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- Published: 08 Dec 2008
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- Author: Maketus
Electronic dance music is a broad set of percussive music genres that largely inherit from the electronic music of electropop groups such as Kraftwerk and YMO as well as 1970s disco music. Such music was originally born of and popularized via regional nightclub scenes in the 1980s. By the early 1990s, the presence of electronic dance music in contemporary culture was noted widely and its role in society began to be explored in published historical, cultural and social science academic studies. It is constructed by means of electronic instruments such as synthesizers, drum machines and sequencers, and generally emphasizes the unique sounds of those instruments, even when mimicking traditional acoustic instrumentation. It sometimes encompasses music not primarily meant for dancing, but derived from the dance-oriented styles.
Electronic dance music is categorized by music journalists and fans alike as an ever-evolving plethora of named genres, styles and sub-styles. With many types of dance music, the number of beats per minute (BPM) helps define a separation between genres. The presence of vocals, live instrumentation vs synthetic instrumentation, and pattern of drum beats also help differentiate genres of electronic dance music. Some genres, such as Techno, House, Trance, Electro, Hardstyle, breakbeat, drum and bass are primarily intended to promote dancing. Others, such as IDM, Dubstep, glitch and trip hop, are more experimental and tend to be associated more with focused listening than dancing.
Influential musicians in industrial, synth pop and later electronic dance styles include Kraftwerk, Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO), The Human League, Silver Apples, Ayumi Hamasaki, A-ha, Pet Shop Boys, Duran Duran, Daft Punk, Dizzee Rascal, Depeche Mode, New Order, Cabaret Voltaire, and Throbbing Gristle. In Hardcore, Happy Hardcore, and Gabber notable producers and DJs include artists such as Angerfist, Neophyte, Endymion, Scott Brown, Brisk and Ham, DJ Hixxy, Darren Styles and Mark Breeze.
In Hardstyle, influential musicians include Headhunterz, Showtek, Zany, Noisecontrollers, Donkey Rollers, The Prophet, Blutonium Boy, Technoboy, Tuneboy, Hardstyle Masterz, Dark Oscillators, Deepack.
In House, Techno and Drum and Bass, pioneers such as Charanjit Singh, Juan Atkins, Derrick May, Goldie, A Guy Called Gerald, LTJ Bukem, Joey Beltram and Frankie Bones are still active as of 2008. The only electronic music album to reach number 1 on the Billboard 200 chart is The Prodigy's The Fat Of The Land.
Commercially successful artists working under the "electronica" rubric such as Fatboy Slim, The Chemical Brothers, Groove Armada, Basement Jaxx, Daft Punk, The Crystal Method, Massive Attack, The Prodigy, Orbital, Propellerheads, Underworld and Moby continue to release albums and perform regularly (sometimes in stadium-sized arenas, such has the popularity of electronic dance music grown; Moby does not use Synthesizers at his Concerts ) . Some successful Musicians, Producers & DJs such as Paul van Dyk, Tijs Verwest (aka Tiësto) , Deadmau5, Paul Oakenfold, ATB, Showtek, John Digweed, Sasha, David Guetta, Armin van Buuren and Ferry Corsten have reached true superstar status, can command five-figure salaries for a single performance and regularly perform for hours on end. Some DJs have world wide radio, and internet broadcasted shows that air weekly, such as VONYC Sessions, a show mixed by Paul Van Dyk, Trance Around The World TATW , a show mixed by Above and Beyond , A State of Trance, a show mixed by Armin van Buuren.
In the late 1990s and 2000s artists considered Indie Electronic grew in popularity, often blending synth-pop, krautrock, and electronica genres with others. Radiohead, Air, Justice, Stereolab, Simian Mobile Disco, Komeda, Broadcast, Röyksopp, Hot Chip, LCD Soundsystem, Uffie, Caribou, Digitalism, Basshunter, Nite Club and Junior Boys are a few notable groups.
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