Description
It took a long time for dance music to recover from 70’s notorious disco demolition event.It wasn’t until the late 80s, and the UK’s legendary 2nd Summer Of Love, that dance music was recontextualized for a younger audience.The 90s It was, to electronica fans, what the 60s were to acolytes of classic rock: a hallowed era praised as much for its diversity as for the impact and commercial success of its music. In the 90s, an entire generation seemingly turned onto electronica, with snooty indie types attending raves and turning into overnight converts.The era came to something of a juddering halt as, mirroring the disco backlash of the late 70s, the new millennium saw crowds tiring of the scene’s overt commercialism. At the end of the decade, the faster side of 90s dance music, such as trance and hard house.Underground, though, the house and garage beats continued pumping.UK garage would endlessly morph in the coming decade, leading to grime, dubstep, and much more.