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If we can only listen to pre-2010 or post-2010 dance music forever, which would it be?
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Mattsanity
The year 2010 is completely arbitrary and this thread is purely fantasy but if you can only pick one, which would it be?
Lira
Post-2010 because you can always hope for a remix?

After all, Charlotte de Witte has just remixed Age of Love, Deborah de Luca remade Children, and I'm sure there are plenty of other options. It's a bit more difficult to have it the other way around unless we hire some theoretical physicists with a time machine :p
Mattsanity
Tru tru. Pre-2010 has 20+ years of dance music for enjoyment while post-2010 has unlimited potential.
Sykonee
A more interesting situation would be if, somehow, the entirety of pre-2010 electronic dance music was erased from collective memory, would any of those old classics ever be recreated? For argument's sake, let's also include any post-2010 remixes or remakes of pre-2010s tracks.

Basically, January 1, 2010 starts Year Zero, and everything that was created after then is all there ever has been.


/has been watching a bit too much Alternate History Hub
LoveHate
I've been listening to a lot minimal lately ...pre 2010 so I'd go with that ...I think a lot of the current stuff is some sort of tribute to older music anyway.
SYSTEM-J
So the choice is between 30+ years of dance music... or 12 years?
Mattsanity
Yes, I just assumed this would be an easy choice due to people's preference of tracks and artists
lacksesepsotygh
I only listen to swinging circus house from 2010
Mattsanity
Yes, everything on vinyl for both options.
Lira
quote:
Originally posted by Sykonee
A more interesting situation would be if, somehow, the entirety of pre-2010 electronic dance music was erased from collective memory, would any of those old classics ever be recreated?

The synth based genres? I'd think so, to some very limited extent.

It's very likely that at least some of the melodies would be recreated, because there's only so much you can do with a common run off the mill chord progression. Of course, there wouldn't be an exact replica, as you don't see any kids from Brno suddenly remaking Café Del Mar without ever hearing it before, but proof something like this would definitely happen are the frivolous lawsuits random artists file against superstars because "they came up with a melody first".

However, producers now have a much wider range of gear to choose from and streaming has forced most producers to abandon those week long build-ups of yesteryear, so I like to think the newer versions would be better by defaut and I'd expect no real exact copies.

The sample based genres? Now that's trickier... I'm not entirely sure someone would end up remaking the Rockafeller Skank these days unless they're really into 60's and 70's music, for example, and it would take one really weird kid to do that now. Maybe Spotify would be a blassing in this sense.

KilldaDJ
trap and grime remixs of cafe del mar please. yung 52 and lil energy colab
Sykonee
I did post that as bit of a joke, but thinking about it more, that scenario does leave some fascinating situations in its wake.

For instance, it basically erases Aphex Twin's influence on so-o-o-o much of electronic music. And nor could you say, "Well, someone else could do something similar", because so much of what Richard D. James created in those early years was with his own, custom-made gear, and almost entirely on the fly as inspiration hit him.

I'll allow that this scenario allows for anything that was made in the post-2010 era does still exist, so any music in that era that was influenced by Aphex Twin can still exist, but I find the odds of another run like Mr. James' '90s occurring infinitesimally small.
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