This article is about dance music in general. You may
also be looking for electronic
dance music or dance-pop.
Dance music is
music composed
specifically to facilitate or accompany
dancing. It can be either a whole musical piece or
part of a larger musical arrangement. In terms of performance, the
major categories are live dance music and recorded dance
music.
Origins
Folk dance music is music accompanying
traditional dance and may be contrasted with
historical/classical, and popular/commercial dance music. An
example of folk dance music in the United States is the
old-time music played at
square dances and
contra dances. Brazilian dance music includes
Samba,
Pagode, and
Forró.
Historical dance music
While there exist attestations of the combination of dance and
music in ancient times (for example
Ancient Greek vases sometimes show
dancers accompanied by musicians), the earliest Western dance music
that we can still play with a degree of certainty are the surviving
medieval dances such as
carols and the
Estampie. The earliest of these surviving dances
are almost as old as Western staff-based
music notation.
By period
The
Renaissance dance music was
written for instruments such as the
lute,
viol,
tabor,
pipe, and the
sackbut.
In the
Baroque period, the major dance
styles were
noble court dances (see
Baroque dance). Examples of dances
include the
French courante,
sarabande,
minuet and
gigue. Collections of dances were often
collected together as
dance suites.
In the
Classical music era, the
minuet was frequently used as a third
movement in four-movement non-vocal works
such as
sonatas,
string quartets, and
symphonies, although in this context it would not
accompany any dancing. The
waltz also arose
later in the Classical era, as the minuet evolved into the
scherzo (literally, "joke"; a faster-paced
minuet).
Both remained part of the
Romantic
music period, which also saw the rise of various other
nationalistic dance forms like the
barcarolle,
mazurka, and
polonaise. Also in the Romantic music era,
the growth and development of
ballet extended
the composition of dance music to a new height. Frequently dance
music was a part of
Opera.
Popular dance music
Modern popular dance music initially emerged from late 19th
century's Western
ballroom and
social dance music.
By genre
Dance music works often bear the name of the corresponding dance,
e.g.
waltzes, the
tango, the
bolero, the
can-can,
minuets,
salsa, various kinds of
jigs and the
breakdown.
Other dance forms include
contradance,
the
merengue (Dominican Republic),
and the
cha-cha-cha. Often it is
difficult to know whether the name of the music came first or the
name of the dance.
Ballads are commonly chosen for
slow-dance routines. However ballads have been
commonly deemed as the opposite of dance music in terms of their
tempo. Originally, the ballad was a type of dance as well (hence
the name "ballad," from the same root as "
ballroom" and "
ballet").
Ballads
are still danced on the Faeroe
Islands.
Dansband
"Dansband" ("Dance band") is a term in
Swedish for bands who play a kind of
popular music, "dansbandsmusik"
("Dance band music"), to
partner dance
to. These terms came into use around 1970, and before that, many of
the bands were classified as "
pop groups".
This type of music is mostly popular in the
Nordic countries.
Electronic
By 1981, a new form of electronic dance music was developing. This
music, made using electronics, is a style of
popular music commonly played in dance music
nightclubs,
radio
stations,
shows and
raves. During its gradual decline in the late 1970s,
disco became influenced by computerization.
Looping,
sampling
and
seguing as found in disco continued to be
used as creative techniques within
Trance
music,
Techno music, and
House music.
Electronic
dance music experienced a boom after the proliferation of personal computers in the 1980s, manifest
in the dance element of Tony Wilson's
Haçienda
scene (in
Manchester) and London clubs like Delirium,The Trip, and
Shoom. The scene rapidly expanded to the Summer Of
Love in Ibiza
, which
became the European capital of house and trance. Clubs like
Sundissential and
Manumission became household names with British,
German and Italian tourists.
Many music genres that made use of electronic instruments developed
into contemporary styles mainly due to the
MIDI
protocol, which enabled computers, synthesizers,
sound cards, samplers, and drum machines to
interact with each other and achieve the full synchronization of
sounds. Electronic dance music is typically composed using
computers and
synthesizers, and rarely has any physical
instruments. Instead, this is
replaced by
digital or
electronic sounds, with a 4/4
beat. Dance music typically ranges from 120bpm, up to 200bpm (Hip
Hop in comparison usually plays at a speed of 80 to 100bpm), with
techno,
trance,
and
house being the most widespread.
Many producers of this kind of music however, such as
Darren Tate and
MJ Cole,
were trained in classical music before they moved into the
electronic medium.
Associated with dance music are usually commercial tracks that may
not easily be categorized, such as "
The Power" by
Snap!, "
Gonna Make You
Sweat " by
C+C Music Factory,
and the Beatmaster's "Rok Da House" but the term "dance music" is
applied to many forms of electronic music, both commercial and non
commercial.
Some of the most popular upbeat genres includes
House,
Techno,
Drum & Bass,
Jungle,
Hardcore,
Electronica,
Industrial,
Breakbeat,
Trance,
Psychedelic Trance,
UK Garage, and
Electro. There are also much slower styles,
such as
Downtempo,
Chillout and
Nu
Jazz.
Many sub-genres of electronic dance music have evolved. Sub-genres
of
House include
Acid House,
Hard House,
Funky House,
Deep
House,
Tribal House,
Dark House,
Hip House,
Tech House and
US
Garage. Sub-genres of
Drum &
Bass include
Tech Step,
Hard Step,
Jump Up,
Intelligent D&B/Atmospheric
D&B,
Liquid Funk,
Sambass,
Drum Funk,
Neuro Funk and
Ragga
Jungle. Sub-genres of other styles include
Progressive Breaks,
Rave Breaks,
Booty
Bass,
Goa Trance,
Euro Trance,
Hard
Trance,
Hardstyle,
Minimal Techno,
Gabber
Techno,
Breakcore,
Broken Beat,
Trip Hop,
Folktronica and
Glitch.
Speed Garage,
Breakstep,
Bassline,
Grime
and the
Reggae-inspired
Dubstep are all sub-genres of
UK Garage.
By decade
1900s-1910s
During the early 20th century,
Ballroom
dancing gained popularity among the
working class who attended public
dance halls.
1920s
Dance music became enormously popular during the 1920s. Nightclubs
were frequented by large numbers of people at which a form of
jazz, which was characterized by fancy
orchestras with strings instruments and complex arrangements,
became the standard music at clubs. A particularly popular dance
was the
fox-trot. At the time this music
was simply called jazz, although today people refer to it as "white
jazz" or
big band.
1930s-1940s
Genres:
Swing music
1950s
Genres:
Rock and Roll
1960s
The late 1960s saw the rise of
soul and
R&B music which used lavish orchestral
arrangements.
Genres:
Funk,
Motown,
R&B
1970s
It was with the rise of
disco in the early
1970s that dance music once again became popular with the public.
Disco was characterized by the use of real orchestral instruments,
such as strings, which had largely been abandoned during the 1950s
because of rock music. In contrast to the 1920s, however, the use
of live orchestras in night clubs was extremely rare due to its
expense.
Disc jockeys (commonly known as
DJs) played recorded music at these new clubs. The disco craze
reached its peaked in the late 1970s when the word disco became
synonymous with "dance music" and nightclubs were referred to as
discos. The year 1980 was characterized by a lack of dance music as
artists rushed on the rock bandwagon in an attempt to continue
their careers.
Other genres:
Funk
1980s
Genres:
New Wave,
Synthpop,
Funk,
Hip Hop,
House,
Acid House,
Techno,
Rave,
Freestyle,
Electro,
Eurodisco,
Italo Disco,
Hi-NRG
1990s
Genres:
Eurodance,
Euro House,
Progressive House,
Techno,
Trance Music,
New Jack Swing,
Drum & Bass,
UK
Garage
2000s
Genres:
Hip Hop,
Electropop,
Snap Music,
Crunk,
Dance Punk,
Nu-Disco,
Electro
House
Radio formats
The
Hot Dance Airplay chart tracks
the most popular tracks played by radio stations using a "dance
music"
format. Dance
music is also part of the mix of related formats, such as
rhythmic adult contemporary and
rhythmic contemporary.
Dance clubs
The
Hot Dance Club Play chart
tracks which songs are currently most popular in
nightclubs.
See also