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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.
Love Songs from the Movies (#51 Billboard 200) [1] Macarena Dance Dance Dance; Mambo #5 (#194 Billboard 200, #15 CAN) [1] Mega Mix Dance Party; Melody of Love; Men of Country; Mob Hits; Monster Mash and Other Songs of Horror (#99 Billboard 200, #21 Indie) [1] Movie Hits; My Love Is Your Love; New Wave 80s; Non Stop Disco Dance Mix; Non Stop ...
Dancemania is a series of remix compilation albums by i-DANCE.The series deals primarily with dance music, especially Eurodance.Despite many of its tracks being made by various musicians from all over the world and mainly from the European continent, the albums have been released exclusively in Japan.
"Musique Non Stop" is a 1986 single by German techno group Kraftwerk, which was featured on the album Electric Café. It was re-released as a remix on their 1991 album The Mix . The single was their first number one on Billboard Hot Dance Club Play and was one of two songs to make it to number one there.
Hi-NRG (pronounced "high energy") [2] is a genre of uptempo disco or electronic dance music (EDM) that originated during the late 1970s and early 1980s.. As a music genre, typified by its fast tempo, staccato hi-hat rhythms (and the four-on-the-floor pattern), reverberated "intense" vocals and "pulsating" octave basslines, it was particularly influential on the disco scene.
Eurodance music videos were often seen with dance acts by the main vocals of the songs (or models ad-libbing), often dancing in bright-coloured infinity cove studios or wide, urban spaces (stations, parking garages) with high visual contrast, or in empty nature scenes.
Now That's What I Call 80s Dance or Now 80s Dance is a triple-disc compilation album which was released in the United Kingdom on 14 October 2013. It includes nearly 60 of the biggest dance anthems of the 1980s era.
The appearance of the album in July 1982 was a month after the release of Soft Cell's similarly styled remix album Non Stop Ecstatic Dancing, [25] and these releases, alongside The B-52's' Party Mix!, were later described by Easle and McIver as "the trilogy of early '80s pop-dance mix albums". [16]