... as an european, I miss Eurobeat from the late 80's to the 90's, and a mention to David Guetta sending back American techno and house to their origins... but ok, it's clear A)) was born in USA, but when you despise it, Europe make it greather and sended back to explode in america when it was already mainstream in my continent... and B)) the industry of the music majors were scared to loose their business whit rock and pop music solo and bands, doing concerts and selling vinyls and CD, than when DJ's appear to switch into big disco and open air festivals been the DJ's the MASTERS of the music business... until now EDM changed all and it' so important like charleston was in the 20's or rockandroll in the 50's... EDM the king now and for ever...
13:43 bro you literally just said the term edm(electronic dance music) shouldn't be used to describe all electronic dance music genres. Can we just appreciate how dumb that sounds?
Alright here’s the break down if edm in a nutshell EDM start or originated in Europe (obviously) techno started in America/detroit house started either America or Europe or both I guess… then the real EDM scene took place in Europe in 1990s with hardstyle, happy hardcore, trance, Freeform, French core?, breakcore (: and I guess dubstep and dnb. Personally I don’t consider the last edm but that’s my opinion
This video is wrong in many aspects, especially in Krautrock and the band Kraftwerk, which were just a German Progressive Rock group in Düsseldorf produced by the rocker Conny Plank, Krautrock is not an aspect or direct line of Classical Electronic Music, EDM if it is forged directly from Classical Electronic Music. "Kraftwerk the pioneers of Electronic Music at the beginning of the 70's? Hip Hop influenced by Kraftwerk? what! 🤦...Electronic Music dates its most relevant stylistic and technological origin from the late 20's and by the end of the 60's it was already ending its second wave where the 4 pillar lines of Classical Electronic Music are forged: E. Post Concreta, E. Moog, E. Experimental and E. Soundtrack / Ambient, Sci-Fi, Cosmic (second wave of father and pioneer producers and developers: Dissevelt, Scott, Baby & Louis, Kingsley, Derbishyre, Garson, Hodgson, Prilly, Lasry, Riley, Hyman, Blake, Cecil, Carlos...) EDM is forged and born directly from the 4 pillars of Classical Electronic Music by the third wave of the top producers and developers of 70's Electronics: Moroder, Jarre, Lacksman, YMO, Tangerine Dreams, Schulze, Vangelis, Tonet, Gizzi, Pinhas, Decerf..., with Giorgio Moroder in 1977 who established the most solid electronic base of EDM, it is from this first phase of evolution and development of EDM (1977-1980) that formed the 5 parent and primary electronic genres that gave rise to this electronic scene: HI-NRG, Synthpop, Electro, Italo Disco and Electro Funk. Ryuichi Sakamoto in 1980 forged the Electro under his productions associated with YMO (Lógic System) in the pioneering use of the TR-808. Kraftwerk replicates, copies and adopts Moroder, Jarre, YMO, Lacksman, Tangerine Dreams, Schulze, Vangelis (among others) throughout much of the 70's and early 80's.
@@TheKandiHouse I have been supporting Chelsea since the 90's... watch the video and listen to the words... don't rely on some cheap AI to make the videos for you... put in some proper effort !!!! Chelsea FC is a proper football club worthy of only proper football videos mate !!!!
i went to Coachella in 2010, and coming from the UK it was so confusing seeing everyone jumping up and down to Deadmouse like they were at a rock concert. It’s dance music guys, you’re meant to dance to it.
This was a pretty comprehensive coverage of the scene for the runtime, but I think 'in the US' might be an appropriate addition to the title. It was good to see the mention of Kraftwerk and the nods to genres emerging in Europe in the second half of the decade, but it does have that US slant of it becoming most popular in the 2010s. I think most Europeans would agree that the peak dance music period is the late 80s to early 2000s, when most of the genres emerged. The 2010s period is essentially a rebranding as "EDM" for the US market, which needed established pop stars singing on dance tracks before they took it seriously. For the fusion of rock/punk with dance, I would have expected to see the likes of the Prodigy, Fatboy Slim, Apollo 440 & the Chemical Brothers mentioned (breakbeat rave / big beat). Trip hop and ambient are worth a mention for showing the non-rave side to the genre. Eurodance didn't get mentioned, yet that was by far the most commercial side of dance music over here, with multi-million selling records from the likes of 2 Unlimited and Snap!. Yeah, I guess it just needs more from the 90s, where dance music peaked over here, but was largely ignored in favour of grunge & hip hop in the US.
It's a good thing you added the "i guess" in the title because a whole lot of this is guess work. Your timeline is all over the place, you got a lot of the dates wrong, you used incorrect footage when describing events/genres, and you left out so many actual pioneers. I hope nobody takes this video seriously because as a recap of history it's lazily researched. Great editing though.
Also glad that skrillex deadmau5 etc made edm and rave music popular in the us. its really messed up how the rave scene couldnt even thrive there through the 90s and early to mid 2000s
So thats why edm techno house and trance cannot thrive in the US because of the media and the politians and thats why hip hop and rnb and punk rock still thrive and also dominate the us pop charts really sad though
This is mostly a history of anglo-british edm with a strong focus on hip-hop-influenced styles. In your video you ignore - a decade of italo pop which was the foundation of - three decades of german techno, euro and similar as well as - three decades of netherlandish and belgian gabber, techno and similar as well as - three decades of spanish dance music. To state that you can't include single artists shows how little you know about electronic dance music.
Joe Biden apparently hates ravers.😵💫 And, to put them in jail for having a party is extremely harsh & cruel. He was all in with the Crime Bill so I'm not surprised.
Not a bad history at all, I'm impressed considering how much you squeezed into 14 minutes. I think it's definitely worth mentioning that things are coming full-circle in how much a big increase in interest in old-school deep house and nu disco there is today, to get away from the more-commercialized EDM. Oh, and kudos on mentioning Donna Summer's "I Feel Love", as I'm totally convinced that song is still one of the biggest mile stones for the genre. You can't have a history of club music without that one being a feature, that's for sure.
Derrick May is probably the least important of the artists from Detroit that you could have mentioned. Most of the tunes he released were written by other people, and people like K-Hand, Eddie Fowlkes, and Delano Smith had far bigger roles in the formation and development of techno than he did.
NO APHEX TWIN, are you kidding? He revolutionized the genre and introduced more complex types of songs!
It's not EDM. It's electronica.
... as an european, I miss Eurobeat from the late 80's to the 90's, and a mention to David Guetta sending back American techno and house to their origins... but ok, it's clear A)) was born in USA, but when you despise it, Europe make it greather and sended back to explode in america when it was already mainstream in my continent... and B)) the industry of the music majors were scared to loose their business whit rock and pop music solo and bands, doing concerts and selling vinyls and CD, than when DJ's appear to switch into big disco and open air festivals been the DJ's the MASTERS of the music business... until now EDM changed all and it' so important like charleston was in the 20's or rockandroll in the 50's... EDM the king now and for ever...
7:20 dammmmn, this song is from the early 80s ?!?, it really sounds like the 2010s house tracks
what's the song starting at 11:40
13:43 bro you literally just said the term edm(electronic dance music) shouldn't be used to describe all electronic dance music genres. Can we just appreciate how dumb that sounds?
Using a mainstream term and then explaining why it shouldn’t be used? Get a grip bro.
EDM is all you need to know. NOBODY EVER CALLED IT EDM UNTIL IT WAS MASS PRODUCE. This guy obviously missed out
Maybe you didn’t watch the whole video…
The US has turned Dance Music into a cartoon of itself with the whole ‘EDM’ movement
Lol it's not "CHICK". CHIC is prounced "Sheek"
2:29 chick???? don’t do their name dirty like that😭😭
I wouldn't really call that track in 1968 dance music. Sounds like quirky rock to me. Their later stuff definitely has an eletro feel to it.
THEY DIDNT MENTION DAFT PUNK!?
I did
Alright here’s the break down if edm in a nutshell EDM start or originated in Europe (obviously) techno started in America/detroit house started either America or Europe or both I guess… then the real EDM scene took place in Europe in 1990s with hardstyle, happy hardcore, trance, Freeform, French core?, breakcore (: and I guess dubstep and dnb. Personally I don’t consider the last edm but that’s my opinion
Also HARDCORE techno originate from Europe and it’s NOT techno in any way
This video is wrong in many aspects, especially in Krautrock and the band Kraftwerk, which were just a German Progressive Rock group in Düsseldorf produced by the rocker Conny Plank, Krautrock is not an aspect or direct line of Classical Electronic Music, EDM if it is forged directly from Classical Electronic Music. "Kraftwerk the pioneers of Electronic Music at the beginning of the 70's? Hip Hop influenced by Kraftwerk? what! 🤦...Electronic Music dates its most relevant stylistic and technological origin from the late 20's and by the end of the 60's it was already ending its second wave where the 4 pillar lines of Classical Electronic Music are forged: E. Post Concreta, E. Moog, E. Experimental and E. Soundtrack / Ambient, Sci-Fi, Cosmic (second wave of father and pioneer producers and developers: Dissevelt, Scott, Baby & Louis, Kingsley, Derbishyre, Garson, Hodgson, Prilly, Lasry, Riley, Hyman, Blake, Cecil, Carlos...) EDM is forged and born directly from the 4 pillars of Classical Electronic Music by the third wave of the top producers and developers of 70's Electronics: Moroder, Jarre, Lacksman, YMO, Tangerine Dreams, Schulze, Vangelis, Tonet, Gizzi, Pinhas, Decerf..., with Giorgio Moroder in 1977 who established the most solid electronic base of EDM, it is from this first phase of evolution and development of EDM (1977-1980) that formed the 5 parent and primary electronic genres that gave rise to this electronic scene: HI-NRG, Synthpop, Electro, Italo Disco and Electro Funk. Ryuichi Sakamoto in 1980 forged the Electro under his productions associated with YMO (Lógic System) in the pioneering use of the TR-808. Kraftwerk replicates, copies and adopts Moroder, Jarre, YMO, Lacksman, Tangerine Dreams, Schulze, Vangelis (among others) throughout much of the 70's and early 80's.
Please I need Id @ 9:42!?
What, no Prodigy?
not trying to be that guy but i feel like this "entire history" is very incomplete lol
It’s meant to be a 10 minute recap video. Not an entire documentary.
Your timelines are really off dude
They’re not
@@TheKandiHouse check again dude?
@@TheKandiHouse I have been supporting Chelsea since the 90's... watch the video and listen to the words... don't rely on some cheap AI to make the videos for you... put in some proper effort !!!! Chelsea FC is a proper football club worthy of only proper football videos mate !!!!
Relax man. It’s soccer…
@@TheKandiHouse I take my football serious dude
what the helllll is this? lmfaoo a.i. garbage
This isn't even 1% of the history of EDM.
Well it’s 50 years of history compiled into 10 minutes.
@@TheKandiHouse Yeah if only there was some other way to tell the full story.
Yes, watch a full length documentary
How could Equinoxe Part IV by Jean Michel Jarre be so overlooked with its early African House rhythm and notable ARP 2600?
I can’t include every artist that everyone likes…
@ Of course not, but this was groundbreaking. Not just “every artist”.
i went to Coachella in 2010, and coming from the UK it was so confusing seeing everyone jumping up and down to Deadmouse like they were at a rock concert. It’s dance music guys, you’re meant to dance to it.
JOE BIDEN???????
This was a pretty comprehensive coverage of the scene for the runtime, but I think 'in the US' might be an appropriate addition to the title. It was good to see the mention of Kraftwerk and the nods to genres emerging in Europe in the second half of the decade, but it does have that US slant of it becoming most popular in the 2010s. I think most Europeans would agree that the peak dance music period is the late 80s to early 2000s, when most of the genres emerged. The 2010s period is essentially a rebranding as "EDM" for the US market, which needed established pop stars singing on dance tracks before they took it seriously. For the fusion of rock/punk with dance, I would have expected to see the likes of the Prodigy, Fatboy Slim, Apollo 440 & the Chemical Brothers mentioned (breakbeat rave / big beat). Trip hop and ambient are worth a mention for showing the non-rave side to the genre. Eurodance didn't get mentioned, yet that was by far the most commercial side of dance music over here, with multi-million selling records from the likes of 2 Unlimited and Snap!. Yeah, I guess it just needs more from the 90s, where dance music peaked over here, but was largely ignored in favour of grunge & hip hop in the US.
What about hardstyle :-(
my step dad was there at the "disco sucks" white sox game, he was like 6 years old lol
Underground raves will always be better IMO.
*talks about trance emerging in germany and the uk* *proceeds to put thunderdome footage* 😂
Daft Punk will always reign king.
0:14 Craftwork killed me
You didn't mention eurodance
I can’t mention every genre and every artist.
thank you for this video, thanks a lot!, searching for Rave Info is hard some times
Lol_ The Hacienda was a mental shop 😊 Good Nights, but I can’t remember much.
🤣🤣
You forgot Popcorn by Gershon Kingsley in 1969 .
you spoke of dubstep and didnt recognize any real UK artists, you mention skrillex and america which has tarnished dub as a whole. awful choices.
also that outro was trash. :D
Yeah, needs some Skream or other early dubstep producers. The Skrillex stuff is more "brostep".
I can’t include every artist that everyone likes…
so no silver apples??
I can’t include every artist that everyone likes…
Wheres Aphex Twin
I can’t include every artist that everyone likes…
i hate how you chose marshmallow for the thumbnail, the most bland and shit artist you could find wtf
It's a good thing you added the "i guess" in the title because a whole lot of this is guess work. Your timeline is all over the place, you got a lot of the dates wrong, you used incorrect footage when describing events/genres, and you left out so many actual pioneers. I hope nobody takes this video seriously because as a recap of history it's lazily researched. Great editing though.
You’re very wrong
no hardcore no care
Never thought I'd get old enough to hear someone mispronounce the band Chic. P.S.: It rhymes with the word FREAK
Also glad that skrillex deadmau5 etc made edm and rave music popular in the us. its really messed up how the rave scene couldnt even thrive there through the 90s and early to mid 2000s
So thats why edm techno house and trance cannot thrive in the US because of the media and the politians and thats why hip hop and rnb and punk rock still thrive and also dominate the us pop charts really sad though
This is mostly a history of anglo-british edm with a strong focus on hip-hop-influenced styles. In your video you ignore - a decade of italo pop which was the foundation of - three decades of german techno, euro and similar as well as - three decades of netherlandish and belgian gabber, techno and similar as well as - three decades of spanish dance music. To state that you can't include single artists shows how little you know about electronic dance music.
I can’t include every artist that everyone likes…
Joe Biden apparently hates ravers.😵💫 And, to put them in jail for having a party is extremely harsh & cruel. He was all in with the Crime Bill so I'm not surprised.
9:31 THUNDERDOME?! BUT YOU DIDNT MENTION THE MID 90S GABBER SCENE.
Not a bad history at all, I'm impressed considering how much you squeezed into 14 minutes. I think it's definitely worth mentioning that things are coming full-circle in how much a big increase in interest in old-school deep house and nu disco there is today, to get away from the more-commercialized EDM. Oh, and kudos on mentioning Donna Summer's "I Feel Love", as I'm totally convinced that song is still one of the biggest mile stones for the genre. You can't have a history of club music without that one being a feature, that's for sure.
This script sounds like it was written with chat gpt 💀💀
Incorrect
Derrick May is probably the least important of the artists from Detroit that you could have mentioned. Most of the tunes he released were written by other people, and people like K-Hand, Eddie Fowlkes, and Delano Smith had far bigger roles in the formation and development of techno than he did.
I disagree
@@TheKandiHouse You can disagree all you want, it's the truth
techno started in dusseldorf with Kraftwerk...