everywhere one went, that quacker could be heard–except in Memphis, where rival stations refused to

play the disk and where Rick’s own WMPS forbade Dees from spinning it.  “I talked about it on my

morning radio show,” Dees told Bronson, “and the sta­tion manager came in and said, ‘We think that’s a

con­flict of interest–you’re fired.'”

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WHBQ-AM, his former station’s chief competitor, swiftly hired Rick.  Dees later transferred to KHJ in Los

Angeles and has since moved to KIIS-FM, the top radio station in the City of Angels; where he plays “the

best of the eight-dees and nine-dees.”  Rick has hosted TVs “Solid Gold;’ for a season, ABC’s late-night

series “Into the Night,” for a moment, and thereafter appeared on an internationally syndicated Top 40

countdown radio program for the United Stations.

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As for follow-ups, Rick Dees still finds the time to issue amusing musings like “Dis-Gorilla” (#56, 1977),

“Big Foot” (1978),”Barely White;’ and “Eat My Shorts” (#75, 1984) b/w”Get Nekked.”