Progressive House
more...
Home
Accessories/ Storage
CDs
Cassettes
Music Memorabilia
Other Music Formats
Records
10" Singles
12'' Singles
Avant-Garde/ Experimental
Blues
Children's
Christmas/ Seasonal
Classical
Comedy
Country
Dance
Big Beat
Breakbeat
Chillout/ Ambient
Disco
Drum 'n' Bass/ Jungle
Electronica
Garage
Hard House
Hardcore/ Rave
House
Lounge/ Downtempo
Old Skool
Other Dance
Progressive House
Techno/ Industrial
Trance
Easy Listening
Folk
Indie/ Britpop
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
Irish Folk/ Traditional
Jazz
Metal
Other 12'' Singles
Pop
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
Pop & Beat: 1960s
R&B/ Soul
Funk
Mainstream
Motown
Northern Soul
Other R&B/ Soul
R&B
Soul
Rap/ Hip Hop
East Coast
Freestyle
Gangsta
Hip Hop
Old School
Other Rap/ Hip Hop
West Coast
Reggae/ Ska
Religious/ New Age
Rock
Alternative
Classic
Country
Doo Wop/ 50s Rock 'n' Roll
Elvis
Glam
Grunge
Hard
New Wave
Other Rock
Progressive
Punk
Soft
Soundtracks/ Themes
Spoken Word
World Music
7'' Singles
78 RPM
Albums/ LPs
Other Records
Progressive in the context of modern dance music (occasionally progressive electronic dance music or prog) is a term that includes a collection of electronic dance music genres which draw upon the use of progressive performing techniques and includes the styles of progressive trance, progressive house, progressive techno and progressive breaks.
Most electronic dance music tracks released are produced with certain features that are favourable for DJs to beatmatch records together seamlessly. Unlike the song structures of genres like hard house or Hi-NRG, the peaks and troughs in a progressive dance track tend to be more subtle. Layering different sounds on top of each other and slowly bringing them in and out of the mix is a key idea behind the progressive movement.
The term "progressive" typically refers to the structure of a track which occur incrementally. An exception is progressive trance. The term Progressive trance usually refers to a type of trance music that features a less prominent lead melody and focuses more on atmosphere. In the case of progressive house, the term "progressive" can also refer to the style's open mindedness to bring in new elements to the genre. These elements can be a variety of sounds, such as a guitar loop, computer generated noises, or other elements typical of other genres. Progressive electronic is also a term for a sub-genre in new age music and contains elements of progressive rock, classical music and ambient music and electronic music. It has been used to describe artists such as Vangelis and Jean Michel Jarre.
Progressive house
Progressive house has its origins in Great Britain in the early 1990s, with the output of Guerrilla Records and Leftfield's first singles (particularly "Song of Life"). Mixmag editor Dom Phillips coined the term to describe this type of music. In 1992, the dance club Renaissance opened in Mansfield. Its DJs - particularly Sasha and John Digweed - were instrumental in popularizing its early sound. The music itself consisted of the 4-to-4 beat of house music with deeper, dub-influenced basslines and a more melancholic, emotional edge. Often, it featured elements from many different genres mixed together. "Song of Life", for instance, has a trip-hop like down-pitched breakbeat and a high-energy Roland TB-303 riff at various stages.
There have been many shifts in style in progressive house. After the release of BT's debut album Ima, for instance, many of the genre's subsequent records featured an ethereal, melodic style. As trance became more popular and melodic, progressive house darkened and acted as an underground counterpoint, merging with tribal house to produce many very minimal percussive tracks.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|