Drai’s Nightclub in Las Vegas, designed by SJ Lighting. All images courtesy SJ Lighting, Inc.Even the dingiest of basements can become a mecca for dancing and debauchery with the addition of one simple sphere: the disco ball. The round, reflective object has survived over 150 years of dance music trends, proving to be the most adaptable yet rudimentary fixture of bars, clubs, and music festivals alike. Sure it's enigmatic, but what makes the disco ball such a classic?
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Lighting designer Steve Lieberman, founder of SJ Lighting, has created some of the world’s most dazzling lighting installations, from nightclubs in New York, Miami, and Las Vegas, to tents and stages at festivals like Coachella, EDC, and Ultra. One of his most recent projects was a disco ball-inspired chandelier in Atlantic City, complete with over 1,500 LED lights—a radiating, rather than reflective, centerpiece. Despite being able to move past the standard disco ball with technology, Lieberman stands by the mirrorball as a quintessential classic.“The ‘mirrorball,’ in my opinion, is the most iconic image that conjures nightclub design,” he tells The Creators Project. Throughout his career, the disco ball hasn’t changed much—“I can rattle off dozens of nightclubs, starting with the early days of my professional career in NYC: Webster Hall, TWILO, Roxy, Expo, Crobar and so many more…all had disco balls anchoring their designs. At risk of sounding cliché; it’s the sun of the nightclub solar system,” he continues.
An elaborate disco-ball-centric design for Marquee Las Vegas by SJ Lighting
Internet lore, as well as a detailed history by THUMP, traces the disco ball back to Charles and Logan McGrath, two bar owners in 1850s England, who ingeniously found that lighting effects might make dancing women look more appealing to their bar’s patrons. 60 years later in Kentucky, an enterprising inventor named Louis Bernard Woeste first patented the Myriad Reflector, described as a hollow object of any geometric form, whose surface is covered with a “multitude of mirrors.” The Myriad Reflector was intended to be used in conjunction with other mood lighting, “and thus casting upon the participants and spectators a multitude of moving and varied color spots and creating a most pleasing result.”
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In the 1970s, disco co-opted the Myriad Reflector, rebranding it with today’s far-catchier name. In the United States, the Omega National Products factory in Louisville, Kentucky became known for rolling out thousands of glass-mirrored disco balls per month, helping to illuminate dancefloors across the country.
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