Electronic dance music

Electronic dance music, (also known as EDM, dance music,[1] club music, or simply dance) is a broad range of percussive electronic music genres produced largely for nightclubs, raves, and festivals. Produced for playback by disc jockeys (DJs), EDM is generally used in the context of a live mix, where a DJ creates a seamless selection of tracks by segueing from one recording to the next.[2]

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.[3] In the UK, "dance music" or "dance" are more common terms for EDM.[4] In this context, EDM does not refer to a specific genre, but serves as an umbrella term for several commercially-popular genres, including techno, house, trance, drum and bass, dubstep, trap, Jersey club and their respective subgenres.[5][6][7][8]

History

While the birthplace of Electronic Dance Music is debatable, it was a music genre that was able to be reproducible once it arrived to the UK around the 1970s/1980s.[9]

Early examples of electronic dance music include the disco music of Giorgio Moroder and the electronic music of Kraftwerk and Yellow Magic Orchestra in the late 1970s.[10]

Disco

Main articles: Disco and Euro disco
Donna Summer - "I Feel Love" (1977)
Donna Summer's "I Feel Love" (1977), produced by Giorgio Moroder, was a seminal Euro disco song.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

During the late 1970s, the popularity of disco music sharply declined in the United States, abandoned by major U.S. record labels and producers. European disco continued evolving within the broad mainstream pop music scene.[11] European acts Silver Convention, Love and Kisses, Munich Machine, and American acts Donna Summer and the Village People, were acts that defined the late 1970s Euro disco sound. In 1977, Giorgio Moroder and Pete Bellotte produced "I Feel Love" for Donna Summer. It became the first well-known disco hit to have a completely synthesised backing track. Other disco producers, most famously American producer Tom Moulton, grabbed ideas and techniques from dub music (which came with the increased Jamaican migration to New York City in the seventies) to provide alternatives to the four on the floor style that dominated. [12][13]

Post-disco

Main article: Post-disco
See also: Boogie (genre)

During the post-disco era that followed the backlash against disco music at the end of the 1970s, which in the United States lead to civil unrest and a riot in Chicago known as the Disco Demolition Night,[14] an underground movement of "stripped-down" disco inspired music featuring "radically different sounds"[15] started to emerge on the East Coast[16][Note 1] This new scene catered primarily to the New York metropolitan area and was initially led by urban contemporary artists that were responding to the over-commercialization and subsequent demise of disco culture. The sound that emerged borrowed from P-Funk [19] the electronic side of disco, dub music, and other genres. Much of the music produced during this time was, like disco, catering to a singles-driven market.[15] At this time creative control started shifting to independent record companies, less established producers, and club DJs.[15] Other dance styles that came to prominence during the post-disco era include dance-pop,[20][21] boogie,[15] electro, Italo disco, house,[20][22][23][24] and techno.[23][25][26][27][28]

Electro

Main article: Electro (music)
The instrument that built electro, the Roland TR-808 drum machine.

In the early 1980s electro emerged as a fusion of funk and New York boogie. Also called electro-boogie, but later shortened to electro, cited pioneers include Zapp,[29] D.Train,[30] Sinnamon. [30] Early hip hop and rap combined with German and Japanese electropop influences such as Kraftwerk and Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO) inspired the birth of electro.[31] As the electronic sound developed, instruments such as the bass guitar and drums were replaced by synthesizers and most notably by iconic drum machines, particularly the Roland TR-808. Early uses of the TR-808 include several Yellow Magic Orchestra tracks in 1980-1981, the 1982 track "Planet Rock" by Afrikaa Bambaataa, and the 1982 song "Sexual Healing" by Marvin Gaye.[32] In 1982, producer Arthur Baker with Afrika Bambaataa released the seminal "Planet Rock" which was influenced by the Yellow Magic Orchestra using Kraftwerk samples and drum beats supplied by the TR-808. Planet Rock was followed later that year by another breakthrough electro record, Nunk by Warp 9. In 1983, Hashim created an electro funk sound which influenced Herbie Hancock, resulting in his hit single "Rockit". The early 1980s were electro's mainstream peak.

House music

Main article: House music

In the early 1980s, Chicago radio jocks The Hot Mix 5, and club DJs Ron Hardy and Frankie Knuckles played various styles of dance music, including older disco records (mostly Philly disco and Salsoul[33] tracks), electro funk tracks by artists such as Afrika Bambaataa,[34] newer Italo disco, B-Boy hip hop music by Man Parrish, Jellybean Benitez, Arthur Baker, and John Robie, and electronic pop music by Kraftwerk and Yellow Magic Orchestra. Some made and played their own edits of their favorite songs on reel-to-reel tape, and sometimes mixed in effects, drum machines, and other rhythmic electronic instrumentation. The hypnotic electronic dance song "On and On", produced in 1984 by Chicago DJ Jesse Saunders and co-written by Vince Lawrence, had elements that became staples of the early house sound, such as the Roland TB-303 bass synthesizer and minimal vocals as well as a Roland (specifically TR-808) drum machine and Korg (specifically Poly-61) synthesizer. It also utilized the bassline from Player One's disco record "Space Invaders" (1979).[35][36]

Mr. Fingers – "Can You Feel It?" (1986)
"Can You Feel It?" (1986) by Mr. Fingers (Larry Heard). It was a seminal deep house track.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

"On and On" is sometimes cited as the 'first house record',[37][38] though other examples from around that time, such as J.M. Silk's "Music is the Key" (1985), have also been cited.[39] House music quickly spread to other American cities such as Detroit, New York City, and Newark – all of which developed their own regional scenes. In the mid-to-late 1980s, house music became popular in Europe as well as major cities in South America, and Australia.[40] Chicago House experienced some commercial success in Europe with releases such as "House Nation" by House Master Boyz and the Rude Boy of House (1987). Following this, a number House inspired c releases such as "Pump Up The Volume" by MARRS (1987), "Theme from S'Express" by S'Express (1988) and "Doctorin' the House" by Coldcut (1988) entered the pop charts.

Acid house, techno, rave

Main articles: Acid house, Techno and Rave music
Phuture – "Acid Tracks" (1987)
Phuture's "Acid Tracks" (1987) is often regarded as the 'first' acid house record.

Rhythim is Rhythim - "Strings of Life" (1987)
"Strings of Life" (1987) by Rhythim is Rhythim (Derrick May) was a seminal Detroit techno track.

Juan Atkins - "Techno Music" (1988)
"Techno Music" by Juan Atkins was the title track of Techno! The New Dance Sound of Detroit (1988).

Inner City - "Big Fun" (1988)
The album also included "Big Fun" (1988) by Inner City (Kevin Saunderson and Paris Grey), a track that achieved significant commercial success as a single release in fall 1988.[41]

Problems playing these files? See media help.
Roland TB-303: The bass line synthesizer that was used prominently in acid house.

By 1988, house music had become the most popular form of club music in Europe, with acid house developing as a notable trend in the UK and Germany in the same year.[42] In the UK an established warehouse party subculture, centered on the British African-Caribbean sound system scene fueled underground after-parties that featured dance music exclusively. Also in 1988, the Balearic party vibe associated with Ibiza-based DJ Alfredo Fiorito was transported to London, when Danny Rampling and Paul Oakenfold opened the clubs Shoom and Spectrum, respectively. Both places became synonymous with acid house, and it was during this period that MDMA gained prominence as a party drug. Other important UK clubs included Back to Basics in Leeds, Sheffield's Leadmill and Music Factory, and The Haçienda in Manchester, where Mike Pickering and Graeme Park's spot, Nude, was an important proving ground for American underground dance music.[Note 2] [43] The success of house and acid house paved the way for Detroit Techno, a style that was initially supported by a handful of house music clubs in Chicago, New York, and Northern England, with Detroit clubs catching up later.[44] The term Techno first came into use after a release of a 10 Records/Virgin Records compilation titled Techno: The Dance Sound of Detroit in 1988.[9]

One of the first Detroit productions to receive wider attention was Derrick May's "Strings of Life" (1987), which, together with May's previous release, "Nude Photo" (1987), helped raise techno's profile in Europe, especially the UK and Germany, during the 1987-1988 house music boom (see Second Summer of Love).[45] It became May's best known track, which, according to Frankie Knuckles, "just exploded. It was like something you can't imagine, the kind of power and energy people got off that record when it was first heard. Mike Dunn says he has no idea how people can accept a record that doesn't have a bassline."[46] According to British DJ Mark Moore, "Strings of Life" led London clubgoers to accept house: "because most people hated house music and it was all rare groove and hip hop...I'd play 'Strings of Life' at the Mudd Club and clear the floor".[47][Note 3] By the late 1980s interest in House, Acid house and techno escalated in the club scene and MDMA-fueled clubgoers, who were faced with a 2 a.m. closing time in the UK, started to seek after-hours refuge at all-night warehouse parties. Within a year, in summer 1989, up to 10,000 people at a time were attending commercially organized underground parties called raves.[1]

Breakbeat hardcore, jungle, drum & bass

4-track illustration of the evolution and continuity of the drum and bass sound.
2 minute sample. This clip contains 4 tracks ranging from proto-jungle "Tribal Bass" (1991) to jungle track "Here I Come" (1995) to an ominous early drum and bass remix (1995) to Aphrodites modern drum and bass remix (in a jump-up style), "Tribal Natty" (2005), all of which contain the same vocals from Barrington Levy (originally contained in the title song of his album Here I Come). Listen and compare the sounds.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

By the early 1990s, a style of music developed within the rave scene that had an identity distinct from American house and techno. This music, much like hip-hop before it, combined sampled syncopated beats or breakbeats, other samples from a wide range of different musical genres and, occasionally, samples of music, dialogue and effects from films and television programmes. Relative to earlier styles of dance music such as house and techno so called 'rave music' tended to emphasise bass sounds and use faster tempos, or beats per minute (BPM). This subgenre was known as "hardcore" rave but from as early as 1991, some musical tracks made up of these high-tempo break beats, with heavy basslines and samples of older Jamaican music, were referred to as "jungle techno", a genre influenced by Jack Smooth and Basement Records, and later just "jungle", which became recognized as a separate musical genre popular at raves and on pirate radio in Britain. It is important to note when discussing the history of Drum n Bass that prior to Jungle, rave music was getting faster and more experimental.

By 1994 jungle had begun to gain mainstream popularity and fans of the music (often referred to as junglists) became a more recognizable part of youth subculture. The genre further developed, incorporating and fusing elements from a wide range of existing musical genres, including the raggamuffin sound, dancehall, MC chants, dub basslines, and increasingly complex, heavily edited breakbeat percussion. Despite the affiliation with the ecstasy-fuelled rave scene, Jungle also inherited some associations with violence and criminal activity, both from the gang culture that had affected the UK's hip-hop scene and as a consequence of jungle's often aggressive or menacing sound and themes of violence (usually reflected in the choice of samples). However, this developed in tandem with the often positive reputation of the music as part of the wider rave scene and dancehall-based Jamaican music culture prevalent in London. By 1995, whether as a reaction to, or independently of this cultural schism, some jungle producers began to move away from the ragga-influenced style and create what would become collectively labelled, for convenience, as drum and bass.[49]

Popularization in the United States

Initially, electronic dance music associated with European rave and club culture achieved limited popular exposure in America but by the mid-to-late 1990s efforts were underway to market a range of dance genres using the label "electronica."[50] At the time, a wave of electronic music bands from the UK, including The Prodigy, The Chemical Brothers, Fatboy Slim and Underworld, had been prematurely associated with an "American electronica revolution".[51][52] But rather than finding mainstream success, many established EDM acts were relegated to the margins of the US industry.[51] In 1998 Madonna's Ray of Light brought the genre to the attention of popular music listeners.[53][54] Despite US media interest in electronica in the late 1990s, American house and techno producers continued to travel abroad to establish their careers as DJs and producers.[51] Other new names began to gain prominence at the turn of the century, such as Dutch producer Tiësto, who received worldwide attention after providing a soundtrack to the entry of athletes during the opening ceremony of the 2004 Summer Olympics—which The Guardian newspaper deemed one of the 50 most important events in dance music.[55]

By the mid-2000s, the prominence of dance music in North American popular culture had markedly increased. According to Spin, Daft Punk's performance at Coachella in 2006 was the "tipping point" for EDM—it introduced the duo to a new generation of "rock kids".[51] In 2009, French house musician David Guetta began to gain prominence in mainstream pop music thanks to several crossover hits on Top 40 charts such as "When Love Takes Over", as well as his collaborations with U.S. pop and hip-hop acts such as Akon ("Sexy Bitch") and The Black Eyed Peas ("I Gotta Feeling").[56] YouTube and SoundCloud helped fuel interest in EDM, as well as electro house and dubstep. Skrillex popularized a harsher sound nicknamed "brostep".[3][57]

The increased popularity of EDM was also influenced by live events. Promoters and venues realized that DJs could generate larger profits than traditional musicians; Diplo explained that "a band plays [for] 45 minutes; DJs can play for four hours. Rock bands—there's a few headliner dudes that can play 3,000-4,000-capacity venues, but DJs play the same venues, they turn the crowd over two times, people buy drinks all night long at higher prices—it's a win-win."[51] Electronic music festivals like the Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC) and Ultra Music Festival (UMF) also grew in size, placing an increased emphasis on visual experiences, and the DJs themselves, who began to attain a celebrity status.[3][57] Other major acts that gained prominence like Avicii and Swedish House Mafia held concert tours at major music venues like arenas rather than nightclubs; in December 2011, Swedish House Mafia became the first electronic music act to sell out New York City's Madison Square Garden.[57]

In 2011 Spin declared a "new rave generation" led by acts like David Guetta, Deadmau5, and Skrillex.[51] In January 2013, Billboard introduced a new EDM-focused Dance/Electronic Songs chart, tracking the top 50 electronic songs based on sales, radio airplay, club play, and online streaming.[58] According to Eventbrite, EDM fans are more likely to use social media to discover and share events or gigs. They also discovered that 78% of fans say they are more likely to attend an event if their peers do, compared to 43% of fans in general. EDM has many young and social fans.[59][59] By late 2011, Music Trades was describing electronic dance music as the fastest-growing genre in the world.[60] Elements of electronic music also became increasingly prominent in pop music.[51] Radio and television also contributed to dance music's mainstream acceptance.[61]

US Corporate interest

Corporate consolidation in the EDM industry began in 2012—especially in terms of live events. In June 2012, media executive Robert F. X. Sillerman—founder of what is now Live Nation—re-launched SFX Entertainment as an EDM conglomerate, and announced his plan to invest $1 billion to acquire EDM businesses. His acquisitions included regional promoters and festivals (including ID&T, which organizes Tomorrowland), two nightclub operators in Miami, and Beatport, an online music store which focuses on electronic music.[62][63] Live Nation also acquired Cream Holdings and Hard Events, and announced a "creative partnership" with EDC organizers Insomniac Events in 2013 that would allow it to access its resources whilst remaining an independent company;[64] Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino described EDM as the "[new] rock 'n' roll".[50][65][66]

U.S. radio conglomerate iHeartMedia, Inc. (formerly Clear Channel Media and Entertainment) has also made efforts to align itself with EDM. It hired noted British DJ and BBC Radio 1 personality Pete Tong to produce programming for its "Evolution" dance radio brand,[67] and announced a partnership with SFX in January 2014 to co-produce live concerts and EDM-oriented original programming for its top 40 radio stations. iHeartMedia president John Sykes explained that he wanted his company's properties to be the "best destination [for EDM]".[68][69]

Major brands have also used the EDM phenomena as a means of targeting millennials [70][71] and EDM songs and artists have increasingly been featured in television commercials and programs.[72] Avicii's manager Ash Pournouri compared these practices to the commercialization of hip-hop in the early 2000s.[72] Heineken has a marketing relationship with the Ultra Music Festival, and has incorporated Dutch producers Armin van Buuren and Tiësto into its ad campaigns. Anheuser-Busch has a similar relationship as beer sponsor of SFX Entertainment events.[72] In 2014, 7 Up launched "7x7Up"—a multi-platform campaign centered around EDM that includes digital content, advertising featuring producers, and branded stages at both Ultra and Electric Daisy Carnival.[70][73][74] Wireless carrier T-Mobile US entered into an agreement with SFX to become the official wireless sponsor of its events, and partnered with Above & Beyond to sponsor its 2015 tour.[71]

In August 2015, SFX began to experience declines in its value,[75] and a failed bid by CEO Sillerman to take the company private. The company began looking into strategic alternatives that could have resulted in the sale of the company.[76][77] In October 2015, Forbes declared the possibility of an EDM "bubble", in the wake of the declines at SFX Entertainment, slowing growth in revenue, the increasing costs of organizing festivals and booking talent, as well as an oversaturation of festivals in the eastern and western United States. Insomniac CEO Pasquale Rotella felt that the industry would weather the financial uncertainty of the overall market by focusing on "innovation" and entering into new markets.[78]

International popularization

In May 2015, the International Music Summit's Business Report estimated that the global electronic music industry had reached nearly $6.9 billion in value; the count included music sales, events revenue (including nightclubs and festivals), the sale of DJ equipment and software, and other sources of revenue. The report also identified several emerging markets for electronic dance music, including East Asia, India, and South Africa, credited primarily to investment by domestic, as well as American and European interests. A number of major festivals also began expanding into Latin America.[79]

China is a market where EDM had initially made relatively few inroads; although promoters believed that the mostly-instrumental music would remove a metaphorical language barrier, the growth of EDM in China was hampered by the lack of a prominent rave culture in the country as in other regions, as well as the popularity of domestic Chinese pop over foreign artists. Former Universal Music executive Eric Zho, inspired by the U.S. growth, made the first significant investments in electronic music in China, including the organization of Shanghai's inaugural Storm festival in 2013, the reaching of a title sponsorship deal for the festival with Anheuser-Busch's Budweiser brand, a local talent search, and organizing collaborations between EDM producers and Chinese singers, such as Avicii and Wang Leehom's "Lose Myself". In the years following, a larger number of EDM events began to appear in China, and Storm itself was also preceded by a larger number of pre-parties in 2014 than its inaugural year. A new report released during the inaugural International Music Summit China in October 2015 revealed that the Chinese EDM industry was experiencing modest gains, citing the larger number of events (including new major festival brands such as Modern Sky and YinYang), a 6% increase in the sales of electronic music in the country, and the significant size of the overall market. Zho also believed that the country's "hands-on" political climate, as well as investments by China into cultural events, helped in "encouraging" the growth of EDM in the country.[80][81]

Criticism

Despite the growing mainstream acceptance of EDM, a number of producers and DJs, including Carl Cox, Steve Lawler, and Markus Schulz, have raised concerns that the perceived over-commercialization of dance music has impacted the "art" of DJing. Cox saw the "press-play" approach of EDM DJs as unrepresentative of what he called "DJ ethos".[57] Writing in Mixmag, DJ Tim Sheridan argued that "push-button DJs" who use auto-sync and play pre-recorded sets of "obvious hits" has resulted in a situation overtaken by "the spectacle, money and the showbiz".[82]

Some house producers openly admitted that "commercial" EDM needed further differentiation and creativity. Avicii, whose 2013 album True featured songs incorporating elements of bluegrass, such as lead single "Wake Me Up", stated that most EDM lacked "longevity".[83] Deadmau5 has criticized the homogenization of EDM, stating that the music he hears "all sounds the same", underlining his diversification into other genres like techno. During the 2014 Ultra Music Festival, Deadmau5 made critical comments about up-and-coming EDM artist Martin Garrix and later played an edited version of Garrix's "Animals" remixed to the melody of "Old McDonald Had a Farm". Afterwards, Tiësto criticized Deadmau5 on Twitter for "sarcastically" mixing Avicii's "Levels" with his own "Ghosts 'n' Stuff".[84][85][86][87]

In May 2014, the NBC comedy series Saturday Night Live parodied the stereotypes of EDM culture and push-button DJs in a Digital Short entitled "When Will the Bass Drop?". It featured a DJ who goes about performing everyday activities—playing a computer game, frying eggs, collecting money—who then presses a giant "BASS" button, which explodes the heads of concertgoers.[88][89][90]

Terminology

The term "electronic dance music" was used in the United States as early as 1985, although the term "dance music" did not catch on as a blanket term until the late 1990s, when the U.S. music industry created music charts for "dance".[91] In July 1995, Nervous Records and Project X Magazine hosted the first awards ceremony, calling it the "Electronic Dance Music Awards".[Note 4][93] Writing in The Guardian, journalist Simon Reynolds noted that the American music industry's adoption of the term EDM in the late 2000s was an attempt re-brand U.S. "rave culture" and differentiate it from the 1990s rave scene.[3] In the UK, "dance music" or "dance" are more common terms for EDM.[4] What is widely perceived to be "club music" has changed over time; it now includes different genres and may not always encompass EDM. Similarly, electronic dance music can mean different things to different people. Both "club music" and EDM seem vague, but the terms are sometimes used to refer to distinct and unrelated genres (club music is defined by what is popular, whereas EDM is distinguished by musical attributes).[94]

Genres

Like other music genres, EDM has various subgenres that evolved over the past 30 years that are often defined by their varying tempo (BPM), rhythm, instrumentation, and time period. For example; hardstyle, dubstep, trance, electro, hardcore, trap, chillstep, chillout, drum and bass, house, and some other genres which came from combinations from the genre above.

Production

Typical tools for EDM production: computer, MIDI keyboard and mixer/sound recorder.

In a 2014 interview with Tony Andrew, the owner and founder of the Funktion-One sound system—considered a foremost model of audio technology and installed in famous venues including Berghain, Output, and Trouw—Andrew explained the critical importance of bass to dance music:

Dance music would not be so successful without bass. If you think about it, we've really only had amplified bass for around 50 years. Big bass is only a couple of generations old. Before the invention of speakers that could project true bass frequencies, humans really only came across bass in hazardous situations—for example, when thunder struck, or an earthquake shook, or from explosions caused by dynamite or gunpowder. That is probably why it is by far the most adrenaline-inducing frequency that we have. Bass gets humans excited basically. Below 90 or 100 Hz, bass becomes more of a physical thing. It vibrates specific organs. It vibrates our bones. It causes minor molecular rearrangement, and that is what makes it so potent as a force in dance music. The molecular vibration caused by bass is what gives dance music its power. It is what makes dance music so pleasurable to hear through a proper sound system.[95]

Andrew warned that too much bass—and too much sound in general—can be harmful, stating that a "good sound engineer will understand that there is a window between enough sound to give excitement and so much that it is damaging".[95]

Festivals

An EDM festival in 2013 with over 100,000 attendees,[96] exhibiting the large crowds and dramatic lighting common at such events since the early 2000s.[3]

Electronic dance music was often played at illegal underground rave parties. These were held in secret locations, for example, warehouses, abandoned bridges, fields and any other large, open areas. In the 1990s and 2000s, aspects of the underground rave culture of the 1980s and early 1990s began to evolve into legitimate EDM concerts and festivals. Major festivals often feature a large number of acts representing various EDM genres spread across multiple stages. Festivals have placed a larger emphasis on visual spectacles as part of their overall experiences, including elaborate stage designs with underlying thematics, complex lighting systems, laser shows, and pyrotechnics. The concepts of rave fashion among attendees also evolved, which The Guardian described as an evolution from the 1990s "kandi raver" into "[a] slick and sexified yet also kitschy-surreal image midway between Venice Beach and Cirque Du Soleil, Willy Wonka and a Gay Pride parade"[3][57][73] These events differed from underground raves by their organized nature, often taking place at major venues, and measures to ensure the health and safety of attendees.[97] MTV's Rawley Bornstein described electronic music as "the new rock and roll",[98] as has Lollapalooza organizer Perry Ferrell.[99]

Ray Waddell of Billboard noted that festival promoters have done an excellent job at branding.[98] Larger festivals have been shown to have positive economic impacts on their host citiesl[97] the 2014 Ultra Music Festival brought 165,000 attendees—and over $223 million—to the Miami/South Florida region's economy.[74] The inaugural edition of TomorrowWorld—an U.S.-based version of Belgium's Tomorrowland festival, brought $85.1 million to the Atlanta area—as much revenue as its hosting of the NCAA Final Four earlier in the year.[100] The increasing mainstream prominence of electronic music has also led major U.S. multi-genre festivals, such as Lollapalooza and Coachella, to add more electronic and dance acts to their lineups, along with dedicated, EDM-oriented stages. Even with these accommodations, some major electronic acts, such as Deadmau5 Danan Kavicana and Calvin Harris respectively, have made appearances on main stages during the final nights of Lollapalooza and Coachella, respectively—spots traditionally reserved for prominent non-electronic genres, such as rock and alternative.[101][102]

Russell Smith of The Globe and Mail felt that the commercial festival industry was an antithesis to the original concepts of the rave subculture, citing "the expensive tickets, the giant corporate sponsors, the crass bro culture—shirtless muscle boys who cruise the stadiums, tiny popular girls in bikinis who ride on their shoulders – not to mention the sappy music itself."[103] Drug-related incidents, as well as other complaints surrounding the behaviour of their attendees, have contributed to negative perceptions and opposition to electronic music events by local authorities;[103][104] After Ultra Music Festival 2014, where a crowd of gatecrashers trampled a security guard on its first day, Miami's city commissioners considered banning the festival from being held in the city, citing the trampling incident, lewd behavior, and complaints by downtown residents of being harassed by attendees. The commissioners voted in favor of allowing UMF to be held in Miami due to its positive economic effects, under the condition that organizers address security, drug usage and lewd behavior by attendees[105][106][107]

Association with recreational drug use

Dance music has a long association with recreational drug use.[108] Russell Smith noted that the association of drugs and music was by no means exclusive to electronic music, citing previous examples such as Psychedelic rock and LSD, disco music and cocaine, and punk music and heroin.[103]

Ecstasy is commonly consumed at raves. Above, a rave in Austria in 2005.

MDMA is often considered the drug of choice within the rave culture and is also used at clubs, festivals and house parties.[109] In the rave environment, the sensory effects from the music and lighting are often highly synergistic with the drug. The psychedelic amphetamine quality of MDMA offers multiple reasons for its appeals to users in the "rave" setting. Some users enjoy the feeling of mass communion from the inhibition-reducing effects of the drug, while others use it as party fuel because of the drug's stimulatory effects.[110]

MDMA is occasionally known for being taken in conjunction with psychedelic drugs. The more common combinations include MDMA combined with LSD, MDMA with psilocybin mushrooms, and MDMA with ketamine. Many users use mentholated products while taking MDMA for its cooling sensation while experiencing the drug's effects. Examples include menthol cigarettes, Vicks VapoRub, NyQuil,[111] and lozenges.

The incidence of nonmedical ketamine has increased in the context of raves and other parties.[112] However, its emergence as a club drug differs from other club drugs (e.g. MDMA) due to its anesthetic properties (e.g., slurred speech, immobilization) at higher doses;[113] in addition, there are reports of ketamine being sold as "ecstasy".[114] The use of ketamine as part of a "postclubbing experience" has also been documented.[115] Ketamine's rise in the dance culture was rapid in Hong Kong by the end of the 1990s.[113] Before becoming a federally controlled substance in the United States in 1999, ketamine was available as diverted pharmaceutical preparations and as a pure powder sold in bulk quantities from domestic chemical supply companies.[116] Much of the current ketamine diverted for nonmedical use originates in China and India.[116]

Reports of alleged drug related deaths

A number of deaths related to alleged drug use have occurred at major festivals in recent years, involving such drugs as MDMA and meth. Electric Daisy Carnival was forced to move to Las Vegas in 2011, when the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum refused to host any it or any other Insomniac-organized electronic music events after an underaged attendee died from an MDMA overdose at the 2010 edition.[97][117][118][119] Drug-related deaths during Electric Zoo 2013 in New York City, United States, and Future Music Festival Asia 2014 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, prompted the final day of both events to be outright cancelled,[118][120] while Life in Color cancelled a planned event in Malaysia out of concern for the incident at Future Music Festival Asia and other drug-related deaths that occurred at the A State of Trance 650 concerts in Jakarta, Indonesia.[121][122][123]

Industry awards

Organization Award Years Notes
BRIT Awards British Dance Act 1994–2004 The BRIT awards in the UK introduced a "British Dance Act" category in 1994, first won by M People. Although dance acts had featured in the awards in previous years, this was the first year dance music was given its own category. More recently the award was removed as was "Urban" and "Rock" and other genres as the awards removed Genre-based awards and moved to more generalised artist-focused awards.
Grammy Award Best Dance Recording 1998–present Most recently won (2016) by "Where Are Ü Now", Jack Ü featuring Justin Bieber
Grammy Award Best Dance/Electronica Album 2005–present Most recently won (2016) by Skrillex and Diplo Present Jack Ü
DJ Mag Top 100 DJs poll 1991–present The British dance music magazine DJ Mag publishes a yearly listing of the top 100 DJs in the world; from 1991 to 1996 the Top 100 poll were ranked by the magazine's journalists; in 1997 the poll became a public vote; The last poll in 2015 named Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike as No1.
DJ Awards Best DJ Award 1998–present The only global DJ awards event that nominates and awards international DJ's in 11 categories held annually in Ibiza, Spain, winners selected by a public vote[124] and one of the most important[125]
Winter Music Conference (WMC) IDMA: International Dance Music Awards 1998–Present[126]
Project X Magazine Electronic Dance Music Awards 1995 Readers of Project X magazine voted for the winners of the first (and only) "Electronic Dance Music Awards".[92] In a ceremony organized by the magazine and Nervous Records, award statues were given to Winx, The Future Sound of London, Moby, Junior Vasquez, Danny Tenaglia, DJ Keoki, TRIBAL America Records and Moonshine Records.[92]
American Music Awards Favorite Electronic Dance Music 2012–present [127]
World Music Awards Best DJ and Best Dance Music Artist 2006–present ,[128][129]

See also

Notes

  1. Various terms to describe the sound of what seemed to be post-disco were introduced such as, but not limited to, "dance", "club music", "R&B" and "disco". The latter however became undesirable to associate with mostly from social and commercial reasons hence the increasing use of "dance"[17][18] vis-à-vis the word "disco."
  2. Fikentscher (2000), p. 5, in discussing the definition of underground dance music as it relates to post-disco music in America, states that: "The prefix 'underground' does not merely serve to explain that the associated type of music - and its cultural context - are familiar only to a small number of informed persons. Underground also points to the sociological function of the music, framing it as one type of music that in order to have meaning and continuity is kept away, to large degree, from mainstream society, mass media, and those empowered to enforce prevalent moral and aesthetic codes and values."
  3. "Although it can now be heard in Detroit's leading clubs, the local area has shown a marked reluctance to get behind the music. It has been in clubs like the Powerplant (Chicago), The World (New York), The Hacienda (Manchester), Rock City (Nottingham) and Downbeat (Leeds) where the techno sound has found most support. Ironically, the only Detroit club which really championed the sound was a peripatetic party night called Visage, which unromantically shared its name with one of Britain's oldest new romantic groups".[48]
  4. "Josh Wink, Moby, and the Future Sound Of London were among the fortunate folks honored at the first Electronic Dance Music Awards presented on July 27 in New York produced by Nervous Records and Project X magazine. Winners were tallied from ballots from Project X readers".[92]

References

  1. 1 2 Koskoff (2004), p. 44
  2. Butler (2006), pp. 12–13, 94
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "How Rave Music Conquered America". The Guardian. August 2, 2012.
  4. 1 2 "Definition".
  5. "Is EDM a Real Genre?". Noisey. Vice. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  6. RA Roundtable: EDM in AmericaResident Advisor,. "RA Roundtable: EDM In America". N. p., 2012. Web. 18 May. 2014.
  7. "The FACT Dictionary: How 'Dubstep', 'Juke', 'Cloud Rap' And Many More Got Their Names'", FACT Mag, July 10, 2013.
  8. "Hardstyle music’s growing influence" Dailytrojan, Web. Mar 3, 2014.
  9. 1 2 van Venrooij, Alex (2015-10-01). "A community ecology of genres: Explaining the emergence of new genres in the UK field of electronic/dance music, 1985–1999". Poetics 52: 104–123. doi:10.1016/j.poetic.2015.06.005.
  10. Richard James Burgess (2014), The History of Music Production, page 115, Oxford University Press
  11. "ARTS IN AMERICA; Here's to Disco, It Never Could Say Goodbye". New York Times. 10 December 2002.
  12. [http://www.billboard.com/biz/search/charts?page=41&f[0]=ts_chart_artistname%3A*donna%20summer*&f[1]=ss_bb_type%3Achart_item&type=2&artist=donna%20summer "Chart Search - Billboard"]. billboard.com.
  13. Shapiro, Peter (2000). Modulations: A History of Electronic Music. Caipirinha Productions, Inc. pp. 254 pages. ISBN 978-0-8195-6498-6. see p.45, 46
  14. Reynolds, Simon (2009) Grunge's Long Shadow - In praise of "in-between" periods in pop history (Slate, MUSIC BOX). Retrieved on 2-2-2009"
  15. 1 2 3 4 "Explore music…Genre: Hi-NRG". Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-07-20.
  16. Kellman, Andy. "Unlimited Touch" artist biography. Retrieved 2014-10-01
  17. Rodgers, Nile (2011). Le Freak: An Upside Down Story of Family, Disco, and Destiny. Random House LLC. p. 42. ISBN 0679644032. By now “dance” was a loaded word for me. The Disco Sucks backlash had given me a post-traumatic-stress–like disorder, and I'd vowed not to write any songs with that word in them for a long time. I was shamed out of using a word—“dance.“
  18. Goldschmitt, Kariann Elaine (2004). Foreign bodies: innovation, repetition, and corporeality in electronic dance music (Digitized 13 Sep 2010). University of California, San Diego. p. 256. ISBN 0-8153-1880-4.
  19. Parliament/Funkadelic. (2009). In Student's Encyclopædia: "Combining funk rhythms, psychedelic guitar, and group harmonies with jazzed-up horns, Clinton and his ever-evolving bands set the tone for many post-disco and post-punk groups of the 1980s and 1990s.". Retrieved August 15, 2009, from Britannica Student Encyclopædia.
  20. 1 2 Slant Magazine | Music | 100 Greatest Dance Songs. Retrieved on 2-2-2009
  21. Smay, David & Cooper, Kim (2001). Bubblegum Music Is the Naked Truth: The Dark History of Prepubescent Pop, from the Banana Splits to Britney Spears: "... think about Stock-Aitken-Waterman and Kylie Minogue. Dance pop, that's what they call it now — Post-Disco, post-new wave and incorporating elements of both." Feral House: Publisher, p. 327. ISBN 0-922915-69-5.
  22. Haggerty, George E. (2000). Gay Histories and Cultures: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. p. 256. ISBN 0-8153-1880-4. House music is a form of post-disco dance music made popular in the mid-1980s in Chicago clubs..."
  23. 1 2 Demers, Joanna (2006). "Dancing Machines: 'Dance Dance Revolution', Cybernetic Dance, and Musical Taste". Popular Music (Cambridge University Press) 25 (3): 25, 401–414. doi:10.1017/S0261143006001012. "In terms of its song repertoire, DDR is rooted in disco and post-disco forms such as techno and house. But DDR can be read as the ultimate postmodern dance experience because the game displays various forms of dance imagery without stylistic or historical continuity (Harvey 1990, p. 62,...)
  24. Riley, Marcus & Trotter, Lee Ann (Apr 1, 2014) Chicago House Music Legend Frankie Knuckles Dead at 59 WMAQ-TV. NBCUniversal. Retrieved 2014-04-24
  25. Campbell, Michael (2008). Popular Music in America. Cengage Learning. p. 352. ISBN 0-495-50530-7. Glossary: techno – post-disco dance music in which most or all of the sounds are electronically generated
  26. AllMusic - explore music... House: "House music grew out of the post-disco dance club culture of the early '80s." Retrieved on 12-27-2009
  27. St. John, Graham (2004), Rave Culture and Religion, p. 50, ISBN 0-415-31449-6, "[sic] house music. As a post-disco party music, house features a repetitive 4/4 beat and a speed of 120 or more beats per minute..."
  28. "Though it makes sense to classify any form of dance music made since disco as post-disco, each successive movement has had its own characteristics to make it significantly different from the initial post-disco era, whether it's dance-pop or techno or trance." — Allmusic
  29. Vibe 6: 84. August 1999. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  30. 1 2 "Electro-Funk > WHAT DID IT ALL MEAN ?". Greg Wilson on electrofunkroots.co.uk. Retrieved 2009-12-23.
  31. "Electro". Allmusic. Retrieved 2012-06-20.
  32. "Slaves to the rhythm". CBC News. November 28, 2008. Archived from the original on December 1, 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  33. Roy, Ron; Borthwick, Stuart (2004). Popular Music Genres: An Introduction. Edinburgh University Press. p. 255. ISBN 9780748617456.
  34. https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Tb-FBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA289
  35. Church, Terry (2010-02-09). "Black History Month: Jesse Saunders and house music". BeatPortal. Retrieved 2010-04-10.
  36. "Jesse Saunders – On And On". Discogs. Retrieved 2012-05-23.
  37. Mitchell, Euan. Interviews: Marshell Jefferson www.4clubbers.net Archived March 29, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.
  38. "Finding Jesse – The Discovery of Jesse Saunders As the Founder of House". Fly Global Music Culture. 2004-10-25. Archived from the original on 2012-03-22. Retrieved 2012-08-14.
  39. Paoletta, Michael (1989-12-16). "Back To Basics". Dance Music Report: 12.
  40. Fikentscher, Kai (July–August 2000). "The club DJ: a brief history of a cultural icon" (PDF). UNESCO Courier (UNESCO): 47. Around 1986/7, after the initial explosion of house music in Chicago, it became clear that the major recording companies and media institutions were reluctant to market this genre of music, associated with gay African Americans, on a mainstream level. House artists turned to Europe, chiefly London but also cities such as Amsterdam, Berlin, Manchester, Milan, Zurich, and Tel Aviv. ... A third axis leads to Japan where, since the late 1980s, New York club DJs have had the opportunity to play guest-spots.
  41. Sicko 2010:68
  42. Rietveld (1998), pp. 40–50
  43. Rietveld (1998), pp. 54–59
  44. Brewster (2006), pp. 398–443
  45. Unterberger R., Hicks S., Dempsey J, (1999). Music USA: The Rough Guide, Rough Guides Ltd; illustrated edition.(ISBN 9781858284217)
  46. "Interview: Derrick May - The Secret of Techno". Mixmag. 1997. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  47. Brewster (2006), p. 419
  48. Cosgrove 1988a
  49. Reynolds, Simon (2013). Energy Flash: A Journey Through Rave Music and Dance Culture. Soft Skull Press. So when I talk about the vibe disappearing from drum and bass, I'm talking about the blackness going as the ragga samples get phased out, the bass loses its reggae feels and becomes more linear and propulsive rather than moving around the beat with a syncopated relation with the drum.
  50. 1 2 Ben Sisario (April 4, 2012). "Electronic Dance Concerts Turn Up Volume, Tempting Investors". New York Times.
  51. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Sherburne, Philip. "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger", Spin Magazine, pages 41-53, October 2011
  52. Chaplin, Julia & Michel, Sia. "Fire Starters", Spin Magazine, page 40, March 1997, Spin Media LLC.
  53. The 30 Greatest EDM Albums of All Time, Rolling Stone, 2 August 2012
  54. Ray of Light - Madonna Allmusic
  55. "A history of dance music: Tiësto DJs at the Athens Olympics opening ceremony". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  56. "DJ David Guetta leads the EDM charge into mainstream". USA Today. June 5, 2012.
  57. 1 2 3 4 5 Jim Fusilli (June 6, 2012). "The Dumbing Down of Electronic Dance Music". Wall Street Journal.
  58. "New Dance/Electronic Songs Chart Launches With Will.i.am & Britney at No. 1". Billboard. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  59. 1 2 Peoples, Glenn. "EDM's Social Dance." Billboard - The International Newsweekly of Music, Video and Home Entertainment Jul 06 2013: 8. ProQuest. Web. 20 July 2015 .
  60. "Just How Big is EDM?". Music Trades Magazine. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  61. "The Year EDM Sold Out: Swedish House Mafia, Skrillex and Deadmau5 Hit the Mainstream". Billboard. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  62. "Exclusive: SFX Acquires ID&T, Voodoo Experience". Billboard. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
  63. "SFX Purchases 75% Stake in ID&T, Announce U.S. Edition of Tomorrowland at Ultra". Billboard. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  64. Zel McCarthy (June 20, 2013). "Live Nation Teams With Insomniac Events in 'Creative Partnership'". Billboard.
  65. "Live Nation Acquires L.A. EDM Promoter HARD: Will the Mainstream Get More Ravey?". Spin. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  66. Dan Rys (May 9, 2012). "Live Nation Buys EDM Entertainment Company Cream Holdings Ltd, Owner of Creamfields Festivals". Billboard.
  67. Ben Sisario (December 20, 2012). "Boston Radio Station Switches to Electronic Dance Format". New York Times.
  68. Kerri Mason (January 6, 2014). "SFX and Clear Channel Partner for Digital, Terrestrial Radio Push". Billboard.
  69. Kerri Mason (January 6, 2014). "John Sykes, Robert Sillerman on New Clear Channel, SFX Partnership: 'We Want to Be the Best'". Billboard.
  70. 1 2 "7Up Turns to Electronic Dance Music to Lift Spirits -- and Sales". Advertising Age. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  71. 1 2 "Exclusive: Bolstering Massive EDM Strategy, T-Mobile Debuts Above & Beyond Video Series". Billboard. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  72. 1 2 3 "Booming business: EDM goes mainstream". Miami Herald. March 26, 2014.
  73. 1 2 Valerie Lee (June 27, 2014). "An Electric Desert Experience: The 2014 EDC Las Vegas Phenomenon". Dancing Astronaut.
  74. 1 2 Roy Trakin (April 3, 2014). "Ultra Music Festival's 16th Anything but Sweet, Though Still Potent". The Hollywood Reporter.
  75. Mac, Ryan. "The Fall Of SFX: From Billion-Dollar Company To Bankruptcy Watch". Forbes. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  76. Sisario, Ben (14 August 2015). "SFX Entertainment Is Back on the Block". Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  77. Faughnder, Ryan (14 August 2015). "After failed CEO takeover bid, what's next for SFX Entertainment?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 August 2015.
  78. "The $6.9 Billion Bubble? Inside The Uncertain Future Of EDM". Forbes. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  79. "Electronic Music Industry Now Worth Close to $7 Billion Amid Slowing Growth". Thump. Vice Media. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  80. Hannah Karp (October 5, 2014). "In China, Concert Promoter Wants EDM in the Mix". Wall Street Journal.
  81. "Is the EDM Scene in China about to Pop Off?". Thump. Vice Media. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  82. "Is EDM killing the art of DJing?". Mixmag. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  83. "EDM Will Eat Itself: Big Room stars are getting bored". Mixmag. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  84. "Deadmau5 Trolls Martin Garrix with 'Old MacDonald Had a Farm' Remix of 'Animals' at Ultra". radio.com. March 31, 2014.
  85. "Deadmau5 gives reason for techno track: "EDM sounds the same to me"". Mixmag. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  86. "Deadmau5: The Man Who Trolled the World". Mixmag. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  87. "Afrojack and Deadmau5 argue over what's "good music"". Mixmag. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  88. "SNL Digital Shorts return with 'Davvincii' to skewer EDM and overpaid DJs". The Verge. May 18, 2014.
  89. "Watch Saturday Night Live Mock Big Room DJ Culture". Mixmag. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  90. "SNL takes stab at EDM culture in new digital short featuring 'Davvincii'". Dancing Astronaut. May 2014.
  91. Jonathan Bogart (10 July 2014). "Buy the Hype: Why Electronic Dance Music Really Could Be the New Rock". The Atlantic.
  92. 1 2 3 Larry Flick (August 12, 1995). "Gonzales Prepares More Batches of Bucketheads". Billboard: 24.
  93. David Prince (1995). "Rhythm Nation". Rolling Stone (705): 33.
  94. Kembrew McLeod (2001). "Genres, Subgenres, Sub-Subgenres and More: Musical and Social Difference Within Electronic/Dance Music Communities" (PDF). Journal of Popular Music Studies 13: 59–75. doi:10.1111/j.1533-1598.2001.tb00013.x.
  95. 1 2 Terry Church (April 10, 2014). "Funktion-One's Tony Andrews on Setting Up Soundsystems – From Wembley Stadium to Your Bedroom". DJTechTools.
  96. http://www.technoton-magazin.com/veranstaltung26_technotonontour_electriclove2014.html
  97. 1 2 3 "A fatal toll on concertgoers as raves boost cities' income". Los Angeles Times. February 3, 2013.
  98. 1 2 Lisa Rose, "N.J. basks in the glow of the brave new rave: Electronic dance festivals go mainstream", Newark Star Ledger, May 16, 2012.
  99. Sarah Maloy (August 4, 2012). "Lollapalooza's Perry Farrell on EDM and Elevating the Aftershow: Video". Billboard.
  100. Melissa Ruggieri (April 8, 2014). "Study: TomorrowWorld had $85m impact". Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  101. "House Music Comes Home: How Chicago's Summer of Music Festivals Has Reinvigorated the City's Dance Spirit". Noisey (Vice).
  102. "How Coachella's final day symbolizes the electronic music fever pitch". Las Vegas Weekly. April 14, 2014.
  103. 1 2 3 "Russell Smith: Exposés on EDM festivals shift long overdue blame". The Globe and Mail. July 12, 2015. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  104. "Music festival safety recommendations come too late for family". CBC News. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  105. "Ultra Fest to Stay in Miami, City Commission Decides". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  106. "Miami Commission: Ultra stays in downtown Miami". Miami Herald. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  107. "Ultra Music Announces Review After Festival Security Draws Criticism". Billboard.com. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  108. P. Nash Jenkins. "Electronic Dance Music’s Love Affair With Ecstasy: A History". The Atlantic.
  109. Carvalho M, Carmo H, Costa VM, Capela JP, Pontes H, Remião F, Carvalho F, Bastos Mde L (August 2012). "Toxicity of amphetamines: an update". Arch. Toxicol. 86 (8): 1167–1231. doi:10.1007/s00204-012-0815-5. PMID 22392347. MDMA has become a popular recreational drug of abuse at nightclubs and rave or techno parties, where it is combined with intense physical activity (all-night dancing), crowded conditions (aggregation), high ambient temperature, poor hydration, loud noise, and is commonly taken together with other stimulant club drugs and/or alcohol (Parrott 2006; Von Huben et al. 2007; Walubo and Seger 1999). This combination is probably the main reason why it is generally seen an increase in toxicity events at rave parties since all these factors are thought to induce or enhance the toxicity (particularly the hyperthermic response) of MDMA. ... Another report showed that MDMA users displayed multiple regions of grey matter reduction in the neocortical, bilateral cerebellum, and midline brainstem brain regions, potentially accounting for previously reported neuropsychiatric impairments in MDMA users (Cowan et al. 2003). Neuroimaging techniques, like PET, were used in combination with a 5-HTT ligand in human ecstasy users, showing lower density of brain 5-HTT sites (McCann et al. 1998, 2005, 2008). Other authors correlate the 5-HTT reductions with the memory deficits seen in humans with a history of recreational MDMA use (McCann et al. 2008). A recent study prospectively assessed the sustained effects of ecstasy use on the brain in novel MDMA users using repeated measurements with a combination of different neuroimaging parameters of neurotoxicity. The authors concluded that low MDMA dosages can produce sustained effects on brain microvasculature, white matter maturation, and possibly axonal damage (de Win et al. 2008).
  110. Reynolds, Simon (1999). Generation Ecstasy: Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture. Routledge. p. 81. ISBN 0415923735.
  111. "Director's Report to the National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse". National Institute on Drug Abuse. May 2000. Archived from the original on 17 October 2012.
  112. Increased non-medical use references:
  113. 1 2 Joe-Laidler, K; Hunt, G (1 June 2008). "Sit down to float: The cultural meaning of ketamine use in Hong Kong". Addiction Research & Theory 16 (3): 259–71. doi:10.1080/16066350801983673. PMC 2744071. PMID 19759834.
  114. Ketamine sold as "ecstasy" references:
  115. Moore, K; Measham, F (2006). "Ketamine use: Minimising problems and maximising pleasure". Drugs and Alcohol Today 6 (3): 29–32. doi:10.1108/17459265200600047.
  116. 1 2 Morris, H; Wallach, J (July 2014). "From PCP to MXE: A comprehensive review of the non-medical use of dissociative drugs". Drug Testing and Analysis 6 (7-8): 614–32. doi:10.1002/dta.1620. PMID 24678061.
  117. "Man dies at Electric Daisy Carnival in Las Vegas". Chicago Tribune. June 22, 2014.
  118. 1 2 Jon Pareles (September 1, 2014). "A Bit of Caution Beneath the Thump". New York Times.
  119. "Electric Zoo to Clamp Down on Drugs This Year". Wall Street Journal. 28 August 2014.
  120. "Six dead from 'meth' at Future Music Festival Asia 2014: police". Sydney Morning Herald (Fairfax Media). Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  121. "Blanked out: Life In Color cancelled due to drug deaths". Malaysia Star. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  122. "Police Probe ‘A State of Trance’ Festival Drug Deaths". Jakarta Globe. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  123. "Three Dead After State of Trance Festival in Jakarta, Drugs Suspected". Spin.com. Retrieved 3 October 2015.
  124. Rodriguez, Krystal (23 September 2014). "Here are the winners of this year's Ibiza DJ Awards". In the Mix Webzine Australia.
  125. Zalokar, Gregor. "DJ Awards 2014 Winners". EMF Magazine. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  126. "30th Annual International Dance Music Awards - Winter Music Conference 2015 - WMC 2015". Winter Music Conference.
  127. "American Music Awards 2012: A big night for Justin Bieber". CBS News. November 18, 2012.
  128. "Choose your Nomination Category". worldmusicawards.com. World Music Awards. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
  129. "Best Dance Music Artist". worldmusicawards.com. World Music Awards. Retrieved 7 June 2015.

Bibliography

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, May 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.