Electronic Dance Music
Electronic dance music, also known as EDM, umbrella term for a panoply of musical styles that emerged in the mid-1980s. Rather than designating a single genre, electronic dance music (EDM) encompassesstyles ranging from beatless ambient music to 200-beats-per-minute hardcore, with house music, techno, drum and bass, dubstep, and trance among the most-notable examples.
Considered as a whole, electronic dance music is characterized by several defining features. It is typified by deliberately inorganic sounds and timbres, frequently produced by cheap early-1980s gear—such as the 303 bass synthesizer and the 808 drum machine, both made by Japanese electronics firm Roland—or built from samples of previous recordings. Live instrumentation and singing are often featured but usually as a garnish rather than the main dish. Most important, the music is created specifically for the social function of dancing all night. A strong emphasis on rhythm is therefore common to most styles of EDM, while ambient music, which is less focused on maintaining a beat, provides an aural cushion for settling down at the end of the night. Furthermore, EDM recordings are produced primarily to be played in dance clubs by disc jockeys (DJs), in a mix with other recordings of the same type, rather than by home listeners—though many tracks have crossed over to the pop audience.
Chicago And Detroit
Electronic dance music has existed in some form since at least the early 1970s. Sly and the Family Stone’s number-one pop hit “Family Affair” (1971), for example, employed a drum machine. As well, disco producers (such as Giorgio Moroder) and synth-pop acts (such as Kraftwerk) played crucial roles in EDM’s sonic development. However, the electronic dance music that would become a global culture was hatched in the American Midwest through the early 1980s. In Chicago Frankie Knuckles, resident DJ at the members-only African American gay club the Warehouse, would make his own edits, on reel-to-reel tape, of the cult disco he played, extending the grooves to keep the all-night dance floor filled. When Knuckles—along with other DJs in Chicago, such as Ron Hardy, Steve (“Silk”) Hurley, and Farley (“Jackmaster”) Funk—added a drum machine to his sets, it codified the basic formula of house music.
Knuckles, FrankieFrankie Knuckles spinning a record in his Chicago home, 2003.Jim Newberry/Alamy
Similarly, Detroit techno has many early pioneers but one widely agreed-upon formative figure: Juan Atkins, who in 1981 partnered with Rik Davis as Cybotron and issued the single “Alleys of Your Mind.” Shortly after releasing an album, Enter (1983), the duo split up, at which point Atkins started his own label, Metroplex, and began releasing 12-inch vinyl singles under the name Model 500. In quick succession, Kevin Saunderson and Derrick May—who, with Atkins, made up the DJ collective Deep Space—also started labels (KMS and Transmat, respectively) and put out their own music. The sound that emerged from the Detroit scene was largely abstract instrumental funk, though Saunderson often used vocalists and had his biggest hits with the soul-influenced duo Inner City. It became formalized as a style after Atkins, in 1988, named a track “Techno Music,” which was included on (and inspired the title of) that year’s defining anthology, Techno! The New Dance Sound of Detroit.
Shoom
Electronic dance music’s reputation as “drug music” stems from one of its crucial origin stories. In the late summer of 1987, a group of English DJs visited the Spanish island of Ibiza for a week of partying. At an outdoor venue called Amnesia, the Argentine-born DJ Alfredo played a wide-open mix of tracks, heavy on Chicago house and Detroit techno, and the visitors found that the MDMA (a mood-enhancing drug also known as Ecstasy) that they had taken made the music seem revelatory. (See also Balearic Beat.) That December one of the DJs, Danny Rampling, started a weekly party called Shoom in a London fitness centre. The scene was dubbed “acid house,” after the seething, burbling “acid” sound produced by the 303 bass synthesizer and prominently featured on Chicago house records.
Within a year of Shoom’s launch, acid house was England’s biggest youth-culture musical phenomenon since punk a decade earlier, and soon the parties were taking place in fields and warehouses, in many cases illegally. Those “raves”—filled with Day-Glo paraphernalia and outlandish oversized clothes that combined the bagginess of hip-hopapparel with candy-coloured video-game aesthetics—became the model for a global party scene. By the beginning of the 1990s, raves had become widespread throughout Europe and, eventually, North America. Thereafter, DJ-based dance scenes sprouted in nearly every part of the world as new subgenres and tweaks of existing styles continually made their way onto club floors.
London And Berlin
Not only was England the centre of the acid-house scene; it was also a font of new electronic-dance-music styles, particularly after British producers fused house and techno with hip-hop and Jamaican dancehall and dub reggae. Among the styles that emerged were drum and bass (initially called jungle), which sped hip-hop breakbeats to house tempo and anchored them with dub-reggae-style bass patterns (notable exponents include Roni Size, Goldie, Bad Company, and dBridge & Instra:mental); downtempo (initially called trip-hop), a more DJ-centric and instrumental-based variation on hip-hop, also with a pronounced dub tinge (Massive Attack, Tricky, DJ Shadow, and Bonobo); and big beat, which favoured rock-flavoured guitar and keyboard riffs over simple propulsive breaks (Fatboy Slim and the Chemical Brothers).
Prodigy, theBritish big-beat group the Prodigy, 1990s.© Kelly A. Swift/Retna Ltd.
Germany, in particular Berlin, was also an important locale in the development of electronic dance music. That city quickly took to house and techno music—styles heavily marked by the German synth-pop quartet Kraftwerk—in the wake of the Berlin Wall’s 1989 demolition. The newly reunified city, full of abandoned spaces, became a natural home for the kinds of renegade parties going on in England; one important club, Tresor, was situated underground in a former bank vault. By the early 2000s, with dance scenes around the world contracting in size (particularly in the United States, where raves were under severe fire from law enforcement), Berlin became a locus for techno producers, DJs, and fans from all over the world, who were attracted by cheap rents and easy-to-obtain artist visas.
The stylistic contributions made to electronic dance music in Germany and elsewhere in Europe are varied. For instance, the club scene in Rotterdam, Netherlands, birthed hardcore (or gabber), a very fast and hard form of techno that is frequently noisy and garnished with screaming heavy-metal samples (a later variant was dubbed “hardstyle”). Meanwhile, Germany, especially Frankfurt, was the origin of trance. Trance began as hard, minimalist, and hypnotic—as on “The Age of Love (Watch Out for Stella Club Mix)” (1992), a remix by the German duo Jam & Spoon of a track by Italian producers Age of Love—but by the mid-1990s it had become the most lushly melodic electronic dance style, producing global hits such as “Children” (1995), by Italian DJ and musician Robert Miles. Although minimal techno (also called minimal, or mnml) had emerged in the 1990s in Detroit, by the middle of the next decade a distinctly Berlin-bred style had developed. Thereafter, Berlin accommodated a panoply of artful house, techno, and other styles that provided the soundtrack to a party-focused lifestyle enjoyed in large part by expatriates and global tourists.
Early 2000s
Berlin at the beginning of the early 21st century was a bulwark in a time of recession throughout the dance-music world. Globally, the size of audiences at clubs and large parties had tapered off, and the music itself went through a reductionist phase. The musical shift was partly a response to the bloat of the late 1990s—when house music and trance were particularly big-sounding—and partly a result of burnout on lengthy tracks that eschewed traditional songwriting structures (and sometimes melodies). The back-to-the-roots impulse of the early 2000s was reflected by the increased popularity of both electro (a 1980s style revived by such acts as Fischerspooner, Ectomorph, and I-f) and mashups, which paired the vocals of one recording with the instrumental components of another.
Technology played a significant role in the changing musical landscape. Before the 21st century, club and rave DJing was primarily done with turntables; most of the music was on vinyl records, and it was difficult to DJ effectively with any other recording format. After 2000, however, a number of new devices upended tradition. The CD-J 1000, issued by Pioneer in 2001, was a compact-disc player that mimicked a vinyl turntable more closely and successfully than previous models had. FinalScratch, unveiled that year and on the market in early 2002, made it possible to play digital files on a traditional turntable through the use of a specially encoded record. In addition, 2001 saw the debut of Ableton Live, a computer software program that enabled users to compose, cue, and blend digital tracks by way of a waveform display—thus eliminating the motor skills previously necessary to perform an effective DJ set.
“EDM”
During the second half of the 2000s, electronic dance music began to surge in popularity again—particularly in the United States, where it had earlier established only a small beachhead, despite its roots in the American Midwest. Several factors played a role. One was the growth of the Internet, which made it easier to discover and access music outside the mainstream. Another was the increasingly common use of dance-music production techniques in pop and hip-hop (e.g., the work of French house producer David Guetta on the Black Eyed Peas’ hugely successful 2009 hit “I Gotta Feeling”). A third factor was the 2006–07 worldwide tour by Daft Punk, launched at the Coachella festival in southern California, which helped translate the rave experience to a rockaudience—especially as footage of the show’s audiovisual overload became widely shared and viewed on YouTube. By the end of the decade, DJs were regularly filling stadiums in Los Angeles, which had become the largest electronic dance scene in the United States, and such large-scale events soon began to proliferate all over the country.
Daft PunkThomas Bangalter (left) and Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo of Daft Punk, 2013.Matt Sayles—Invision/AP Images
The biggest party was Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC), which began in Los Angeles in 1997 and later expanded to other cities. At the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in 2010, the event drew nearly 200,000 attendees over two days. Online discussions of EDC that year helped to promote the term electronic dance music—along with the abbreviation EDM—beyond academic and specialist circles and into wider use. EDM therefore became the umbrella term for the new wave of stadium dance music, ranging from bass-heavy dubstep (as popularized in the early 2010s by Skrillex), big sweeping progressive house (Swedish House Mafia), the hard blare of electro house (Steve Aoki), and the clean tough beats and riffs of Dutch house (Afrojack).
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