The following year he co-wrote and produced the album
Space Woman, credited to the act '''Herman's Rocket'''. The "cosmic disco" album was commissioned by record label owner
Humbert "Mémé" Ibach, and the title track became one of Massiera's best-known tracks. Massiera's next album,
Galactic Soul (also known as
Synthetic Soul) followed a similar approach, but this time was credited as being by
Venus Gang. Both albums were produced with Torelli as arranger, and both included reworkings of Massiera's earlier material as well as that of others. Also in 1978, Massiera co-wrote and co-produced Jessy Joyce's disco album
J. Joyce & Co., and co-wrote and produced one of his best-known albums,
Human Egg, the name of both the album and the act. The prog rock album featured many of Massiera's regular contributors including Bernard Torelli, Patrick Attali, Tony Bonfils, Jessy Joyce and André Ceccarelli. Before the end of the 1970s, Massiera also produced disco albums by Micky & Joyce (
Hold Up) and
Trans Am Dancing by Friends featuring singer Sparkle Tuhran. He left Antibes in 1979, and opened the studio Jean Jaurès in Paris for
Philips Records. In 1981 he produced the
jazz-rock album
Debbi by Francis Lockwood, the disco-
reggae album
La Chica by African Magic Combo, and a second album credited to Visitors, as well as numerous singles for other artists, in some cases as a co-producer with Torelli or others. Through the 1980s Massiera continued to work as a writer and producer, but at a lower level of intensity than before, sometimes using the pseudonyms
Areisam or
Sierra. With Torelli in 1983, he wrote and produced the
12-inch single "Inch Allah", credited as
Orient Express. In the mid-1980s he left Paris and established a new studio in
Le Bar-sur-Loup. In 1992, on the occasion of Columbus'
quincentennial, he co-wrote and produced the album
Red Power by
Indian Nation. A second album on the same theme,
Red Soul, was issued in 1995. ==Reissues==