Description of Electroclash
The term electroclash was coined in 2001 by New York DJ/svengali Larry Tee, to describe a synergy of synth pop, techno, punk and performance art embodied at that time by fashion set darlings Fischerspooner. While the original New York electroclash scene rapidly withered as the fashionistas moved on, electro-influenced techno was always more of a constant in Northern Europe, where influential labels such as DJ Hell's Munich-based International Deejay Gigolos or Clone from Holland were mainlining post-punk and Italo-disco influences from the late '90s onwards. Electro (though we'll continue to add the '-clash' to avoid confusion with old-skool breakdance electro) is now the prominent sound in discerning clubs from Berlin to Barcelona, characterized as much by its eclecticism as its acid basslines, robotic vocals and debt to New Order's "Blue Monday." Electroclash is the ultimate retro-futuristic dance movement, and a welcome source of credible glamour; it's techno with a personality injection.
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Black Strobe
Surly Parisian electroclash
duo of Ivan Smagghe and
Arnaud Rebotini, signed to
Trevor Jackson's influential
Output label.
Chicks On Speed
All-girl Munich art-school
trio they began the group
as a college fashion project
who make polemical
Electro-Punk.
DJ Hell
Champion of sleazy electro
and sartorially sophisticated
owner of International
Deejay Gigolo records.
Fischerspooner
These New Wave-inspired
performance artists'
retro-perfect electro-pop
has made them the toast of
NYC's hipster community....
I-F
Holland's answer to
Underground Resistance's
Mike Banks, orchestrating
the nu-electro scene from
his bunker in The Hague.
Tiga
Montreal-based electro
dandy and contemporary of
DJ Hell and Felix Da
Housecat.