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Description of Dance Rock

 
Dance-rock emerged as indie-rock and electronic club culture came into alignment, during the early '00s. Its roots, however, can be traced to the early '80s, in the dance-punk of Gang of Four, the edgy synth-pop of New Order, and the spiraling post-punk-cum-world beat of Talking Heads. These original sounds were then rediscovered and reinterpreted by the latter-day neo-post-punk, electro and house scenes of the nascent millennium. The sound was first cultivated in the cities of New York and London, but songs like the Rapture's "House of Jealous Lovers" and LCD Soundsystem's "Daft Punk Is Playing At My House" -- both early anthems -- were soon heard in nightclubs in major cities across the globe. An important part of the movement is DJ remixes of bands: post-punkers like Glasgow's Franz Ferdinand, London's Bloc Party, Sao Paulo's CSS and New York's Interpol get retreads by producers like Belgium's 2 Many DJs (aka Soulwax), Philly's Diplo, London's Erol Alkan and New York's James Murphy (of LCD Soundsystem). The record labels involved in fostering the movement are equally international, with New York's DFA Records, Paris's Kitsune Maison and Sydney's Modular Records leading the charge. Dance-rock reached its apex in 2007, as self-proclaimed "new ravers" the Klaxons, with their album Myths of the New Future, won the UK's prestigious Mercury Prize for emerging artists.
 

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Dance Rock Key Artists

 
Bloc Party

In the mid-2000s, Bloc Party
emerged with a sound and
attitude that built on the
fashionable retro art-rock
coming from acts ranging...

CSS

CSS is short for Cansei de
Ser Sexy, which means
"tired of being sexy,"
something Beyonce once
said she was. These hot y...

Electric Six

This Detroit quintet mixes
dirty garage, punk and
(gasp!) disco. It makes you
wanna pogo along -- and
then take a shower. They...

Gang of Four

Stuttering guitars, martial
rhythms, funk-inspired
bass, and intellectual lyrics
-- one of the greatest
post-punk outfits. Like th...

Happy Mondays

The Mondays were one of
the first bands to champion
the nascent rave culture of
1988, already mixing '70s
psychedelia. Happy Mond...

Hot Chip

Alexis Taylor, Joe Goddard,
Al Doyle, Owen Clarke and
Felix Martin are the men
behind this electropop
Casiotone-hop group. Hot...

Klaxons

Klaxons vigorously deliver
art rock's take on acid
house with impressive
poker faces and interesting
haircuts. Formed in Lond...

LCD Soundsystem

Ex-bouncer and punk
drummer James Murphy
weaves punk and dance
styles together into an
in-your-face rocky electr...

Le Tigre

Le Tigre's songs make a bold
move toward quirky,
DJ-fueled new wave. Bikini
Kill founder Kathleen Hanna
formed Le Tigre with film...

New Order

This synth pop band formed
from Joy Division's remains
has always kept one foot in
the mainstream and the
other underground. New...

Out Hud

The heart of Out Hud,
Phyllis Forbes and Molly
Schnick, used to be in a Bay
Area punk rock band called
the Tourettes. Members o...

Soulwax

Belgian dance-rockers
Soulwax mash-up guitar riffs
and electronic blips. The
duo began as a derivative
post-grunge band but has...

Talking Heads

The artistically-inclined
Talking Heads got their start
in the punk stomping
grounds of New York's
CBGB. David Byrne, Tina...

The Faint

Omaha's the Faint bring a
dark, goth-influenced
dance sound to the
Midwestern indie
characterized by Saddle...

The Rapture

Originally from San
Francisco, the Rapture play
a disco-punk-funk blend
that make them indie
dancefloor saviours. Buzz...

Electronics

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