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Hi-NRG is uptempo disco or electronic dance music usually featuring synthetic bassline octaves. This list contains some examples of hi-NRG artists and songs. This list contains some examples of hi-NRG artists and songs.
The term "disco" in Europe existed long before the Eurodisco and U.S. disco music scene. It was used in Europe during the 1960s as a short alternative to "discotheque". The first dance music venues called discotheques emerged in Occupied France in the 1940s. In the UK, "discotheques" and "discos" were called "clubs" like any other nightclub.
Funky house is a subgenre of house music that uses disco and funk samples, a funk-inspired bass line or a strong soul influence, combined with drum breaks that draw inspiration from 1970s and 1980s funk records. [1] It often includes disco strings, though not consistently.
In an interview with Little Black Book, Lawton described the video as "very '70s rock 'n' roll, but with a pinch of the occult thrown in. Knowing I'd want to make the tone provocative, I needed to ensure there was the class and sophistication in the visuals to keep it chic. That meant keeping mystery and intrigue at the forefront, using ...
"Magsayawan" (English: Let's Dance) is a song recorded by the Filipino disco group VST & Company, written by the songwriting team of Charo Unite and Ernie dela Peña. [2] It was one of the group's biggest hits in the Philippines and was the only hit single not written by the group's principal songwriters, Vic Sotto and Joey de Leon .
To achieve the effect, the 1980s remix artists take the original song and "slather it with obsolete-sounding synthesizer music." [10] They use different images of '80s music such as saxophone solos, syncopated synthesizer beats, and a more liberal use of chord progressions than the originals. Some covers seek inspiration from specific 1980s songs.
[89] [90] At a similar time, "YouTube Disco" was launched, a music discovery service. It closed in October 2014. [91] [92] YouTube's current headquarters in San Bruno, California (2010 to present) In January 2010, [93] YouTube introduced an online film rentals service which is currently available only to users in the US, Canada and the UK.
The music video was released on 10 September 2021 and directed by James Fitzgerald. [6] It showcases Purple Disco Machine as an eccentric scientist who "calls on his sleekly moustached 80s Californian sidekick to rescue Eyelar from 2021 with his time travelling Chevy Camaro". [7] Video was filmed in Montenegro. [8]