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  1. EDM's origins are purely American, initially branching off in the early '80s from electro-disco to create Chicago House (and Detroit Techno a few years later). Disco clubs (most famously The Warehouse in Chicago, and The Loft in New York) were embraced most within Black, Latino, and gay subcultures. American society in the late '70s, as y'all ...

  2. Techno was conceived in Detroit. The artists in Detroit were heavily influenced by Kraftwerk, among others. George Clinton is another important one, you can hear the funk influence very strongly in the Detroit stuff. An electronic club sound was being developed in Germany at the same time as techno.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › EurodanceEurodance - Wikipedia

    Eurodance (sometimes referred to as Euro-NRG, Euro-electronica or Euro) is a genre of electronic dance music that originated in the late 1980s in Europe. It combines many elements of rap, techno and Eurodisco. [2] This genre of music is heavily influenced by the use of rich vocals, sometimes with rapped verses.

  4. Nov 7, 2019 · The enthusiasm and dedication of some of the social entrepreneurs from the 1980s and 1990s has resulted in a vibrant music scene in Berlin today. In fact, Berlin’s techno scene has become so ...

  5. The accordion has been a primary instrument in Mexican music. It is mostly associated with Norteño music, which has become one of the most popular music genres in Mexico since the 1990s, but the instrument is also featured in other genres such as Cumbia. Ramon Ayala is arguably the best-known accordion player in Mexico; nicknamed the "King of ...

  6. Jul 27, 2016 · By the early 2010s the term "electronic dance music" and the initialism "EDM" was being pushed by the U.S. music industry and music press in what was largely an effort to re-brand U.S. rave culture. 1. (I'm not as cynical though. I think the media needed a word for a phenomenon, and "EDM" stuck with the people.)

  7. Jul 27, 2023 · techno, electronic dance music that began in the United States in the 1980s and became globally popular in the 1990s. With its glacial synthesizer melodies and brisk machine rhythms, techno was a product of the fascination of middle-class African-American youths in Detroit, Michigan, for European electronic dance music.

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