Dance Ignition there's no more to say :-D
gENRE tECHNO dANCE hOUSE dANCE
By 1981, a new form of electronic dance music was developing which would gradually take the place of disco. This music was made using electronics is a style of popular music commonly played in dance music nightclubs, radio stations, shows and raves. During its gradual decline in the late 1970s disco became influenced by computerization. Looping, sampling and seguing as found in disco continued to be used as creative techniques within hip hop and house music. The term "dance music" is often used for more commercial forms of electronic music. Styles include Eurobeat, house, Eurodance, drum and bass, hip house, trance, techno, electro, synthpop, funk, garage, and many others. Associated with dance music are usually commercial forms that may not easily be categorized, such as "The Power" by Snap! and "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" by C+C Music Factory.
Electronic dance music experienced a boom after the proliferation of personal computers in the 1980s, manifest in the dance element of Tony Wilson's Haçienda scene (in Manchester), and the Summer Of Love in Ibiza, which became the European capital of house and trance. Clubs like Sundissential and Manumission became household names with British, German and Italian tourists.
Many music genres that made use of electronic instruments developed into contemporary styles mainly due to the MIDI protocol, which enabled computers, synthesizers, sound cards, samplers, and drum machines to interact with each other and achieve the full synchronization of sounds. Electronic dance music is typically composed using computers and synthesizers, and rarely has any physical instruments. Instead, this is replaced by digital or electronic sounds, with a 4/4 beat. Dance music typically ranges from 120bpm, up to 200bpm, with techno, trance, and house being the most widespread. Many producers of this kind of music however, such as Darren Tate and MJ Cole, were trained in classical music before they moved into the electronic medium.
In the new millenium, several new subgenres of electonic dance music have evolved throughout Central and Northern Europe, including modern r&b, uk garage, bassline house (originating in Sheffield (UK), psytrance, Goa trance, minimal techno, grime and reggae-inspired dubstep.