Re: Is Dance Dead? Really close.
> It is not dead, but it is on life support. I can't even play
> it at parties any more. You play Hip Hop and the floor fills
> up. You start out with the perennial dance floor favorite
> "It Takes Two" and finish out the set with a Missy Elliott
> megamix and the floor is packed. If I play DHT, Darude, Daft
> Punk, the floor parts like Moses at the Red Sea.
>
> I have personally loved it since the glory days of Disco. I
> have gone out on a limb to play Euro-dance and Salsoul
> labeled records in the late 70's as a trainee. Then into
> 80's Kraftwerk, New Wave (Adam and the Ants, Eurhythmics,
> and Blondie).
> Everything began to change when Planet Rock was released. I
> played just about anything on the Prelude and Tommy Boy
> labels.
>
> Dance really went underground and, in my case, I didn't play
> any real Dance until Frankie Knuckles popularized House
> Music. That music form sequed into Freestyle (once again, in
> my case). After Freestyle fell, it was all over for Dance.
> Dance took on a Euro sound which few Americans tolerate
> unless they are loaded up on drugs on a Saturday night. Even
> the majority of these folks would not be caught dead
> listening to Dance Monday through Thursday.
>
> Lately, a lot of Dance is very repetitious and the lyrics
> have no meaning to anybody. A lot of it is made by people in
> other countries and know little English. They practice one
> or two lines and repeat 30 times.
>
> If it does not catchon soon, it will stay underground for
> years to come. Of course, some on this board would be fine
> with that.
> well, it's not fine with me. I'm going to continue my efforts to reach a mainstream audience with dance records that people will enjoy during the Monday through Thursday frame.'DanceFloor" is about as commercial as it gets,while still maintaining a dark venere that prevents it from being outright bubblegum;I think we've found the right ingredients,time will tell.