Electro house

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Electro house
Stylistic origins
Cultural origins
Mid 2000s, western Europe
Typical instruments
Mainstream popularity Moderate, Large mid-2000's in Australia and Western Europe

This article is about Electro house music. For original Electro music, see Electro music.

Electro house is a subgenre of house music that rose to become one of the most prominent genres of electronic dance music today. Stylistically, it combines the four to the floor beats commonly found in house music with harmonically rich analogue basslines, abrasive high-pitched leads and the occasional piano or string riff. The tempo of electro house ranges approximately from 120 to 135 bpm. Dirty house is a derivative of electro house, which is often much more commercial in its appeal and in general features more vocals. Electrotech is a darker variation of electro house mixed with the sound of tech house.

The use of the word "electro" to describe this style of modern house music is contentious, and creates an ambiguity between electro house and classic electro, with which it bears little resemblance.[1]

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Roots

The most obvious precursor to the modern electro house scene is the electroclash movement of the early 2000s; largely a re-run of the early 1980s synth pop sound, but deliberately made cruder and more raw-sounding than the primitive records on which it was based.[2] More recently, some of the artists and labels involved with the sound, such as Crosstown Rebels, have found a new direction in electro house.[3] Some artists associated with the electroclash movement, such as Felix da Housecat, noticeably used elements of house in their music at the time and have since come to be seen as highly influential.[4] French house has also been considered an influence.

Previously and concurrent to electroclash, tech house was developing. Traditionally, the most noticeable influences of tech house were from Detroit techno, such as sweeping strings and 909 beats, but it developed a dirtier sound in the early 2000s, owing largely to a trend of acid house revival,[2] shown by artists such as David Duriez and the Brique Rouge label.[5] Another profound house artist from the past, Satoshi Tomiie, has helped to shape the typical sound of electro house by adding his own blend of NY-groove styled musical elements to further influence and enhance the musical sound of this genre. His influence on electro house begins back in the 1989 with the affiliation to the famous high-society DJ Frankie Knuckles and Satoshi Tomiie is still currently playing a substantial role in the composition of the electro house sound.[citation needed]

In 2003 some tribal house DJs such as Steve Lawler, while previously associated with the darker-hued sounds of progressive house, began to use analogue basslines, starting a sound dubbed 'dirty tribal'.[6] Concurrently, the breakbeat scene was creating similar sounds with the popular tech-funk style. It was around this time that electro house properly began to emerge.

[edit] Electro house today

The sound became steadily more popular throughout 2006. Bodyrox's single "Yeah Yeah" featuring Luciana was labelled by several BBC Radio 1 DJs "the biggest tune of the summer of 2006", and the remix by D.Ramirez gained worldwide popularity, particularly in the Ibiza clubbing scene.[7][8] Another key point was when Tocadisco's remix of "Walking Away" by The Egg gained significant media coverage after being featured on a television advertisement for the Citroën C4. A mashup of the track with "Love Don't Let Me Go" by David Guetta was also later released as a single, which reached #1 in the charts in Spain and #3 in the UK.

As of 2007, the sound has been recognised as one of the most dominant movements in house music,[citation needed] surpassing funky house in popularity,[citation needed][9] with a large range of DJs and producers finding an interest in its dancefloor sensibilities and sense of fun, such as Dave Seaman from the progressive house scene;[10] Tiefschwarz[11] and Ben Watt who previously played deep house,[12] Steve Lawler from the tribal sound, Wutam & J-Break from the breakbeat scene,[13] and popular Ibiza club DJ Lisa Lashes who is most known for her work in hard dance.[14] Dave Spoon and Lisa Maffia also proved electro house could be well received by the mainstream audience with the song "Bad Girl at Night". Electro house has also introduced electronic music to the indie rock scene through its links to the new rave and disco-punk movement.[15] Artists such as Digitalism[16], Justice, Soulwax, The Whip, and MSTRKRFT have pioneered a new sound in electro house which crosses over with new rave and alternative and indie rock, as well as its electroclash roots. This variation of electro house is also called Maximal.

[edit] Samples

Bodyrox - Yeah Yeah (D.Ramirez Dub Mix) (2006)
Excerpt from the instrumental (dub) remix of "Yeah Yeah", by Bodyrox. An electro house track which had massive success worldwide in 2006.

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[edit] References

[edit] External links

[edit] External links

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