“Boogie Wonderland” is a song by American band Earth, Wind & Fire with the Emotions, released in April 1979 on Columbia Records as the first single from their ninth album, I Am (1979). The song peaked at number 14 on the US Billboard dance chart, number six on the Hot 100, and number two on Billboard Hot Soul Singles. It was certified gold in the US and platinum in the UK. “Boogie Wonderland” was Grammy-nominated for Best R&B Instrumental Performance and Best Disco Recording; it won the Grammy for Best R&B Instrumental Performance.
The song was composed by Allee Willis with Jon Lind and produced by EWF leader Maurice White and Al McKay.
Rose Riggins of Gannett wrote “Boogie Wonderland is the hit. But it is more than just an average pop song. The song is an exploration of times spent at house parties and at discos, when you wanted to be disco queen or king and the spotlight just wouldn’t focus on you. You wonder why and look into the mirror and it says, Uh, Uh, baby it don’t work you dance to shake the hurt. Like so many of EWFs hits, Boogie Wonderland, is bolstered by the blazing horns that have become the groups trademark. Teamed up with the talented vocal group the Emotions, EWF has created a song that will join the ranks of such past hits as Mighty Mighty, Getaway, Fantasy and September.Dave Marsh of Rolling Stone said Maurice White “takes simple dance formulas like ‘Boogie Wonderland’ and finds fresh possibilities within them.
James Johnson of the Evening Standard called it a song “couched in a more down-to-earth, dance-floor dialogue. Matthew Greenwald of AllMusic stated: “one of the few records that paired two full-fledged groups successfully, the combination of EWF and the Emotions worked wonders here and it remains a classic of the period.”[10] Allen Weiner of Morning Call wrote: “Boogie Wonderland is the LP’s most commercial tune, a tribute to both jazz/soul and disco fans that is pulsating and pleasing. Ace Adams of the New York Daily News also found that “The Emotions’ Boogie Wonderland gets Earth, Wind & Fire off to a flying start on this album”. Cash Box called it a “a standout pop dance track,” saying that “sharp, slamming horn intro segues into bright backup singing by the Emotions, blending in perfectly with E, W & F leader Maurice White’s vocal.