Doowop.....
If we are going to do a semantic war here, it is "description"...not discription. But I digress.
Dance music is part of the RHYTHMIC genre, which I did state on his show. And not every dance track out there has the same beat. On top of that, not every dance track is instrumental; there are tracks with lyrical content in there. Whether you like what is heard or not, hey..that's you or anyone in here; I am certainly not out to challenge or change anyone's tastes in here.
And hello, we ARE in the 21st century. Where is it law that for music to be deemed legitimate that an instrument HAS to be played? Hip-hop has thrived over the years from DJ's scratching records in the background along with samples and loops thrown in. In Britain, dance music IS pop and played in the clubs. How does that music mainstream overseas and in this country it is held back?
And if you look back at earlier posts on this thread, what one generation considers "dance" to be, others may not. And even though one word got "censored", I did state that doo w op (separated to avoid censoring...not a spelling error) could be considered the dance music of someone in their 60s.
George did make some valid points and I did too! That's whats great about this country...we can agree to disagree but have a healthy discussion in the process. Things have to change within as well but on the dance music side we are working on it.
If we are going to do a semantic war here, it is "description"...not discription. But I digress.
Dance music is part of the RHYTHMIC genre, which I did state on his show. And not every dance track out there has the same beat. On top of that, not every dance track is instrumental; there are tracks with lyrical content in there. Whether you like what is heard or not, hey..that's you or anyone in here; I am certainly not out to challenge or change anyone's tastes in here.
And hello, we ARE in the 21st century. Where is it law that for music to be deemed legitimate that an instrument HAS to be played? Hip-hop has thrived over the years from DJ's scratching records in the background along with samples and loops thrown in. In Britain, dance music IS pop and played in the clubs. How does that music mainstream overseas and in this country it is held back?
And if you look back at earlier posts on this thread, what one generation considers "dance" to be, others may not. And even though one word got "censored", I did state that doo w op (separated to avoid censoring...not a spelling error) could be considered the dance music of someone in their 60s.
George did make some valid points and I did too! That's whats great about this country...we can agree to disagree but have a healthy discussion in the process. Things have to change within as well but on the dance music side we are working on it.