Equipment: anything goes, but for dance music I need beats and that usually means Jomox 999, TR-606, MPC. Classic dance synth sounds from Pro 1, Juno 60, MKS-50, V50/TX81z. Compressors.
Performing: I’ve done it, but I don’t do it. I’ve been a DJ since the early 90s and prefer to play records for dancefloors. I can provide much more diversity and emotional range with records, and really just much better music overall. As a once avid dancer, I’ve always had a much better time dancing to DJs and live bands than sequencer performers.
Tension: same as any kind of music. There are no rules other than “don’t clear the floor”.
Artists: too many. Leroy Burgess, Randy Muller, Skyy, Patrick Adams, Loleatta Holloway, Nile Rodgers, James Brown, The Fatback Band, Midnight Starr, Change, Francois Kevorkian, Larry Heard, Steve Hurley, Juan Atkins, Drexciya, Chez Damier, MK, MAW, Pretty Tony, Rhythm & Sound, NOIA, Klein & MBO, Motorbass, Liaisons Dangereuses, Robert Hood, Steffi, Linea Aspera, New Order, Vince Clarke, Front 242, ESG, Konk, Liquid Liquid, Arthur Russell…. Too many to list and particularly too many one hit wonders as is the way of the 12” single. This is why DJs are better than music journalists (or algorithms).
Culture: the question not asked. Too often I feel this is what’s missing from the electronic dance music I hear from the synth crowd on the internet and the discussion around it. Anyone can download the right sounds, put them together and then upload, but it feels empty and insignificant. It used to be that you had to go to that club/warehouse/basement/field/studio/record store and exist as part of the culture to get there, and your music would show it.
It’s easy to listen to a Rob Hood minimal track or a Berghain banger and think that it’s a complete abstraction, born in isolation from all reality. This is not the case. This music is informed by an interconnected web of cultures as diverse as Black gospel, gay bathhouses, cheesy italodisco and German anarcho-capatlism. The sounds chosen have cultural significance and reference other sounds recursively across time and space, which is why they appear abstract but induce emotion.
There’s a feeling you feel, when it’s early in the morning and you’re catching that third wind on the dancefloor, system is bumping, everyone is sweaty and broken down, and THAT song comes on and you’re dancing and crying and feeling that special connection with all the dancers who ever danced. Dance music is the culture of people who feel that feeling from dancing and people who make the music that makes you feel that feeling. From dancing.
I’ve spent far too long typing this post turned borderline rant. Anyway, since we can’t go out to a dope underground soundclash right now, here are some references for those who are less familiar with where dance music culture is coming from (Not that there are rules, there really aren’t. Just don’t clear the floor.):
Words:
Last Night a DJ Saved My Life by Bill Brewster
Love Saves the Day by Tim Lawrence
Video:
Pump up the volume: A history of House music
I Was There When House Took Over the World
Maestro - The History of Larry Levan & The Paradise Garage
Vogue Supremacy 90’s Ballroom Style
Sub Berlin -The Story of Tresor
Detroit Techno City Documentary
Detroit The Blueprint Of Techno