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Suggestions for extreme Contemporary Electronic Dance Music

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Comments

  • edited January 2018

    @mannix said:

    @jwmmakerofmusic said:

    @mschenkel.it said:
    I once went to a pansonic gig trying to dance

    You could totally rock out and dance to this.

    Of course instead of Dabbing, Jumpstyle or Jitterbug, you’d be doing Interpretive.

    Oops, this video is not available :(

    I am so tired of the copyright c*ckblock on youtube. Latest example - the other day I added Utah Saints’ “What Can You Do For Me” to my “classics” playlist, and then the day after that it’s “video unavailable”. :angry:

    Anyways, sorry about that. See if this one works for you... :)

  • edited January 2018

    @jwmmakerofmusic said:

    @mannix said:
    Thanks you all for posting stuff. keep it posting.

    And to answer @telecharge and so being more specific.
    I'm interested in electronic dance music that is extreme and radical. For example types of music that are meant to dance on but people would in the first place not associate with dance music. To give some historical example. Acid (303, 808, 909 based) was once a genre most people took with a laugh and saw as something for idiots. It's now an established sort of music. Later we things like Jungle and somethin called Gabber where it was about extreme speed (high count of BPMs) then came Breakcore and Trap with extreme wobbles and breaks. I know all these genres developed in subgeneres and got refined. My question is are there any new developements in these types of music and even more are there at the moment new electronic genres developing that are different from the types that I mentioned above. So music on which peopel also start to dance/ move different. Maybe it is not the case but just curious.

    So I’m assuming you’re looking for the next possible movement/trend in dance music that hasn’t hit mainstream yet but could someday? Unfortunately I’m not sure myself. I haven’t heard an original trend like that in electronic dance music in 9 years. Dubstep was the last original trend as far as I know (which then evolved into Brostep, then into Trap, and then it split into “Vomitstep” (“Purple Lambourgini”, very astutely-named self-referential genre actually) and the barf-inducing pop fluff known as Future Bass). Ever since Dubstep went commercial, every trend in electronic dance music is recycled from what was hot 20-30 years ago.

    In the meantime, we’ll just keep posting the best of the strangest, weirdest stuff we can find. ;) Who knows? Maybe in the span of two years, one of those genres will become trendy thanks to some unknown artist whose stage name we’ll soon grow to hate when he becomes a commercialised puppet. ;) Much like Skrillex and Dubstep.

    You totally get my point. Somehow I got the feeling that somewhere out there new things might be or are happening, but because of bubble and served answers in Google (YT/ Spotify) on preferences I might not find. For this reason some forum members input good be great. But probably, as you say, new trends are (not yet) here. Agree also on the point that you're making of the endless renewed recycling.
    Weirdest thing a friend pointed me too recently is that there seems to be a whole school of DAF (Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft) like bands in Germany that sounds quite like DAF in the 80s did.

  • This guy can be the new (music) messia

  • Not sure if this qualifies, but if you want to listen to some extremely technical electronic music - as in extremely skilled craftsmanship, albeit perhaps at the expense of some soul sometimes - check out Comaduster (the artist is a sound designer for Bioware, Microsoft, and more).

    Note: I did not post this music to YouTube

    https://youtu.be/cmtWbnSJveU

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